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WAC Group Launches WAC Architectural Brand to Empower Lighting Designers with Advanced, Technology-Driven Solutions

WAC Group has launched WAC Architectural, a commercial specification lighting brand that expands the WAC legacy with a portfolio of precision-engineered luminaires designed for project-driven applications. Its offering includes advanced track systems, high-performance linear solutions, and robust exterior fixtures, each engineered for optical excellence, sophisticated beam control, architectural coherence, and a high degree of design flexibility. WAC Architectural empowers designers to push creative and technical boundaries; it is built on a foundation of four advantages…

1, Owned From Concept to Completion

2. Responsibility, Engineered at Scale

3. Precision You Can Depend On

4. Forged in the World’s Most Demanding Market

Architectural – WACGROUP

The LHRC Announces Online Courses for 2025

The Light and Health Research Center’s (LHRC) is offering two online professional certificate courses in 2025. These interactive educational offerings will be led by LHRC faculty and staff who are the foremost experts in their fields. Courses begin in September, and registration for the classes is now open. The 2025 educational programs include:

  • Online Professional Certificate Course in Lighting Design – 11 to Nov. 13, 2025

https://icahn.mssm.edu/research/light-health/education/professional-certificate-lighting-design

  • Online Certificate Course in Light and Human Health – 24 to Oct. 22, 2025

https://icahn.mssm.edu/research/light-health/education/online-certificate-light-and-human-health

Telling Time – 12-hour time is a very ancient system that traces back to the Mesopotamian empires. They had a cultural fixation with the number 12, used a base-12 numerical system, and divided up most things into 12ths whenever possible – including day and night. The 12 hours of day and 12 hours of night system spread throughout Europe and the Middle East and has defied multiple attempts to change it over the centuries. Also, for anyone curious as to why there was such a love of the number 12, it was because that was how they counted on their hand. Look at your hand. Notice how each of your fingers minus your thumb has three easily identifiable parts to it. They used to count by using their thumb to count each part of the finger, much in the same way we count to 10 using our fingers today. So, 12 was the max you could count on one hand.