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Boston Herald - July 15, 2008
Fall festival to illuminate Hub landmarks
By Donna Goodison | Tuesday, July 15, 2008 | http://www.bostonherald.com | Business & Markets
Landmark Boston buildings and bridges will be illuminated to show off their architectural splendors at night for the city?s first lighting festival this fall.
During ?IlluminaleBoston08,? teams of 30-plus lighting designers will light up South Station, Rowes Wharf, 175 Federal St., the Custom House Tower, the Flour and Grain Exchange and the Congress Street, Northern Avenue, Evelyn Moakley and Summer Street bridges.
The Oct. 1-5 festival, which will highlight creative and energy-efficient lighting, is the brainchild of Hub lighting designer Lana Nathe, of Light Insight Design Studio in Boston. It?s timed to coincide with other ?Go Green? activities planned for the Oct. 4 inaugural celebration of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway. The lighting displays, some of which will be audited for their environmental impact, will be turned on from 5 p.m. to midnight each day.
?The night imagery of this city is one of the reasons why we?re doing this,? Nathe said. ?If you go to Europe, their cities are glowing, and the jewels of their historical buildings are illuminated. Boston has that charm.?
Nathe modeled the Boston event after Luminale. Held every two years in Frankfurt during the Light+ Building trade fair, the German festival attracts more than 100,000 visitors to see 220 illuminations and 180-plus events.
While some Boston lighting displays will simply illuminate a structure?s architectural elements, others will tilt toward the theatrical with animated lighting and light-emitting diodes (LED) that change colors.
?The Custom House will be in its warm glow originally like it was in the ?80s, but it?s going to be more with energy-efficient materials,? Nathe said. ?The Northern Avenue bridge will be interactive, and people will walk across the bridge and trigger lights.?
Some featured structures are on festival partner Light Boston Inc.?s list of candidates for permanent lighting, and Nathe hopes some of the lighting will remain in place after the festival ends. ?When the lights go out, we want that energy of ?Wow, that?s nice, we want to focus on this,? ? said Nathe, who envisions the festival becoming a regular Hub event.
?It supports our general program of lighting the historic sights of Boston,? said Ben Colburn, Light Boston?s president. ?Our hope is that this type of event shows that lighting can be fun and also bring an economic benefit to the city.?
The participating lighting design teams are donating their time, but the festival group has set a $300,000 fund-raising goal to defray equipment costs. Excess funds will benefit Light Boston.
An updated festival Web site will be available in about a week at www.illuminaleboston.com.
Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/business/general/view.bg?articleid=1107064