| News
Article
for October 7, 2004
Vincent Thomas Bridge about to see the light? After years
of delays, the grass-roots effort to outline the San Pedro landmark could
be completed by December. Project originally started
in 1988.

By
Donna Littlejohn
Daily Breeze
Will San Pedro finally see the light?
After more than 16 years of delays, preliminary work is under way to
install decorative blue LED lights on San Pedro's Vincent Thomas Bridge.
The light fixtures will begin to go up in about two weeks.
But will the bridge be lighted in time to celebrate the bridge's 41st
anniversary on Nov. 15 as planned?
Probably not.
"There was a little glitch with Caltrans," said Los Angeles
City Councilwoman Janice Hahn. "It sounds like the bridge will be
lit in early December."
The latest problems involved repairs needed for the bridge's
travelers -- the platforms used to move workers around the bridge.
Hahn said plans to fix the equipment have been expedited since she visited
the director of the California Department of Transportation in Sacramento
and stressed the importance of the $800,000 bridge lighting project to
the community.
The installation is being done by Pier Electric in conjunction with other
agencies.
Two South Bay companies -- Ledtronics of Torrance and FarLight of Wilmington
-- will provide the energy-efficient lighting along the roadway and cables
on the 1.1-mile-long local landmark.
"This will be a great showcase," said Robert Tudhope, president
of FarLight, an 8-year-old business. "We want to do it right and
we want it to be everything it can be. You see the bridge in movies and
television."
While a May 2002 trial run using three lights prompted some to question
whether the LEDs will be very visible, experts say that with the number
of lights multiplied -- about 160 altogether -- the project will work.
"It will have a wide field of viewing and a 180-degree distribution
pattern, so you'll see it from all sides," Tudhope said.
Jordon Papanier, marketing manager for Ledtronics, said even the test
lights were visible from Friendship Park. The blue lights, he said, "should
stand out well against all the yellow light in the harbor."
The money was raised through individual donations as well as funding
provided by corporations and the port and city of Los Angeles.
The bridge lighting project started in 1988 as a grass-roots community
effort to outline the span linking San Pedro to Terminal Island with
traditional electric "twinkle lights."
The project, however, encountered numerous unexpected setbacks through
the years.
Most recently, environmental concerns arose over a new design scrapping
the small lights in favor of installing aggressive laser beams pointing
skyward.
Environmentalists said the vertical lights would endanger migrating birds.
The problem was solved when Louis Dominguez, president of the Vincent
Thomas Bridge Lighting Committee, suggested going back to the simpler
original idea of outlining the bridge with small lights, but this time
using solar power combined with new LED technology.
LEDs -- light emitting diodes -- use about 12 times less power than traditional
lights. They radiate very small but brilliant light and are being increasingly
used for traffic signals, computer displays and control panels.
The lights can last tens of thousands of hours and are impervious to
heat, cold, shock and vibration.
And with the solar power component, the Vincent Thomas Bridge lighting
project will be a model of environmentally friendly technology in California,
Dominguez said.
Glass-paneled, interactive kiosks highlighting bridge history, LED technology
and the names of those who donated $100 or more to the project will be
included in the first leg of San Pedro's new waterfront promenade near
the Vincent Thomas Bridge, which was named for the area's former assemblyman.
A community celebration will be held to turn on the lights for the first
time, Hahn said.
Originally, the project was expected to cost $300,000 and be completed
in time for the bridge's 30th anniversary in November 1993.
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For Technical Information Contact:
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E-Mail: webmaster@ledtronics.com
Link to: Daily
Breeze
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