LED Track & Linear Lighting Retrofit – Retail & Stores – Cologne
Project Overview
FusionBrite retrofitted a 3,000 sqm Frischemarkt (full-range supermarket with heavy fresh-focus) in Cologne (Köln), North Rhine-Westphalia for RheinFrische Handels GmbH.
The scope covered: open sales floor, chilled perimeter walls (dairy / meat / deli / fruit-vegetable), bakery/pastry zone, and checkout corridor.
The upgrade replaced ageing T8 fluorescent rows and PAR30 halogen accents with a purpose-built mix of LED linear trunking for uniform general light and 3-circuit track + accent spots for vertical merchandising — delivering a 60% reduction in connected lighting load and a net payback of ~14 months after BAFA grant processing.
Background & Regulatory Context
The site is a high-footfall city location where energy performance is no longer just an ESG talking point — it affects margin and financing paperwork:
- Base lighting system dated from the mid-2010s: 2×36W/58W T8 rows on EM ballasts, many tubes yellowed/degraded; perimeter cold zones cycled condensation onto lamp caps and holders.
- Accent layer relied on 50W halogen spots that ran hot, added minor HVAC penalty, and needed ladder-access swaps almost monthly.
- NRW commercial electricity pricing and rising network charges meant “just keeping the lights on” was a visible P&L line — especially with extended opening (07:00–22:00 Mon–Sat, Sunday trading exceptions).
- Compliance drivers:
- DIN EN 12464-1 (illuminance & glare)
- EU Ecodesign / RoHS product-level compliance
- BAFA energy-efficiency grant pathway (capital spend on controlled LED systems with measured saving potential)
Management’s brief was pragmatic: keep ceilings clean, kill glare, make fresh pop, don’t break the schedule, and give us the data pack BAFA expects.
Engineering Challenges
- Perimeter Cold Zones (≈4°C): Existing fittings weren’t truly sealed; micro-corrosion on lampholders caused intermittent flicker under humidity cycling. New gear needed IP54+ sealing, cold-rated drivers, and no exposed screw terminals.
- Ceiling & Beam Constraints: 3.4m–3.6m slab height in centre aisles, slightly lower perimeter soffits; trunking had to stay parallel and straight or the store “feels crooked” to customers (perception matters in food retail).
- EM / Emergency Conversion: Several circuits served emergency escape lighting routes; new drivers had to preserve EM functionality without doubling costs.
- Zero Downtime: Night-only staging (≈22:30–05:30), but the bakery/prep crew starts at 05:00, so every night ended with a clean-floor, tools-gone, full-output check.
- Keep It BAFA-Auditable: No “creative lux” claims — illuminance had to be measured pre- and post-, with luminaire schedules matching the installed bill of materials exactly.
Solution & Product Specification
The design split lighting into two intentional layers — because a pure batten-for-batten swap makes a grocery store look “flat,” while track-only makes it uneven and expensive to run.
Zones & Products Installed
| Zone | Product | Qty | Key Spec |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open aisles / dry goods | FB-LINEAR TRUNK 1200 (micro-prismatic lid) | 102 pcs | 4000K, CRI 85, IP40, DALI-2, EM option on escape routes |
| Chilled perimeter (dairy / meat / produce wall) | FB-LINEAR TRUNK 1200 IP54 (sealed lens, stainless fixings) | 68 pcs | 4000K, CRI 92, cold-rated driver, condensate-safe gasket system |
| Bakery / deli / seasonal promo tables | FB-TRACK RAIL 3-circuit + FB-SPOT 25W (19°/36° interchangeable optics) | 22 spots on 16 m rail | 3000K warm accent, CRI 95, lockable aim |
| Entrance lobby / trolley vestibule | FB-LINEAR MICRO 600 | 14 pcs | 4000K, IP65, robust polycarbonate housing |
Total installed luminaires: 206 fixtures + 22 track spots (track rail routed along soffit lip above deli/bakery for clean shadow lines).
Photometric Targets & Verification
- Sales aisles (dry goods): average maintained ≈500 lx (DIN EN 12464-1 typical sales-floor expectation met with margin; UGR kept <19).
- Fresh perimeter vertical surfaces: local spot boosting to ≈650–800 lx on product faces — this is what makes meat/cheese/produce “look fresh” at eye level.
- Checkout corridor: ≈750 lx task emphasis without over-lighting the rest of the room (sensor-controlled background dim when queue clears).
Verification method (as-built, not simulated):
- Pre-install lux readings logged at grid points
- Post-install lux readings repeated at same grid
- Photo-log submitted with BAFA energy report (kW before/after, operating hours, control strategy)
Controls (where it mattered most)
A DALI-2 sensor cluster was added to:
- Daylight harvesting along the glazed street-front (setpoint 400 lx) so sunny afternoons don’t burn power.
- Presence step-down in early-morning stocking windows (22:00–06:00 low-traffic periods drop to a safe “navigate but not blast” level).
- One cleaning scene key at the back-office panel (100% output for 60 min) so night crew aren’t fighting dimmed light while mopping.
Quantified Results & Compliance
| Metric | Before | After | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Connected Lighting Load | 21.8 kW | 8.7 kW | ✅ 60% reduction |
| Annual Energy Cost* | ~€72,000 | ~€29,000 | ✅ ~€43,000 electricity saved |
| Maintenance (lamp-related call-outs) | ~20/yr | ~4/yr | ✅ ~80% drop |
| DIN EN 12464-1 | Marginal in spots | Documented compliant (grid verified) | ✅ |
| BAFA Grant | — | Processed | ✅ Reimbursement applied to net CAPEX |
*Rough calc basis: local commercial rate ≈ €0.28–0.32/kWh and measured annual lighting operating hours (~4,200 h including dimming/step-downs).
CO₂ reduction: approx. 17 t CO₂e / year based on German grid intensity, logged for RheinFrische’s ESG reporting pack.
Operations team noted a secondary effect worth mentioning: once glare disappeared from the main aisles, staff stopped “tilting heads” while reading shelf-edge labels and price tags — small ergonomics, real throughput.
Strategic Value for Retail & Stores
In German food retail, a lighting upgrade that only cuts kWh is good; a lighting upgrade that protects merchandise presentation while cutting kWh is bankable.
For NRW city stores specifically, the combination of:
- DIN EN 12464-1 (safety/comfort compliance),
- BAFA-eligible spend (grants that shorten payback),
- and a two-layer light system (linear for uniform floor, track for vertical sell-through)
…means the lighting becomes a controlled asset, not a recurring liability. Multi-site operators can standardise the trunking family across locations while letting the track layer adapt to each store’s merchandising character (more bakery, more organic chill, more alcohol/beverage promo, etc.).
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