Telstra HQ: VIC, Australia

SMART SENSOR QTY: 8,000

KEY PROJECT DELIVERABLES: PLUG-AND-PLAY LIGHTING CONTROL | SMART-PHONE OPTIMISATION

The home of Telstra for over 25 years, 242 Exhibition St is underwent major upgrade works, in collaboration with owners Investa, to support Telstra's transition to Future Ways of Working. This initiative saw next generation working solutions enabling business improvement and transformation, making employees and the working environment more dynamic, integrated and collaborative than ever.

The Organic Response solution facilitated this transition, offering a more flexible, agile and comfortable working environment, whilst delivering significant sustainability benefits. There is also deep engagement with next generation IoT services that can be delivered on the lighting control platform.

The Brief:

To deliver an  “LED upgrade with wireless lighting control as part of Telstra’s broader workplace transformation vision for efficient space that enhances agility and innovation. Telstra was looking for a control system for it’s home (last 25 years) which would be able to; increase energy efficiency; space efficiency; future workplace design with data driven changes; and future proof lighting control system”.

Project Overview:

INSTALLATION:

Organic Response Lighting Control System was deployed in all areas of this upgrade project with the exception of central area across 40 floors. Each floor had an average of 250 integrated or detached sensor nodes. The luminaire were made capable of future upgrades with RF backpacks installed for future data driven workspace utilization.

TECHNOLOGICAL BENEFITS

  • Distributed intelligence

  • Plug’n’play based avg. lighting power consumption 2W/m²

  • Savings of $3 per m² per annum off energy bills

  • No ongoing maintenance costs

  • Absence of control wiring and flexibility of configuration variations

  • Absence of requirement for specialised contractor for ongoing modifications

  • Easy upgradability for future data driven workplace utilisation