Philips Lighting Supports Circadian Rhythms of Czech Employees with Human Centric Office Lighting

Philips Lighting has helped to transform the Czech Republic headquarters of energy company innogy, by installing an LED lighting system tuned to support the circadian rhythms of innogy’s office staff, including stimulating their energy levels at set times in the day. Employees enjoy a comfortable bright light, similar to natural daylight, to start their day and after lunch. This helps to stimulate energy levels, enhance workplace comfort and vision, supporting a sense of wellbeing and performance. The stimulus from the “human centric lighting” fixtures is likened to a strong cup of coffee.

(Image: Philips Lighting)

In November 2017, innogy completed a deep renovation of 10,000 square meters of office space at its Czech Republic headquarters at Limuzská, Prague. The company went from a traditional closed office environment to open plan and seized the opportunity to create a best-in-class work environment to enhance the comfort, wellbeing and productivity of its 550 office employees. Lighting played a key part of the renovation which involved a new restaurant, furniture, healthy food, kitchens and creativity spaces.

Philips Lighting installed a networked lighting system consisting of approximately 2,000 Philips LED luminaires. These include 860 Philips PowerBalance tunable white ceiling fixtures and 96 Philips LuxSpace tunable white downlights, programmed to provide different light settings at various times of the day. The subtle differences in the color temperature and intensity of the lighting also supports eye comfort and may be personalized by employees to suit specific tasks. While the emphasis of the lighting system is on enhancing employee comfort, it is also helping to improve operational efficiency through remote monitoring and maintenance.

(Image: Philips Lighting)

Two thumbs up from employees

“We wanted to create an outstanding environment for our employees. At the beginning of the day the office lights mimic natural daylight, providing a useful energy boost. The light levels decrease until after lunch when we give another boost to help staff over the post-lunch energy dip. Nearly 80% of employees surveyed described the new lighting as better or much better than the previous fluorescent tube lighting, while 60% agreed that it contributed to a place in which they wanted to work,” said Tomáš Michna, senior manager for facility and services at innogy Czech Republic.

“We’ve taken our knowledge of how light physiologically benefits people from successful projects in hospitals and schools and applied it to the offices space. We know that exposure to a certain comfortable bright light setting for one-hour can provide a mild energy stimulus similar to a cup of coffee and supports wakefulness,” said Jiří Tourek, Country Manager Czech Republic at, Philips Lighting. ‘’Similarly, other light settings can aid relaxation or help people to wind down before lunch or going home.”

While the lighting is designed to complement people’s natural circadian rhythms, employees at innogy may, at any time, override the light settings, tailoring the light to their needs or specific work tasks, using a wall-mounted control. This touch-button control enables control of lighting and blinds, allowing workers to personalize their immediate environment to suit their preferences.

(Image: Philips Lighting)

Workplace satisfaction is good for business

High workplace satisfaction positively correlates with high employee engagement. Independent research reveals that workplace satisfaction makes good business sense as disengaged employees cost organizations an average of USD 3,400 a year for every USD 10,000 in annual salary. The lighting at Limuzská, which 56% of employees found to be easy on the eyes, also contributed to employees rating an improvement in their performance following the renovation.

Saving energy by delivering light when and where it’s needed

The installation includes approximately 150 sensors that detect human presence and switch the lights off in a room or area when it is vacated, saving electricity. This combination of energy-efficient LED lighting and controls has enabled innogy to reduce electricity used for lighting by around 50% compared to its previous fluorescent lighting.

Disclaimers of Warranties
1. The website does not warrant the following:
1.1 The services from the website meets your requirement;
1.2 The accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the service;
1.3 The accuracy, reliability of conclusions drawn from using the service;
1.4 The accuracy, completeness, or timeliness, or security of any information that you download from the website
2. The services provided by the website is intended for your reference only. The website shall be not be responsible for investment decisions, damages, or other losses resulting from use of the website or the information contained therein<
Proprietary Rights
You may not reproduce, modify, create derivative works from, display, perform, publish, distribute, disseminate, broadcast or circulate to any third party, any materials contained on the services without the express prior written consent of the website or its legal owner.

Tokushima, Japan - 6 March 2024: Nichia, the world's largest LED manufacturer and inventor of the high-brightness blue and white LED, has started mass production of the new UV-B (308nm) and UV-A (330nm) LEDs in its popular 434 Series packa... READ MORE

New XLamp® S Line LEDs enhance growth, last longer, lower energy costs Horticulture and other forms of agricultural lighting require application-tuned ratios of spectral content, high efficacy and long lifetimes. Whether you are interested... READ MORE