PART XII Reference + General Applications
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Lighting Design

Lumen method · point method · IES · fixtures · controls · IES Handbook · NEC 410

Lighting is one third of NCEES "General Applications." §31 covers compliance — how much wattage is allowed. This section covers design — how many fixtures of what type at what spacing produce the right footcandles where the work happens. Two methods: lumen method for general illumination of large flat spaces, point method for task lighting and outdoor design.

The Vocabulary — Photometric Quantities

QuantitySymbolUnitWhat it physically is
Luminous fluxΦLumen (lm)Total light output of a source — like a faucet's gallons-per-minute
Luminous intensityICandela (cd) = lm/srLight flowing in a particular direction — direction-specific
IlluminanceEFootcandle (fc) = lm/ft² · Lux (lx) = lm/m²Light arriving at a surface — what you measure with a light meter
LuminanceLcd/m² (nit)Light leaving a surface toward the eye — what creates brightness perception
Efficacyηvlm/WLumens out per watt in. LED: 100–200. Fluorescent: 70–100. Incandescent: 10–17.
Color rendering indexCRI / Ra0–100How accurately a source renders color vs reference. ≥ 80 typical office. ≥ 90 retail/galleries.
Color temperatureCCTKelvin (K)2700 K warm yellow · 3500 K neutral · 4000 K cool · 5000 K daylight · 6500 K bluish

Quick conversions: 1 fc ≈ 10.76 lx (often rounded to 1 fc ≈ 10 lx for sanity-check math). Workplane is the imaginary plane where the task lives — typically 30 inches above the floor (desk height).

The Lumen Method — General Illumination

The lumen method answers: how many fixtures do I need to deliver target average footcandles across a room? It assumes the space is roughly rectangular and the lighting is generally uniform. Cornerstone equation:

Lumen method — fixture count
N = (E · A) / (Φ · CU · LLF)
N = number of fixtures · E = target footcandles · A = room area (ft²) · Φ = lumens per fixture · CU = coefficient of utilization · LLF = light loss factor
TermWhat it capturesTypical values
E — illuminance targetRequired footcandles for the task (IES Handbook Lighting Recommendations)Office task: 30–50 fc · Conference: 30 fc · Corridor: 5–10 fc · Warehouse: 10–30 fc · Retail: 30–75 fc · Operating room: 200–500 fc
A — room areaFloor area in ft²Just the area of the room
Φ — luminous flux per fixtureInitial lumen output from manufacturer photometric data (.IES file)2×4 LED troffer ≈ 4,000 lm · Hi-bay LED ≈ 30,000 lm · Wall sconce ≈ 800 lm
CU — coefficient of utilizationFraction of fixture lumens that actually reach the workplane (the rest is absorbed by walls / ceiling / floor)Open ceiling: 0.50–0.65 · Suspended grid w/ light walls: 0.65–0.80 · Recessed troffer in dark room: 0.40–0.55
LLF — light loss factorCombined depreciation: lumen depreciation (LLD) × dirt depreciation (LDD) × ballast/driver factorOffice (clean): 0.80 · Industrial (dirty): 0.65 · Outdoor: 0.70

Coefficient of Utilization — Driven by Room Cavity Ratio

CU is read from the manufacturer's photometric data table for a given fixture. Inputs are the room cavity ratio (RCR) and the reflectances of ceiling / walls / floor. Typical IES reflectance shorthand: 80/50/20 means 80% ceiling, 50% walls, 20% floor.

Room cavity ratio
RCR = 5 · hcav · (L + W) / (L · W)
hcav = ceiling-to-workplane height (ft). L, W = room length and width. Lower RCR (= taller, longer rooms) → higher CU.

The Point Method — Task and Outdoor Lighting

The point method answers: at this specific point on the workplane, what illuminance does each fixture contribute? Use it for non-uniform layouts (task lights, sports field, parking lot, façade lighting) where average illuminance is meaningless. Two laws govern:

Inverse-square law (perpendicular)
E = I / d²
E in fc when I in candela and d in feet. Light fall-off is quadratic with distance.
Cosine law (off-axis)
Eh = (Iθ / d²) · cos θ = (Iθ · h) / d³
θ is the angle from vertical. h is mounting height above workplane. d is the slant distance from fixture to point. Iθ is the candela in direction θ — read from the photometric polar diagram.
Point method geometry fixture at height h · target point P at horizontal distance r · slant d workplane (30 in AFF) FIXTURE I (cd) at angle θ h (mounting height) d r θ P Eh at P = (Iθ · cos θ) / d² = (Iθ · h) / d³ Photometric polar diagram candela vs angle from nadir · read I(θ) directly 90° 270° 180° 2k cd 4k cd 6k cd θ=30° I(30°)≈3,200 cd Read I(θ) from the polar plot at the angle to your target — feed it into the cosine law.

Source Types Today

TypeEfficacy (lm/W)LifeCRIStatus
LED100–20050,000–100,000 hr80–95Default for new construction. Effectively all of new and retrofit since ~ 2018.
T8 / T5 fluorescent80–10020,000–40,000 hr75–85Legacy. ASHRAE 90.1-2022 LPDs require LED for most spaces.
Metal halide / HPS70–100 / 80–14015,000–24,000 hr65 / 25Legacy outdoor and high-bay. Replaced by LED.
Compact fluorescent (CFL)50–7010,000 hr80Phased out — most jurisdictions ban sales as of 2024.
Halogen / incandescent10–251,000–4,000 hr100Banned for general lighting in US since 2023 (DOE rule).

Lighting Controls — ASHRAE 90.1 / IECC Mandates

Modern energy codes require lighting controls. The exam tests both the technology and where each is mandatory.

ControlWhat it doesWhere required
Manual on / auto offOccupant turns lights on; sensor turns them off after timeoutMost enclosed spaces ≥ 300 sq ft (ASHRAE 90.1-2022 §9.4.1.1)
Occupancy sensorPIR / ultrasonic / dual-tech detects motion; turns lights on/off automaticallyRestrooms, corridors, conference rooms, offices, classrooms
Vacancy sensorSame hardware as occupancy but does not auto-on (occupant must manually turn on)Spaces where automatic on is undesirable — private offices preferred by some jurisdictions
Daylight harvestingPhotosensor dims/switches lights based on daylight contributionSpaces with windows or skylights ≥ 250 sq ft of effective aperture
Time-of-day schedulingBuilding automation system sweeps off after hoursRequired as override on top of manual / occupancy in most commercial
Multi-level / continuous dimming0–10 V or DALI dimming; 50% bi-level switching minimumMost enclosed spaces; matches ASHRAE LPD assumed dimming credit
Plug load controlRelay-controlled receptacles auto-off on schedule or vacancy≥ 50% of receptacles in offices, copy rooms, conference, classrooms (per IECC C405.10)

Worked Example 1 — Lumen Method for an Office

Example 01 · Lumen methodOpen office · 60 ft × 40 ft · 9 ft ceiling · target 35 fc · 80/50/20 reflectance · 2x4 LED troffers (4,000 lm each, 35 W)
  1. Geometry. Area A = 60 × 40 = 2,400 ft². Ceiling height 9 ft − workplane 2.5 ft = hcav = 6.5 ft.
  2. Room cavity ratio.
    RCR = 5 · 6.5 · (60 + 40) / (60 · 40) = 5 · 6.5 · 100 / 2,400 = 1.35
  3. CU from photometric data. For 80/50/20 reflectance and RCR ≈ 1.5, manufacturer table for a recessed 2x4 LED troffer with medium distribution gives CU ≈ 0.78.
  4. LLF. LED has very low LLD (~ 0.95 over 50,000 hr). Office is clean, LDD ≈ 0.94. Driver factor ~ 1.0. LLF = 0.95 × 0.94 × 1.0 ≈ 0.89.
  5. Solve for fixture count.
    N = (E · A) / (Φ · CU · LLF)
    N = (35 · 2,400) / (4,000 · 0.78 · 0.89)
    N = 84,000 / 2,776 = 30.3 fixtures → 30 fixtures
  6. Layout check. 30 fixtures in 60 × 40 = a 6×5 grid (10 ft × 8 ft spacing) or 5×6 grid (12 ft × 6.7 ft). Manufacturer SC ratio (spacing-to-mounting-height) typically 1.2–1.4. With hcav = 6.5 ft → max spacing = 1.3 × 6.5 ≈ 8.5 ft. Use the 6×5 grid (8 ft spacing along short axis).
  7. Connected lighting load. 30 × 35 W = 1,050 W for 2,400 ft² = 0.44 W/ft². ASHRAE 90.1-2022 LPD for open office: 0.61 W/ft² (whole-building method varies). Comfortably under LPD limit.
  8. Verify. Initial fc (no LLF) = 30 × 4,000 × 0.78 / 2,400 = 39 fc. Maintained fc = 39 × 0.89 = 35 fc. Target met.

Worked Example 2 — Point Method for a Parking Lot

Example 02 · Point methodParking lot pole · 25 ft mounting · LED area light 20,000 lm · check fc at a point 30 ft horizontally from the pole base.
  1. Geometry. h = 25 ft. r = 30 ft. Slant distance d = √(h² + r²) = √(625 + 900) = √1,525 = 39.05 ft.
  2. Angle from vertical.
    θ = arctan(r / h) = arctan(30 / 25) = arctan(1.2) ≈ 50.2°
  3. Read I(θ) from polar plot. For a Type III (medium) distribution area light, the polar shows ~ 5,000 cd at 50°. (Manufacturers publish "Type II / III / IV / V" street-light distributions per IES TM-15.)
  4. Apply cosine law.
    Eh = I(θ) · cos θ / d² = 5,000 · cos(50.2°) / 39.05²
    = 5,000 · 0.640 / 1,525
    = 3,200 / 1,525
    = 2.10 fc initial
  5. Apply LLF. Outdoor LED LLF ≈ 0.70 (lumen depreciation + dirt + ambient temp). Emaintained = 2.10 × 0.70 = 1.47 fc.
  6. Compare to IES target. IES RP-20-14 (parking lots) recommends 0.5–2.0 fc minimum, 4:1 max-to-min uniformity. 1.47 fc passes the minimum but a single fixture cannot deliver good uniformity across the lot — multiple poles overlap to keep ratio acceptable.
  7. Add a second pole. Place pole #2 at 60 ft from the first. The point in question (30 ft from #1) is now also 30 ft from #2. By symmetry, second pole adds another ~ 1.47 fc. Total at this point ≈ 2.94 fc. The point method scales linearly with fixture count — sum the contributions.
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Why the cosine law matters here
If you'd used the inverse-square law alone (E = I / d²), you'd get 5,000 / 1,525 = 3.28 fc. That's the illuminance on a surface perpendicular to d. The pavement is horizontal — it receives only the cos θ projection. The 0.64 factor (not 1.0) is precisely why parking lots use Type III (high-angle) distributions: they push lumens out at θ ≈ 60°, where cos θ is low but the candela are high enough to compensate.
What you can do after this section
  1. Convert between footcandles, lux, candela, and lumens; explain the difference between illuminance and luminance.
  2. Apply the lumen method (N = E·A / (Φ·CU·LLF)) to size general illumination for any room.
  3. Apply the inverse-square + cosine laws to compute illuminance from a point source at any geometry.
  4. Read a polar photometric diagram and pick the right luminaire distribution for the application.
  5. Identify required ASHRAE 90.1 / IECC controls (occupancy, daylight, scheduling, plug load) by space type.
  6. Pair this section with §31 (Energy Codes) for full design + compliance — design counts fixtures, §31 verifies LPD.

Drill — Quick Self-Check

Drill 1 · units

1 footcandle = ___ lux (approximate)?

Drill 2 · LLF

Three components of light loss factor?

Drill 3 · efficacy

Typical LED efficacy in lm/W?

Drill 4 · point method

Inverse-square law E = I / d² gives illuminance on a surface ___?

Drill 5 · controls

Difference between an occupancy sensor and a vacancy sensor?

If You See THIS, Think THAT

If you see…Think / use…
"Lumens"Total light output of a source.
"Candela"Light intensity in a particular direction.
"Footcandle"Light arriving at a surface (lm/ft²). 1 fc ≈ 10.76 lx.
"CU"Coefficient of utilization — what fraction of fixture lumens reach the workplane.
"RCR"Room cavity ratio = 5·hcav(L+W)/(L·W). Drives CU lookup.
"LLF"Light loss factor — multiply by initial illuminance for maintained.
"80/50/20"Reflectances: 80% ceiling / 50% walls / 20% floor.
"Type II / III / IV / V"IES outdoor distribution classes (street light beam shapes).
"Cosine law" / "cos θ"Project light onto a tilted surface — multiply by cos of angle from normal.
"CRI" / "Ra"Color rendering 0–100. ≥ 80 office, ≥ 90 retail / gallery.
"CCT 3500K"Color temperature — neutral white.
"DALI" / "0–10 V"Standard dimming protocols — DALI digital, 0–10 V analog.
"Daylight harvesting"Photosensor dims electric light when daylight is sufficient.
"NEC 410"Code article for luminaires (mounting, support, voltage limits).
"IES Handbook"Reference for recommended illuminance per task.
"BUG rating"Backlight / Uplight / Glare — outdoor light pollution + spill control.
"LM-79 / LM-80"IES standards for LED testing (LM-79 photometric, LM-80 lumen maintenance).
Also see