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Many companies that now have no difficulty in accepting cleaning as a significant and legitimate cost centre in offices still would not consider lighting in the same context. Indeed, some property managers seem to believe that maintaining a lighting system entails no more than the replacement of lamps as they fail. What is required is programmed maintenance to inspect, clean and ‘group relamp’ the lighting fittings on a routine basis. Not only does this ensure that a proper return is made on the investment in the system, but that it produces what it was designed to produce.
Many companies that now have no difficulty in accepting cleaning as a significant and legitimate cost centre in offices still would not consider lighting in the same context. Indeed, some property managers seem to believe that maintaining a lighting system entails no more than the replacement of lamps as they fail. What is required is programmed maintenance to inspect, clean and ‘group relamp’ the lighting fittings on a routine basis. Not only does this ensure that a proper return is made on the investment in the system, but that it produces what it was designed to produce.
PLANNED LIGHTING MAINTENANCE FOR OFFICES
Walker, Bill (author)
Facilities ; 6 ; 16-19
1988-12-01
4 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
The case for planned lighting maintenance
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