Plumen Reinvents Itself

Along with a new focus on smart lighting, the lighting company is currently up for sale.

1 MIN READ
We admit that $30 is a lot to pay for a light bulb, but the Plumen 001 is the world’s first designer, low-energy light bulb. Unlike the typical designer fluorescent fixture with tight swirls, this one has a more fluid form, but it will still save your buyers up to 80% on energy bills. www.plumen.com.

Plumen

We admit that $30 is a lot to pay for a light bulb, but the Plumen 001 is the world’s first designer, low-energy light bulb. Unlike the typical designer fluorescent fixture with tight swirls, this one has a more fluid form, but it will still save your buyers up to 80% on energy bills. www.plumen.com.

Almost a decade after its launch by London-based design studio Hulger, the lighting manufacturer Plumen has announced a change in mission. The company, which aimed to popularize low energy lighting with the release of its iconic, award-winning Plumen 001 compact fluorescent lamp in 2010, will shift its focus to “promoting the health and environmental benefits of smart lighting,” according to a press release from the company.

Plumen

After developing a range of solid-state lighting designs, namely the Plumen 003 and Plumen 001 LED, Plumen believes it has helped grow LEDs’ share in the lighting market from 10 percent to a forecasted 80 percent by 2020. As a result, Plumen considers its founding mission, “the world converting to LED,” complete.

Moving forward, Plumen will explore smart lighting from two main approaches: the first underscoring the relationship between lighting and human well-being, and the second investigating how smart lighting can further reduce energy consumption.

To finance the shift, Plumen’s co-founders Nicolas Roope and Michael-George Hemus have placed the company on the market and moved to a “manufacture to order” model. While some stock remains on Plumen’s website, Plumen’s team has encouraged commercial and residential customers to place orders as soon as possible “to avoid disappointment.”

About the Author

Madeleine D'Angelo

Madeleine D'Angelo is an associate editor for ARCHITECT. She graduated from Boston College with B.A.s in English and in French. Previously, she worked as a freelance producer for NPR's On Point and interned for Boston Magazine. Follow her on Twitter.

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