L&S America Online   Subscribe
Advertise
Home Lighting Sound AmericaIndustry News Contacts
NewsNews
NewsNews

-Today's News

-Last 7 Days

-Theatre in Review

-Business News + Industry Support

-People News

-Product News

-Subscribe to News

-Subscribe to LSA Mag

-News Archive

-Media Kit

Pharos Architectural Controls and London After Dark

From the River Thames to the city's skyline, Pharos technology is embedded across a wide range of London's architectural identity.

Light plays a central role in defining London's night-time identity, revealing its architecture, public spaces, cultural venues, commercial centers, and transport hubs. Behind many of these illuminated environments sits Pharos Architectural Controls, whose intelligent lighting control systems underpin some of the capital's most recognizable night-time visuals.

From the River Thames to the city's skyline, Pharos technology is embedded across a wide range of London's architectural identity. The result is not a single installation, but a city-wide presence -- a connected influence shaping how London is experienced after dark.

Across London, Pharos control systems have been specified for landmark lighting schemes spanning infrastructure, architecture, and public realm environments. These include globally recognized icons such as Tower Bridge, the Old Royal Naval College, The Shard, and the London Eye, as well as major cultural, commercial, and civic destinations across the city.

Tower Bridge stands as one of London's most recognizable illuminated structures, forming part of a wider network of Pharos-controlled lighting schemes along the River Thames. Across the river corridor, several landmark bridges, including Waterloo Bridge, Blackfriars Bridge, Millennium Bridge, Southwark Bridge and London Bridge, incorporate sophisticated lighting control systems that enable coordinated illumination through the heart of the city.

The Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, part of the Maritime Greenwich UNESCO World Heritage Site, is another key riverside landmark where lighting control has been introduced. Working within a heritage setting along the Thames, Pharos controls support a lighting scheme that enhances the site's iconic domes and waterfront presence, enabling subtle, responsive illumination that respects the historic fabric while offering opportunities for dynamic evening experiences.

The Shard still stands as one of the most prominent uses of Pharos control technology on London's skyline. Its facade lighting system relies on networked control to manage dynamic illumination across the building's tapered form. Visible across the capital, the installation demonstrates how lighting control can be applied at an architectural scale, enhancing one of London's most globally recognizable buildings.

The London Eye on London's Southbank is a defining city landmark in motion, relying on Pharos control systems to deliver synchronized illumination across its structure. Throughout the year, it provides dynamic lighting displays for major events, celebrations, and campaigns, demonstrating how intelligent control can manage complex lighting schemes on a challenging, moving architectural landmark.

The Southbank district is home to some of London's most visited cultural institutions featuring Pharos technology for their lighting displays, including the Southbank Centre, National Theatre and OXO Tower. Within this riverside stretch, architectural lighting plays a significant role in shaping the area's evening character, contributing to a continuous cultural and visual identity along the Thames.

Alongside these established cultural destinations, regeneration projects across the capital are reshaping London's night-time environment, creating new opportunities for architecture, public realm, and lighting design to converge.

The regeneration of Battersea Power Station has created one of London's most ambitious mixed-use destinations, where architecture and visitor experience intersect. Within this setting, Lift 109, located inside one of the building's iconic chimneys, offers a fully immersive lighting and audio experience. At the heart of the installation, the Pharos control technology supports dynamic sequences that transform the ascent through the chimney into a narrative journey of light, anticipation and reveal.

In West London, Wembley Stadium and its surrounding infrastructure form part of a major entertainment and events district. Lighting installations across this area - including the iconic Wembley Arch, the pedestrian underpass at Bobby Moore Bridge, and Union Park, Wembley Park's first major public green space in over 150 years -- demonstrate the role of intelligent control in shaping large-scale, high-traffic environments for global audiences and major events.

Pharos technology is also present across some of London's most recognizable retail and civic destinations, including Harrods, Selfridges, Carnaby Street and Westfield Stratford City. In each of these locations, lighting plays a key role in shaping identity, atmosphere and visitor experience, with intelligent control enabling dynamic facades and curated night-time presentations that respond to seasons, events and brand moments.

Elsewhere in the capital, landmark cultural and public buildings such as the Palace of Westminster, Somerset House, Alexandra Palace and the Natural History Museum demonstrate the use of lighting control within heritage and visitor-focused settings.

At Heathrow Airport, Pharos control systems are deployed across terminal environments where lighting must adapt to different operational requirements. These include responding to passenger movement, supporting retail and commercial spaces, enhancing art installations, and complementing the surrounding architectural design. Within this highly complex transport setting, intelligent control enables flexible lighting strategies across large-scale interior and exterior spaces.

Together, these projects highlight the breadth of Pharos installations across London, demonstrating the scale, versatility and reach of Pharos technology within the capital's built environment.

Ryan Sainsbury, regional sales manager, UK, Ireland, Benelux, and Northern Europe, at Pharos Architectural Controls says, "London's landmark lighting installations demand robust, flexible, and highly responsive control systems that can perform reliably at scale. It's rewarding to see Pharos technology specified across such a wide range of the capital's most recognizable projects, supporting dynamic lighting environments that help define the city's night-time identity."

These installations are more than large-scale projects; they highlight an important trend. When lighting becomes part of a city's identity, rock-solid reliability at architectural scale is essential, and creative ambition must be supported by technical precision.

(Pharos adds, "Several of these projects were installed 20 years ago and continue to be powered by Pharos controllers today. We're confident that most of the remaining installations referenced in this article remain Pharos-controlled, although it's possible some may have undergone refurbishments or system upgrades of which we are not aware.")

WWWwww.pharoscontrols.com


(14 July 2026)

E-mail this story to a friendE-mail this story to a friend

LSA Goes Digital - Check It Out!

  Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on Facebook

LSA PLASA Focus