Skip to main content

Signify’s LEDs for Dublin tunnel

Lighting specialist Signify has equipped the 9km-long Dublin Port Tunnel in Ireland with energy efficient LED lighting for all the route’s 1,800 light points. The quality of lighting for drivers in the tunnel improved from CRI25 to CRI70
August 1, 2023 Read time: 2 mins

 

Since the end of 2006, Dublin Port Tunnel has provided a link to the wider motorway network between Dublin Port and the M50 motorway, routing heavy goods transport quickly, quietly and safely away from city and residential areas. Contractors replaced the existing Philips WRTL SON-T lighting – installed 17 years ago - with LED lights which dramatically reduced the energy needed to keep the lights on. Installers made use of the existing high-quality housings which were all retested and CE marked to current standards.

Philips METIS 2816 LED insert trays were fitted. As the new lights were made to perfectly fit the existing fittings, installation could be completed with minimal disruption to road users. Installers worked during late night and early morning hours over five weeks. Each lantern took just five minutes to strip out and replace. Reusing materials also kept the project’s capital expense to a minimum, saving an estimated €3 million compared to a new installation.

Signify says that the upgrade has achieved up to 60% reduction in electricity use, based on 2022 rates - the equivalent of the electricity consumed by up to 300 Irish households. Over the coming five years, the project is expected to save upwards of €4 million in electricity costs. The project is part of the Irish government’s energy efficiency plans and was partially funded through the European Green Deal. Tunnel maintenance operator ERTO was instructed by Transport Infrastructure Ireland to find a solution that would reduce energy costs and improve the quality of light in the tunnel. Signify says that its LED retrofit solution was selected for its ease of replacement and impressive cost savings, which are especially significant in the context of the current energy crisis.

“The replacement of the original SON lamps with LED inserts is a huge step towards reducing the carbon emissions, energy consumption and future maintenance of the Dublin Port Tunnel,” said Patrick O’Hanlon, senior engineer at Transport Infrastructure Ireland.

“With public lighting accounting for 24% of Dublin Council’s energy expenditure, energy efficiency projects like this one can make an enormous positive impact,” said Dermot Deely, managing director at Signify Ireland. “Through a relatively simple upgrade, we’ve been able to improve light quality, cost, maintenance, and sustainability for Dublin Port Tunnel. We are particularly proud to have supported these environmental goals while giving a second life to many of the materials that were already in place.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Scotland to trial an all-electric road gritter unit from Bucher
    November 15, 2019
    Transport for Scotland will be trialling an all-electric gritter unit from Swiss company Bucher Municipal along the Forth Bridges this winter. The Electra 100% Electric Gritter: SEIV 19 – 350 is a version of Bucher’s Phoenix Electra in which a 48V electrical system replaces the usual hydraulic systems. It is powered by a lithium battery and brushless motors with dedicated and integrated inverter. Bucher says that the set-up avoids power losses and allows independent and proportional energy absorptions and
  • Smartphone solutions assure paving quality at a lofty height
    April 1, 2022
    Road construction project with digital documentation and temperature monitoring by Vögele
  • World’s largest bridge deck for KAIA expansion
    December 16, 2013
    A bespoke formwork solution from RMD Kwikform is playing a key role in creating the largest ever airport cast bridge deck as part of the multi-billion dollar expansion of King Abdulaziz International Airport near Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The firm is also a leading player in the creation of arterial tunnels under the airport’s elevated roads, another key part of the project’s first phase works due for completion in 2014. Guy Woodford reports
  • IRF World Congress: Safety through sustainability
    October 17, 2024
    Be sustainable, but above all be safe, was the theme of the first day of the three-day IRF World Congress in Istanbul, Turkiye. David Arminas reports.