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South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology

                                    array(23) {
  ["id"]=>
  int(18059)
  ["name"]=>
  string(33) "South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology"
  ["slug"]=>
  string(28) "sudtiroler-archaologiemuseum"
  ["challenge"]=>
  string(717) "The Archaeological Museum in Bolzano is famous for its exhibition on the Iceman, better known as Ötzi. With over 300,000 visitors a year, it is one of the most important museums for high Alpine archaeology and provides fascinating insights into life in times gone by. The lighting posed a particular challenge, as it had to meet both the high conservation requirements and the aesthetic presentation of the exhibits. Particularly sensitive finds, especially Ötzi, required precise lighting control in order to protect them optimally and present them effectively at the same time. In addition, the lighting needed to be more flexibly adaptable in order to perfectly showcase changing exhibition scenarios and events."
  ["solution"]=>
  string(1026) "We integrated over 250 DALI luminaires and implemented a fully automatic control system for the archeology museum's lighting control system. Thanks to intelligent time management, different lighting scenes are activated throughout the year without the need for manual intervention. Each luminaire can be dimmed individually to present the exhibits in the best possible light. Pre-programmed operating modes have been developed for special events, which automatically generate the appropriate lighting mood based on a date.

In close cooperation with Andreas Putzer, an expert in high alpine archaeology and author, the lighting parameters were precisely set via the Loxone system. This ensures that the artefacts are neither over-lit nor compromised in terms of conservation. The system also offers a practical error message function: if a luminaire fails, the museum technology department receives an automatic email with the exact location of the fault - a huge relief for an exhibition area of over 1,200 m²." ["partner_quote"]=> string(202) "The Archaeological Museum in Bolzano now benefits from a state-of-the-art and flexible lighting control system that meets both technical and conservation requirements.
It was an exciting project!" ["partner_quote_name"]=> string(12) "Elmar Crepaz" ["partner_quote_position"]=> string(3) "CEO" ["more_info_url"]=> string(0) "" ["preview_image"]=> string(81) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509799-768x512.jpg" ["application_areas"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(8) "lighting" } ["tags"]=> array(0) { } ["project_type"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(6) "office" } ["copyright"]=> NULL ["images"]=> array(7) { [0]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509799-1024x683.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(51) "Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum/flipflop-collective" } [1]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509805-1024x768.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(39) "Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum/Lafogler" } [2]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509811-1024x683.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(46) "Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum/Andreas Tauber" } [3]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509819-1024x768.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(39) "Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum/Lafogler" } [4]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509826-1024x768.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(39) "Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum/Lafogler" } [5]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509833-1024x767.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(44) "Südtiroler Archäologiemuseum/Ochsenreiter" } [6]=> array(2) { ["image"]=> string(82) "https://portal.loxone.com/admin/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/1734509844-1024x768.jpg" ["copyright"]=> string(8) "Elmatics" } } ["country"]=> string(2) "IT" ["city"]=> string(5) "Bozen" ["build_year"]=> string(4) "1913" ["square_meters"]=> string(7) "1200 m2" ["account_data"]=> array(4) { ["id"]=> string(36) "43f75f0f-12c1-4c7e-bf23-065a909fb85a" ["name"]=> string(14) "ELMATICS VGMBH" ["website"]=> string(0) "" ["partner_website"]=> string(38) "/partner/39017-schenna/elmatics-vgmbh/" } ["conference"]=> string(4) "none" ["video"]=> string(0) "" ["fallback"]=> array(8) { ["name"]=> string(33) "South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology" ["challenge"]=> string(717) "The Archaeological Museum in Bolzano is famous for its exhibition on the Iceman, better known as Ötzi. With over 300,000 visitors a year, it is one of the most important museums for high Alpine archaeology and provides fascinating insights into life in times gone by. The lighting posed a particular challenge, as it had to meet both the high conservation requirements and the aesthetic presentation of the exhibits. Particularly sensitive finds, especially Ötzi, required precise lighting control in order to protect them optimally and present them effectively at the same time. In addition, the lighting needed to be more flexibly adaptable in order to perfectly showcase changing exhibition scenarios and events." ["solution"]=> string(1026) "We integrated over 250 DALI luminaires and implemented a fully automatic control system for the archeology museum's lighting control system. Thanks to intelligent time management, different lighting scenes are activated throughout the year without the need for manual intervention. Each luminaire can be dimmed individually to present the exhibits in the best possible light. Pre-programmed operating modes have been developed for special events, which automatically generate the appropriate lighting mood based on a date.

In close cooperation with Andreas Putzer, an expert in high alpine archaeology and author, the lighting parameters were precisely set via the Loxone system. This ensures that the artefacts are neither over-lit nor compromised in terms of conservation. The system also offers a practical error message function: if a luminaire fails, the museum technology department receives an automatic email with the exact location of the fault - a huge relief for an exhibition area of over 1,200 m²." ["partner_quote"]=> string(202) "The Archaeological Museum in Bolzano now benefits from a state-of-the-art and flexible lighting control system that meets both technical and conservation requirements.
It was an exciting project!" ["partner_quote_name"]=> string(12) "Elmar Crepaz" ["partner_quote_position"]=> string(3) "CEO" ["more_info_url"]=> string(0) "" ["video"]=> string(0) "" } }

Fact check

Country
{{getRegion('IT')}}
City
Bozen
Build year
1913
Area
1200 m2
Loxone partner

Challenge

The Archaeological Museum in Bolzano is famous for its exhibition on the Iceman, better known as Ötzi. With over 300,000 visitors a year, it is one of the most important museums for high Alpine archaeology and provides fascinating insights into life in times gone by. The lighting posed a particular challenge, as it had to meet both the high conservation requirements and the aesthetic presentation of the exhibits. Particularly sensitive finds, especially Ötzi, required precise lighting control in order to protect them optimally and present them effectively at the same time. In addition, the lighting needed to be more flexibly adaptable in order to perfectly showcase changing exhibition scenarios and events.

Solution

We integrated over 250 DALI luminaires and implemented a fully automatic control system for the archeology museum's lighting control system. Thanks to intelligent time management, different lighting scenes are activated throughout the year without the need for manual intervention. Each luminaire can be dimmed individually to present the exhibits in the best possible light. Pre-programmed operating modes have been developed for special events, which automatically generate the appropriate lighting mood based on a date.

In close cooperation with Andreas Putzer, an expert in high alpine archaeology and author, the lighting parameters were precisely set via the Loxone system. This ensures that the artefacts are neither over-lit nor compromised in terms of conservation. The system also offers a practical error message function: if a luminaire fails, the museum technology department receives an automatic email with the exact location of the fault - a huge relief for an exhibition area of over 1,200 m².

The Archaeological Museum in Bolzano now benefits from a state-of-the-art and flexible lighting control system that meets both technical and conservation requirements.
It was an exciting project!

Elmar CrepazCEO