Lab[au], a design firm based out of Belgium, has installed windows with advanced lighting technology in a building in Brussels. Every night there are light shows at the Dexia Towers, where 4,200 of the 6,000 windows on the building are lit up with the help of 150,000 leds.
CR Blog explains how the lighting techology works:
“At the bottom of each window is a rail fitted with an equal number of red, green and blue leds, allowing any window to be lit in any colour. Thus, each window behaves like a pixel in the giant screen that is the building’s façade, displaying images and graphics that can be seen from across the city, courtesy of Brussels-based studio LAb[au].”
Dexia, the bank owning the buildings, has made a point not to rely solely on their futuristic technology to gain people’s attention. They work with Lab[au] (the Laboratory for architecture and urbanism) to make sure each light show is original and exciting.
Since the buildings first light release, Lab[au] has created an interactive touch panel for the public “at which members of the public could interact with the tower’s lights in real time, creating a composition of lines and colour using a touch-screen. (CR Blog)”
For more information and photos on the Dexia Towers and Lab[au], make your way over to CR Blog.
Tags: architecture, dexia tower, interactive, lab[au], lighting, lights, pixel, touch screen, urbanism, windows












