The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How Atlanta Botanical Garden lights up for holidays for less

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

The profusion of multicolor­ed lights in the Garden Lights, Holiday Nights display at the Atlanta Botanical Garden can boggle the mind.

There are tunnels of color, stars in the trees and smooth, strange, glowing geometric solids, like lighted Christmas ornaments, perched on the Great Lawn.

Adorned with almost 2 million bulbs, the garden’s yearly light show is one of the most popular attraction­s in the city.

It’s a Clark Griswold riot of selfindulg­ence, but in these energycons­cious times, is it also an unfortunat­e squanderin­g of electrical power?

Actually, not so much. The Garden Lights display, which remains open through Jan. 7, is engineered

unfortunat­e squanderin­g of electrical power?

Actually, not so much. The Garden Lights display, which remains open through Jan. 7, is engineered to sip, rather than guzzle, at the grid.

First, the garden uses LED lights almost exclusivel­y, which are 80 percent more efficient than incandesce­nt bulbs. “We really don’t use much of the old ones anymore,” said Mary Pat Matheson, the garden’s president and CEO, estimating that 95 percent of the bulbs in the garden are LED.

The garden also buys its power through a “green” energy program, which supports solar and biomass power generation.

“What you’re doing is buying credits” at a slightly higher price than the cost of convention­al energy, Matheson said.

The expenditur­e is appropriat­e, she said. The garden is dedicated to conservati­on, and is acutely aware of the problems created by fossil fuel-generated power, which contribute­s to climate change and the loss of many plant species. “We’re dealing with record-breaking fires in North Georgia and throughout the Southeast; record-breaking drought; a record-breaking hot summer, and these are all impacts of climate change,” Matheson said.

“For us to pay a little bit more, those are the tradeoffs that we need to do as a society. We need to watch our energy use, and do it in a way that’s sustainabl­e.”

LED bulbs also offer a flexibilit­y that makes the display on the Great Lawn particular­ly hypnotic.

Those “Orchestral Orbs” blink on and off, brighten and dim and change color to a menu of prerecorde­d music. The Botanical Garden’s display isn’t the only holiday light show that aims to economize on power.

For several years, the 8 million-bulb Fantasy in Lights display at Callaway Gardens in Pine Mountain (now celebratin­g its 25th anniversar­y) has been replacing old bulbs with LED lights, and is now about 99 percent LED, according to spokespers­on Rachel Crumbley.

The park hopes to inspire visitors to do the same with their own home displays. “The more that we do it, the more common it becomes,” she said. The lighting display at Stone Mountain Park is also virtually 100 percent LED lights, including the bulbs on the 275-foot tree atop the granite monolith, according to spokespers­on Jeanine Jones. “We moved to LED lights a few years ago.”

At the Botanical Garden, setting a good example is part of the attraction’s mission. The garden hopes to encourage some of the 165,000 who will visit the light show to adopt the same approach to minimizing impact.

“We’re a green organizati­on,” Matheson said. “We couldn’t conceive of doing a light show that was not

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA BOTANICAL GARDEN ?? The “Orchestral Orbs” on the Great Lawn at the Atlanta Botanical Garden shift colors, changing to the beat of a prerecorde­d menu of holiday tunes, including “Sleigh Ride” and “Baby It’s Cold Outside.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA BOTANICAL GARDEN The “Orchestral Orbs” on the Great Lawn at the Atlanta Botanical Garden shift colors, changing to the beat of a prerecorde­d menu of holiday tunes, including “Sleigh Ride” and “Baby It’s Cold Outside.”
 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA BOTANICAL GARDEN ?? Garden Lights, Holiday Nights at the Atlanta Botanical Garden wraps the garden’s popular daytime attraction­s in wreaths of LED lights, including this Ice Goddess, with her blue and white flowing tresses.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA BOTANICAL GARDEN Garden Lights, Holiday Nights at the Atlanta Botanical Garden wraps the garden’s popular daytime attraction­s in wreaths of LED lights, including this Ice Goddess, with her blue and white flowing tresses.
 ??  ?? The holiday light show at the Atlanta Botanical Garden, one of the most popular in the city, utilizes LED lights and “green” energy, to reduce its energy footprint.
The holiday light show at the Atlanta Botanical Garden, one of the most popular in the city, utilizes LED lights and “green” energy, to reduce its energy footprint.

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