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Silencing the harsh sounds of thermally-active buildings

By | February 16, 2012, 3:06 AM PST

Thermally activated buildings are a staple of modern eco-efficient design. They retain heat and keep things cool through the use of slabs - often concrete - that also form the core of the building. That leaves a lot of exposed surfaces that can lead to disquieting, echoey noise levels undermining the health and productivity of workers.

Now, two industrial behemoths want to soften the ruckus. You could call them the the Gentle Giants. Holland’s Royal Philips Electronics and France’s Saint-Gobain are teaming to offer Soundlight Comfort - acoustic panels that hang from the ceiling to absorb sound and, at the same time, provide energy efficient LED lighting.

The panels come from the Ecophon Group at Saint-Gobain, the construction materials company headquartered outside Paris. The integrated LEDs are from Philips Lighting, a division of Eindhoven-based Philips. For Philips, the partnership marks another in a series of corporate collaborations. Last month, Philips and German chemical company BASF said they had developed a transparent car roof that allows daylight through and becomes an interior light at night.

While some lighting experts complain that LEDs emit harsh light, Philips and Saint-Gobain say that their product delivers “good quality white light.” They were short on details, and did not provide a price.

Still Soundlight Comfort looks and sounds like another solid burst of green in the “green building” movement. Now if only those slabs that the panels are dampening came from newfangled low-carbon cement, rather than from the conventional CO2-intensive cement making processes. Companies including the UK’s Novacem, California’s Calera, and others are working on it. More on that another time.

Photos from Philips Lighting

More collaboration, LEDs and buildings on SmartPlanet:

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Mark Halper

About Mark Halper

Mark Halper is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Mark Halper

Mark Halper

Contributing Editor, Energy

Mark Halper has written for TIME, Fortune, Financial Times, the UK's Independent on Sunday, Forbes, New York Times, Wired, Variety and The Guardian. He is based in Bristol, U.K.

Follow him on Twitter.

Mark Halper

Mark Halper

Mark has no financial holdings in the companies he writes about. He occasionally travels at the expense of companies or their press relations agencies in order to report on a company or industry event related to it; Mark will prominently disclose this information when appropriate. This relationship will have no influence on his coverage. Companies he covers do not get to review columns in advance, or select or reject topics.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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