Tuesday, June 6, 2023
Wednesday, April 26, 2023
Landscape Lighting Company Offers Tips for Illuminating Georgia Wineries

Tasteful Nightscape LED Lighting for Wineries and Vineyards
Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth, GA, designs, installs, and services residential and commercial LED landscape lighting systems in the metro Atlanta area. Residential design and installation services include the primary residence, weekend and vacation homes, and Airbnb or Vrbo rentals. Commercial projects encompass retail businesses, restaurants, professional offices, corporate headquarters, production and manufacturing facilities, government buildings, subdivision entrances, and event venues for weddings, family reunions, corporate outings, and other activities.
Georgia’s robust wine industry: Past and present
Georgia has a rich history of wine production and is home to numerous wineries and vineyards. The American Wineries Guide highlights the robust wine industry in Georgia, stating, “In addition to being one of the largest producers of Muscadine in the U.S., Georgia is also making significant progress with vinifera and French-American hybrid grapes in the cooler, higher elevation northern part of the state. Although Georgia was a major winemaking state in 1900, following prohibition modern winemaking did not return to Georgia until the 1980s with the passage of a farm winery law. The majority of Georgia’s forty-plus wineries are located in the northern part of the state, and nearly all are within a two-hour drive of the Atlanta metropolitan area. Whether you would like to visit a winery that provides beautiful vineyard lodging, has food available to complement its wines, or hosts vineyard weddings, we (American Wineries Guide) make it easy to find the best wine-tasting and touring destinations in Georgia wine country.”

Specifically, a vineyard is where the grapes are grown, usually in orderly rows. A winery is where the ripe grapes are processed, aged, bottled, and distributed as wine. Often, the vineyard and winery are on the same tract of land. Here is where landscape lighting comes into the picture. The winery is usually where people travel, sometimes by busloads, for tours and wine tastings. At the winery, the vintner (the actual winemaker) or a sommelier (an expert with a vast knowledge of various wines) will lead the tastings and instruct guests about the wines included in the event.
Often, the focal point of the winery is a spacious, beautifully landscaped, and well-appointed building. This structure may serve as the processing plant for the winemaking (or vinification) process when the grapes ripen. When not in use, the facility may double as an event venue for weddings, receptions, reveal parties, family reunions, or corporate gatherings.
Tasteful nightscape lighting tips for wineries and vineyards
Landscape lighting can transport the magic, drama, and mystique of the winery into the evening hours when the sun has dipped below the horizon. With the right fixtures, lighting techniques, and color temperature, a winery and its complement of vineyards, accessories, and landscape features can be elevated to aesthetically sublime heights.
Tip #1. Make a grand entrance
Shrouded in mystique and curiosity, wineries are a favorite destination of the inquisitive, the romantic, and the happy wine-taster looking for an award-winning selection. Capture and highlight the mystique and curiosity of the winery with stunning curb appeal. Create high expectations the moment guests drive through the entrance, and then deliver some of the best wines found under the Georgia sun.
Tip #2. Roll out the red carpet with LED low-voltage landscape lighting
Enhance ambiance and elevate anticipation with strategic landscaping from the entrance to the parking lot. Uplight ancient oaks that tower above the winding lane to the main facility. Gently splash the serpentine rock wall quarried from the Lexington-Oglesby Blue Granite Belt.
Tip #3. Strike a nostalgic chord by highlighting items of historical note
Illuminate that antique Farmall F-300 and other vintage farm equipment put out to pasture here and there around the property. The 1948 Dodge B-series pickup, arguably the best-performing and hardest-working farm truck in its heyday, deserves its own spotlight as it rests comfortably under its protective awning.
Tip #4. Water features are a top priority
When nature provides a peaceful stream fed by a cascading waterfall, the natural feature deserves the lighting designer’s attention. Adorn the perimeter of the waterfall with several classic benches and a comfortable footpath well-lighted for safety and security. Feng shui need not suffer.
Tip #5. Cast the actual winery in its best light
The winery is where great grapes become an even better wine. Since, in many instances, the winery doubles as an event venue, frame the edifice in a manner that leaves onlookers awestruck. Just look to Pinterest to see how a simple, rustic barn with dazzling landscape lighting is captivating and breathtaking.
Tip #6. Light for safety and security
Walls, decks, benches, steps, stone paths, and sidewalks possess their nuanced risk hazard and require the skill and trained eye of the lighting designer to make the setting safe without distorting ambiance or creating light pollution.

Tip #7. Go with a “master sommelier” of LED low-voltage landscape lighting.
Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth is, like many of Georgia’s finest wines, the best in class in the metro Atlanta area. Lindsey Rodericks, the company owner and a gifted landscape lighting designer with thirteen years of experience in the industry, can help wineries create a landscape lighting plan that showcases the vineyard and facilities in the best light.
For more information about landscape lighting design and installation, contact Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth by phone at (678) 324-6842 or by email at lindsey@southernlls.com.
Thursday, April 13, 2023
Friday, March 24, 2023
Monday, March 6, 2023
Commercial Landscape Lighting Tips for Acworth, GA, Businesses

How LED Landscape Lighting Can Help Acworth Businesses Get Seen
Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth designs, installs, and services residential and commercial outdoor LED lighting systems in the metro Atlanta area. Landscape lighting can positively impact the visibility and curb appeal of a business.
Commercial Landscape Lighting Tips for Local Businesses
The tips below are designed to help an Acworth, GA, business or other commercial entity reap the full benefit of their location through the use of a professionally designed and installed commercial landscape lighting system.
.png)
Tip #1. Identify existing signage opportunities and make each one stand out with LED low-voltage landscape lighting
In most commercial settings, a business is permitted to display code-compliant signage. Often this signage is limited in size, color, font style, and font size to comply with municipal sign ordinances and any guidelines put in place by the property owner or property management company. Regrettably, commercial signage is often too small to garner much vehicular or pedestrian attention. If the signage or marquis is noticed, features such as logo design and size, brand colors, font color, font type, and font size render the sign unreadable except at very slow vehicle speeds.
Savvy businesses maximize façade advertising space while staying code compliant. Some mercantile and professional complexes offer opportunities beyond façade signage, and these opportunities include streetside marquis with signs from resident businesses. Make sure this signage is lighted with landscape lighting for nighttime visibility. If the property management company will not outfit the marquis with adequate LED low-voltage landscape lighting, forge relationships with fellow tenants, and bring the management company an offer they cannot refuse. By working together, everyone benefits, including the prospective customers or clients who are now able to see and read the marquis that highlights all the outstanding businesses in the retail or professional complex.
Explore the limits of code-compliant signage and highlight with LED low-voltage landscape in the evening and in the morning. If the font size is “up to 8 inches,” make the fonts as large as possible. Avoid serifed fonts. The most readable colors under lights are black on white and dark blue on white, or vice versa. Simple is best; the goal is visibility and readability. Capture the attention of the pre-dawn morning traffic. LED low-voltage landscape lighting costs 80% less than traditional halogen lighting. By programming a morning lighting slot an hour or two before sunrise, a business can win market share from competitors left in the dark.
Tip #2. Create attractive curb appeal with great landscaping
A great landscape attracts attention and creates a positive first impression that can last for months in the mind’s eye of passersby. Once the landscape is in place, light it up with LED low-voltage landscape lighting. Give potential customers or clients something to see on their morning and evening drive-by.
Tip #3. Eliminate distractions and blind spots
Through the strategic use of landscape lighting techniques, a business can enhance visibility, minimize distractions, and eliminate blind spots. Spotlighting focuses attention on signage and key brand assets that identify the company. Landscape lighting also enables a business to highlight products on permanent display. Some façade signage features dimensional lettering, which adds depth to commercial signage. Unfortunately, box letters can create background shadows that render the words unreadable for several hours during the day. Landscape lighting may be able to mitigate shadow distortion during the day. Once the sun sets, landscape lighting can totally eliminate shadows, making signage highly visible and easily read by passing traffic.
Tip #4. Maximize organic advertising opportunities with LED low-voltage landscape lighting
Businesses that effectively target vehicle traffic generate leads, improve sales, and increase profits. Signage and product displays are affordable marketing strategies that can potentially reach every car that passes by the location. Tasteful landscape lighting empowers a business to capture the attention of drivers that pass by the location after dark. The ROI is incredible.
.png)
Tip #5. Contact a team of lighting professionals
At Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth, GA, lighting technicians provide an onsite consultation to discuss improving the visibility, image, and impact of the location with LED low-voltage landscape lighting.
For more information about LED landscape lighting for businesses in the metro Atlanta area, contact Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth by calling (678) 324-6842 or emailing lindsey@southernlls.com.
Tuesday, February 14, 2023
Monday, January 16, 2023
Micro Venue Lighting: LED Landscape Lighting for Backyard Brick Ovens
Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth, GA, designs, installs, and services residential and commercial outdoor LED lighting systems in the Metro Atlanta area. The team of professionals can design a completely new system or make adjustments to an existing system if the lighting needs of the client change due to an addition to the home or landscape, such as the addition of a backyard brick oven.
The origins of the backyard brick oven
The wood-fired brick oven has been found in many ancient cultures throughout human history. According to a leading manufacturer of wood-fired ovens, “Wood-fired brick ovens, also known as Masonry ovens, date back to 4,000 years ago. These ovens are famously known to be derived from the Ancient Roman period, although these ovens were greatly influenced by the Peruvian, Turkish, and Spanish cultures. The Masonry oven, sooner than later, was introduced to the Americas as the Beehive Oven, which was established during their colonial period. The Beehive oven, similar dome-shape to the beehives, was a popular cooking tool until the Industrial Revolution…”

Lighting design considerations
A survey of the various styles, shapes, and sizes of backyard brick ovens is no small undertaking. Backyard brick ovens are popular at all levels. As the price point of the home increases, the artistic and culinary sophistication of this amenity also increases. The backyard brick oven becomes a visual, aesthetic, and culinary centerpiece in some backyards. The rustic Mediterranean look blends with any landscape. The aroma of a pizza wafting through the neighborhood attracts a friendly community of onlookers seeking a slice of piping hot pizza fresh out of the oven. The cuisine, baked to perfection, satisfies any pallet.
Highlighting the aesthetics of the backyard brick oven
The brick oven has evolved into an iconic masterpiece of Mediterranean styling and taste in many metro Atlanta backyards. The rustic rounded shape of the baking dome deserves more than a place in the shadows of the backyard. A well-designed brick oven is often accessed by a paver walkway leading to a similarly cobbled apron surrounding the brick oven. The hardscape may feature a workstation for food preparation, a table, sitting benches, an herb garden, and a water feature. Though compact and intimate, the setting integrates nicely with the surroundings: warm, friendly, and delicious!
Landscape lighting considerations are complex, requiring technical expertise and an eye for taste. The time to consider how to light the feature in a way that enhances and highlights its architectural beauty is during the planning stages prior to construction. The installation of wiring, lighting fixtures, and any water or electrical cables need to be coordinated.
If the brick oven is not a part of the original landscape plan, the lighting designed to enhance the oven will need to be smoothly and beautifully integrated with other landscape lighting features in a way that is complementary rather than competitive. The technical aspects may be challenging, but a tasteful integration may be even more challenging.
Just as the construction of an exquisitely designed backyard brick oven is beyond the skills of most DIY homeowners, so too is the design and installation of a lighting plan that accentuates the beauty and mystique of the rustic Old World pizza oven.
Improving functionality with landscape lighting
Backyard brick ovens are growing in popularity in the Metro Atlanta area. As a new addition to the landscape layout, the feature must compete for a place in an already crowded space. Before investing in a brick oven, consult with a landscape architect for advice on the perfect location of the oven. Safety precautions require units to be at least ten feet away from any structure. Competition with existing hardscapes for a plot of ground often means the oven is more than ten feet away from the home. This distance from the home necessitates the installation of landscape lighting that makes the setting accessible when shadows are long, or the sun has completely set. Existing lighting may reduce the hazard. However, existing lighting may make matters worse. Once the location of the oven is resolved, contact the lighting professionals at Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth, GA, for lighting design and installation that makes the feature beautiful and functional.
Design and install the lighting in coordination with the progress of the landscape installation. If pavers, beds, benches, walls, and water features are involved in the brick oven project, the wiring should be laid down in the proper sequence to prevent portions of the landscape from being damaged during the lighting installation.
Consider the food preparation process involved in cooking in an outdoor brick oven. The process involves close proximity to flames. The desirable cooking temperature is in excess of 700 degrees Fahrenheit, hotter than most electric ovens. Illuminating a workspace with these high temperatures requires strategic spotlighting, the elimination of shadows and glare, and a well-lit food delivery platform. Uneven lighting, glare, a poorly lit tread area near the oven and shadows can lead to freshly cooked pizza ending up on the ground, trips and falls, and burns to the cooks and to bystanders.
The programmable versatility of LED allows the homeowner to instantly adjust the LED lighting to accommodate the food preparation process, safety concerns, and food delivery once the item is removed from the oven. Once everyone is served, the lighting can be adjusted to enhance the experience of eating delicious pizza and sipping a glass of fine wine.

For more information on LED landscape lighting, contact Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth by phone at (678) 324-6842 or by emailing lindsey@southernlls.com.
Marietta Lighting Company Offers a Landscape Lighting Guide for the Holidays
The landscape lighting team at Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Marietta recognizes the significance of the holiday season that rolls around during the last several months of each year. The home becomes a hub of entertainment and activity. Landscape lighting plays a central role in making the home and yard warm, inviting, functional, safe, and secure.
A Landscape Lighting Checklist
This helpful checklist will help Marietta, GA, homeowners maximize curb appeal and create a magical ambiance with LED low-voltage landscape lighting.

#1. Greet guests with inviting curb appeal
Stunning curb appeal is a very powerful influencer any time of the year, but especially during the holiday season. Great curb appeal creates an ambiance that sets the stage for an evening of entertainment, community, and celebration. That positive first impression, cast within just a few seconds of experiencing the beautifully illuminated landscape, melts inhibitions. The total landscape package, skillfully and beautifully lit, issues a warm welcome to guests, invite participation, raises hopeful expectations, and heightens anticipation. Exquisite landscape lighting calms, soothes, and warms the heart. Nightscape lighting is evocative and magical; it can charm, invigorate, and energize. A myriad of visceral and emotional responses accompanies the visual experience of an artfully crafted LED landscape lighting plan.
#2. Highlight any seasonal additions to the landscape
Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and the New Year afford the homeowner ample opportunities to adorn the yard, entranceway, porch, and the home’s façade with seasonal decor. The seasonal accents liven up the landscape, add dimension, and create interest. Some ornamentation may require an additional fixture or two or an adjustment of existing fixtures. When well executed, an illuminated Santa and reindeer scene mesmerizes onlookers, especially children. A tastefully lit creche evokes warm, thoughtful reverence. Landscape lighting enhances the visual power of the scenery.
#3. Spotlight entertainment festivities in the backyard outdoor living space
The holidays bring celebration and entertainment. The guest list may expand beyond the expected number, overtaxing outdoor living spaces with a large number of visitors. Sufficient and well-placed lighting can facilitate functionality, and a few adjustments or additions may be all that is needed. Some venues and focal points of activity to assess for functional lighting include:
- patio
- firepit or fireplace
- grill
- outdoor kitchen (food prep and serving areas)
- backyard brick oven
- swimming pool
- backyard playground
- crowd overflow areas in the backyard
#4. Focus on safety
Prior to an event or gathering involving outside venues and first-time guests, take a few minutes to conduct a nighttime inspection of the primary areas of activity. Items of concern include glare, excessive brightness, blind spots, shadows, defective bulbs, damaged fixtures, and misdirected beams.
Take note of any additions to the landscape or hardscape which have not yet been illuminated. If possible, schedule an appointment to expand the system to include the new additions. Often, the holidays include visits from elderly friends and relatives. Make sure benches and other seating are well-lit. Handrails, steps, and low stone walls that do double-duty as sitting benches need adequate lighting. Walkways with subtle changes in grade or elevation constitute a high-risk hazard for the elderly with low vision, sensitivity to glare, or night blindness. The absence of steps does not necessarily negate the need for lighting. In fact, the need for illumination may increase in order to mitigate the risk factor of a stumble or fall. Consider the temporary installation of high-visibility signage to warn strollers of the upcoming hazard. The signage can be removed once guests have departed.
#5. Beam in on security
During the inspection mentioned above, also consider issues of security. Areas under camera surveillance should be adequately illuminated. Eliminate shadows. Note areas where the glare is so intense that it provides criminals a place to hide. Review the video footage from the inspection. Look for blind spots.
#6. Be aware of light pollution
When making fine adjustments to an existing landscape lighting system or adding fixtures to accommodate new hardscapes, consider the neighbors. Festivities, especially year-end celebrations, can run long into the night and sometimes to the dawn of the next day. Consider dimming or shutting off unneeded zones to reduce the light that may disturb neighbors. Where safety is a factor, keep the lights turned on. Programmable lighting technology affords the homeowner a wide array of lighting options.
Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Marietta, GA, designs, installs, and services LED low-voltage landscape lighting in the metro Atlanta area. The lighting professionals offer a free onsite consultation, and nighttime demonstrations are available for customers ready to move forward with a lighting project. Contact the design specialists at Southern Landscape Lighting Systems to schedule an inspection and evaluation of an existing system, especially before the holidays arrive.

Sunday, December 18, 2022
What Homebuyers Want and How LED Low-Voltage Lighting Can Help Them
Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Alpharetta, GA, designs, installs, and services residential and commercial LED landscape lighting systems in the metro Atlanta area. The lighting team is dedicated to casting homeowners, prospective homebuyers, and professional home builders in the best light possible.
The National Association of Home Builders recently published a summary of a larger study involving 3,247 prospective and current homebuyers. The survey, conducted within the context of the pandemic, yielded key findings that have implications for professional home builders and the residential LED landscape lighting design and installation industry.

Below are some key findings of the study that have a direct bearing on landscape lighting and how landscape lighting can put professional home builders in a better light.
#1. Preferences have changed.
Households with a remote worker and/or virtual students are most likely to be affected by the pandemic: 43% of households with at least one remote worker and one virtual student affirm that their housing preferences have been altered by the pandemic, compared to only 9% of those with neither teleworkers nor virtual students.
The landscape lighting connection: The home has become a terminal for work, school, entertainment, recreation, and community. With more time spent at home, more homebuyers will explore curb appeal improvement options, which include landscape lighting.
#2. Outdoor amenities that expand the outdoor living space figure prominently on the homebuyer’s wish list.
Seventy-five percent or more of homebuyers want the following outdoor features: exterior lighting, a patio, a front porch, a rear porch, and a deck. The desire for other exterior features, including an outdoor kitchen, outdoor fireplace, or built-in grill, increases significantly with a corresponding increase in the price point of the home. Homebuyers are willing to fund projects that expand and enhance outdoor living spaces.
The landscape lighting connection: A patio, deck, outdoor kitchen, or fireplace needs landscape lighting to maximize safety. Also, landscape lighting extends the time available to enjoy outdoor living spaces. Activities can continue well into the evening hours.
#3. Homebuyers want energy efficiency.
Homebuyers are concerned (78%) about the environmental impact of their homes. Over half of homebuyers (57%) are willing to spend an extra $5,000 upfront to save $1,000 per year on utilities.
The landscape lighting connection: Efficient exterior lighting finds its way into the top five most wanted energy-efficient features. Lighting methods that use less energy than traditional bulbs are important to more than 70% of homebuyers. Converting a traditional halogen landscape lighting system to an LED low-voltage landscape lighting system makes complete sense to cost-conscious homebuyers who value sustainability. Currently, LED landscape bulbs last anywhere from 25,000 to 40,000 hours, depending on the situation. Homebuyers can save money while saving the Earth.
#4. Technology is a top priority.
Energy efficiency and home security are top tech priorities. A programmable thermostat, security cameras, video doorbell(s), wireless home security system, and a multi-zone HVAC system top the tech list.
The landscape lighting connection: A landscape lighting system enhances the effectiveness of a security system or other home security technology. Discreet, strategically positioned landscape lighting is necessary if a home security system is to provide the desired protection. Dangerous shadows and poorly lit walking paths can become hazardous.
#5. Homebuyers are conscientious about first impressions.
Homebuyers are thinking about the color of their front door. 24% want a white door, while 17% prefer that the door be brown.
The landscape lighting connection: Careful thought about the color of the front door indicates that the homebuyer is interested in curb appeal and especially the first impression a home evokes. An elegant, professionally designed, and installed LED low-voltage landscape lighting system is a pivotal factor in creating that breathtaking first impression.
#6. Homebuyers are thinking multi-generationally and with an accessibility view.
Multi-generational housing is a distinct preference for minorities.
- 53% of Hispanics
- 50% of African Americans
- 46% of Asians
In terms of accessibility, the top five most wanted features are non-slip floor surfaces and an entrance without steps. Sixty percent of homebuyers see these two amenities as essential or desirable.
The landscape lighting connection: The presence of older family members in the home necessitates that the yard is illuminated enough to be easily navigable. LED landscape lighting also complements accessibility features by making sure that walkways and entrances are safe and well-lit.
#7. Clean and bright are top priorities.
According to the study, the following features came in at the top of the list: “A laundry room and exterior lighting are the two most wanted features in a home (both rated essential or desirable by 87% of buyers). The Most Wanted List also includes two other exterior features: a patio (82%) and a front porch (75%)…”
The landscape lighting connection: Homeowners themselves express great interest in exterior lighting, as well as in patios and porches, which would benefit from the application of a lighting system.
Putting the Homebuyer and the Homebuilder in the Best Light
Since nearly 60% of homebuyers want new home construction, professional homebuilders should consider including LED low-voltage landscape lighting in their building plan to ensure the homebuyer is truly satisfied with the final product. The best time to involve a professional landscape lighting designer in the homebuying or homebuilding process is at the very beginning of the process when negotiations are taking place, and plans are being drawn.

Friday, December 16, 2022
Thursday, December 8, 2022
LED Landscape Lighting for Assisted Living Centers in Marietta, GA
The team at Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Marietta designs and installs outdoor LED lighting systems for a wide variety of applications. One such application is the installation of landscape lighting to enhance the beauty and safety of the outdoor facilities at an assisted living community.
The 2020 census reports that there are approximately 55 million Americans over the age of 65. Every day in the US, 10,000 people celebrate this milestone in their lives. Continuing care retirement communities meet the growing needs of this aging demographic.

The NIH goes on to describe more aspects of assisted living: “Assisted living residents usually live in their apartments or rooms and share common areas. They have access to many services, including up to three meals a day; assistance with personal care; help with medications, housekeeping, and laundry; 24-hour supervision, security, and on-site staff; and social and recreational activities. Exact arrangements vary from state to state.”
Georgia has almost 700 assisted living centers, and nearly half of these facilities are in the greater Atlanta area. Acworth, Alpharetta, and Marietta are dotted with numerous continuing-care retirement communities, many of which provide assisted living services. Nearly 13% of Marietta residents are over the age of 65.
Assistive lighting for assisted living
Many residents in continuing care and assisted living centers to enjoy a high level of independent living and mobility. These elder care communities offer exercise and recreational venues ranging from hiking trails and walking tracks to paved walkways and sitting areas with benches. Each venue accommodates one or more levels of independence and mobility. LED low-voltage landscape lighting provides assistive lighting at assisted living centers without compromising aesthetics. Landscape lighting not only expands safe access to venues after dark but also enhances aesthetic beauty.
Below are some practical applications for facility and grounds maintenance managers to consider when evaluating the safety, security, functionality, and aesthetics of the elder care facility.
Ramps and rails
Steps limit or prevent accessibility to residents in a wheelchair or using a walker. A knee or hip replacement can make climbing or descending steps risky. In place of steps, architects have incorporated gentle grades or constructed ramps. Eliminating steps does not forego the need to illuminate the sloped areas. Adequately bright path lighting assists the resident in discerning depth, which is necessary to prevent overbalance and a potential fall. Railings are very important in both upslopes and downslopes. On the upslope, the railing enables the resident to pull their way up the slope. On the downslope, the railing stabilizes the resident, preventing overbalance. A simple, well-lit bench at both the top and bottom of the incline adds a measure of safety as well as a nice aesthetic.
Steps and rest stops
Since a continuing care retirement center includes residents with a full range of mobility, some steps may be included in the landscape of the facility. These steps should be free of shadows, and glare should be kept to a minimum or eliminated. Illuminated handrails provide an extra measure of security in case a resident loses their grip. A lighted bench for rest and recovery is important in areas where physical exertion may leave a resident in need of a brief rest.
Landscape lighting for the immobile
Once the sun goes down, mobility is restricted for many residents by choice or by physical limitations. Many continuing care residential communities (CCRCs) have made beautiful landscaping a top priority. Beautiful gardens, fabulous water features and statuary, meandering walkways, and magnificent trees festoon the landscape. This landscape can be experienced in all its glory after the sun sets with the help of a skilled landscape lighting artisan. Many residential retirement communities are on the outskirts of suburbs and are often visited by ample wildlife when darkness falls. Deer, rabbits, raccoons, skunks, and wild boar will amble through the gated neighborhoods, industrial parks, and even CCRCs. LED landscape lighting enables all residents, including the infirm, to enjoy the nocturnal antics of indigenous wildlife.
Other areas that would stand to benefit from LED low-voltage landscape lighting include:
- Recreational areas
- Dark or shadowed spaces during the daytime hours
- Therapeutic lighting (mood enhancement, sundowning, sleep enhancement)
- Lighting signage and curb appeal
- Landscaping for a robust nightlife
The metro Atlanta LED low-voltage lighting company offers an onsite, in-person consultation. Be sure to inquire about the onsite nighttime demonstration. A beautiful landscape deserves to be enjoyed, especially after sunset.

Landscape Lighting Company Explains Lighting Types and Techniques
The team at Southern Landscape Lighting Systems of Acworth designs installs and services residential and commercial outdoor lighting systems in the metro Atlanta area. The company offers a nighttime demonstration so customers can have an idea of how LED low-voltage landscape lighting will impact the visual aesthetic of the home and landscape.
The Aesthetic Pleasures of LED Low-Voltage Landscape Lighting
A well-lit walking path evokes images that are elegant and other-worldly. A well-designed and creative LED low-voltage lighting design and installation can transform any ordinary and mundane landscape, backyard, or front yard into a magical getaway that brings visual, mental, and emotional peace, relief, and refreshment. The enjoyment experienced in the evening wandering the landscape is unmatched and never grows old. Almost as pleasing as roaming the well-illuminated yard is showing it off to friends and family.

Why Install Landscape Lighting
Below is an in-depth look at the advantages of landscape lighting.
1. Enhance safety around the yard.
A well-lit pathway is comfortable to navigate, especially for the elderly person who may experience difficulty seeing in the dim, dusk lighting. The loss of contrast affects depth perception, which can make navigating a gentle incline or a set of steps perilous and frightening. Illuminating walls, guardrails, and seating areas can improve orientation.
2. Transform the backyard into a retreat.
Color temperature, light brightness, and positioning, along with beam width and angle, can instantly create an ambiance that gives the yard a more composed and relaxed feel, much like a resort or retreat.
3. Draws attention to the landscape features most valued or appreciated by the homeowner.
A custom mural from a regional artist, a signature statue from a renowned sculptor, an antique farm implement, a fishpond brimming with award-winning koi, a swimming pool, a putting green, or an illuminated play station for the grandchildren, or a meandering path lined with country rock from the Georgia mountains may be featured attractions in a landscape furnished with a well-designed landscape lighting system. Custom programming capabilities allow the homeowner to create settings and showcase individual elements in the yard.
4. Create a new and original aesthetic.
Fixtures come in a variety of shapes, styles, and colors to accommodate individual tastes and preferences.
5. Improve home value.
According to the National Association of Home Builders, almost 9 out of ten homebuyers rate exterior lighting as essential and highly desirable. A captivating LED low-voltage landscape lighting system can have a positive ROI.
Different Types of Outdoor Lights
The selection of landscape lighting fixtures is not a one-size-fits-all approach. Options abound. Here are some popular examples: uplights, downlights, path lights, deck and patio lights, wall lights, and hardscape lights.
Lighting Techniques
- Path lighting makes walkways, paths, and stairs safe while adding a warm and inviting atmosphere to the location.
- Uplighting is perfect for drawing attention to a distinctive architectural feature of the home or an element in the yard. The boulders, trees, or the side of the house are prime subjects for uplighting.
- Downlighting can be used to brighten an entire area of the yard and improve overall visibility. Moonlighting, a form of downlighting, is used in a tree to make branches and leaves appear as shadows.
- Deck and patio lighting are akin to downlighting. The light fixtures are more prominent. Consideration should be given to style, size, and finish as a means to accentuate the color palette of the deck or patio. Used properly, this lighting technique splashes sitting areas with a liberal amount of light to illuminate faces and enhance social interaction.
- Hardscape lighting focuses on walls, steps, pavers, water features, boulders, and firepits. This technique spotlights the object and is employed to light an outdoor kitchen island.
- Wall lighting involves fixtures that are engineered to light up walls, and these fixtures may be installed in the walls. This technique creates a designer feel for the spaces where this application is in use.



.png)
.png)
.png)