Pontiac installs LED streetlights, expects big savings

It's getting cheaper to keep the lights on in Pontiac, at least since the city has finished installing its first LED streetlights.

The LEDs are part of the $2 million reconstruction that took place this summer. The project rebuilt 1 mile of Baldwin Avenue between Cesar Chavez Avenue and Montcalm Street, just northwest of downtown. That includes replacing the road, sidewalks and 36 light polls.

LED lights are going in all of the new cobra-head street lamps. The LEDs cost $21,000 and are partially funded by federal and state grants.

The 36 lights are expected to significantly cut expenses because LEDs are more energy-efficient and longer-lasting. LEDs typically cut electric bills in half because they use less energy. They mostly produce light that is visible to the human eye. Normal incandescent lights produce a significant amount of ambient light that isn't. They also last much longer.

"It really cuts down on the maintenance cost," says Allan E Schneck, director of the department of public works for the city of Pontiac.

Oxford-based Relume Technologies and its distributor Lumeco provided the LEDs. The company also provided the LEDs for Ann Arbor's downtown.

The technology is already widely used in traffic lights, TVs and brake lights for cars; as well as those expensive flashlights you find at REI. Ann Arbor is in the process of installing them in all its downtown streetlights. Those lights are expected to pay for themselves through energy savings within 4.2 years.

Ann Arbor is also looking to eventually install LEDs in all of its streetlights within the next few years. Other cities like Ferndale, Wyandotte and Ypsilanti are seriously considering similar options.

Source: Allan E Schneck, director of the department of public works for the city of Pontiac
Writer: Jon Zemke
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