IES Light For Life® Virtual Symposium 2026: Controls
Recorded On: 12/11/2025
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- Non-member - $199
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Symposium Description: This one-day virtual symposium recording explores how lighting control strategies shape spaces that are adaptive, energy-efficient, and visually engaging.
Presentations curated to cover:
1. Smarter controls, connected systems, and data‑driven automation
2. AI in next-generation lighting controls
3. Advancing sequences of operations and design intent narratives
4. Incorporating wireless controls
5. Integration across devices and protocols
Lighting Controls: Crystal Balls, Emerging Opportunities, Practical Actions
Pontificating future trends, embracing new functionality, and supporting practical use, we’ll rapid fire on lighting controls faster than a dimmer at a disco. In this quick download and dive, the IES Lighting Control Systems Committee peers into the “crystal ball” - where smarter controls, connected systems, and data‑driven automation are shifting how we design and operate spaces with lighting controls. We’ll make the future of lighting controls feel less mysterious and map out the path to applicable practicality amidst an evolving lighting and controls landscape.
Lighting Controls in 2026
As LED lighting maximizes efficacy, lighting controls have been a primary focus for increased energy savings. Occupancy sensing in interior applications and for outdoor street and area lighting promise significant savings, if installed. Adoption of lighting controls however has been slower than projected.
Artificial Intelligence can simplify adaptation to user patterns and adapt to human preferences and health benefits. AI also can minimize the time designers spend on individually controlling, addressing, scheduling, and specifying each luminaire. It can control charge times for renewables adjusting to demand response rates. How quickly we learn to successfully integrate AI into our projects is largely dependent on lighting control and software manufacturers. What can we look forward to, and when will lighting controls achieve their potential? Attend this session to learn more about the future of lighting controls.
Wireless Lighting Controls: From Design to Implementation
Wireless technologies are reshaping the lighting industry at a critical moment. By streamlining installation, reducing first costs, improving energy performance, and simplifying maintenance through integrated sensors and minimized electrical and data infrastructure, wireless controls are rapidly becoming the norm. As adoption grows, a new design challenge emerges: clearly and effectively documenting these systems within construction documents. Drawing on seven years of hands-on experience across libraries, office buildings, and large healthcare facilities nationwide, this presentation shares practical lessons learned—while looking ahead to how wireless lighting forms the foundation for broader smart building technology integration, including RTLS, voice-enabled platforms like Alexa, patient user interfaces, and other connected systems that enable truly intelligent environments.
Questioning Claims of Simplicity in Lighting Controls
As lighting controls become more advanced, energy codes and new capabilities are driving increased complexity—making it harder for project teams to design, specify, and verify systems that perform as intended. This session explores the “complexity dilemma” and the “time dilemma” facing designers and specifiers, and highlights best practices that improve outcomes, including the Control Intent Narrative (CIN) and Sequence of Operations (SOO) as defined in IES LP-16. The presentation introduces Design Express, a free set of Microsoft Excel–based CIN/SOO templates organized by building type and pre-populated to align with 2024 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) lighting control requirements. Attendees will learn how these templates streamline documentation, improve coordination, generate more complete specifications, and support consistent implementation across common space types.
Navigating the Time–Complexity Dilemma in Lighting Controls
The lighting controls industry is experiencing a clear shift: owners, designers, contractors, and operators are demanding simpler networked lighting control systems. But “simple” means different things to different stakeholders, with a risk that oversimplification can be provided with unforeseen limitations and lifecycle costs. This session explores what simplicity actually means in modern network lighting controls. We’ll examine simplicity across different lighting control systems and distinguish between ones that are merely easy to implement versus those that are easy to use. Attendees will gain a practical framework for evaluating simplicity and where it is most important.
Are Smart Homes Dumb?
Homeowners have more options than ever for lighting control, but the common light switch is still the gold standard for ease of operation. At the high end of the market, whole-home automation and lighting control delivers beautiful aesthetics but too often leaves the homeowners dissatisfied with the experience. At the low end, a lack of ease and interoperability relegates intelligent lighting to the tech savvy. Are we going in the right direction? How might the lighting industry be perfectly positioned to fix the headaches and capitalize on the opportunity?
Watch any or all of the videos from the symposium. You must watch each video in its entirety to unlock the corresponding CEU certificate. Watch all videos to receive a total of 4 CEUs.
Harold Jepsen
Vice President
| Harold Jepsen is the Vice President of Standards & Industry Relations for Legrand’s building control and lighting businesses. A 30-year veteran in the energy, lighting and building automation industry, he is a professional engineer and WELL-AP. Harold serves on various committees within NEMA, ASHRAE, IES, ICC, and other organizations involved in lighting, controls, and energy efficiency. He sits on board of the Lighting Controls Academy, the Association for Smart Homes and Buildings, and is the secretary of the IES Lighting Control Systems technical committee. |
Lauren Schwade
Associate Principal
Mazzetti
| Lauren Schwade is Associate Principal and Healthcare Lighting Lead at Mazzetti, with nearly two decades of experience designing innovative lighting for healthcare environments. She has worked with institutions such as MD Anderson, St. Jude, Kaiser, and Memorial Sloan Kettering to create solutions that improve patient experiences and support staff wellbeing. Her expertise includes healthcare lighting design, integrated controls, and circadian lighting strategies. She serves on the IES Healthcare Lighting Committee, collaborates with the Center for Health Design, and contributes to research and industry guidance. Lauren also shares her knowledge through national conferences and consultation with healthcare product manufacturers. |
Brennan Schumacher
Mazzetti
| Brennan serves on the Board of Directors and leads Mazzetti’s global Lighting Design Studio, delivering technologically advanced, environmentally responsible lighting solutions that support human health. He has presented for the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. Department of Energy, LightFair, IES conferences, Green Schools conferences, Sustainable Living Fairs, and multiple branches of the U.S. Green Building Council. Brennan regularly educates clients and colleagues through accredited presentations on sustainable lighting design and human health. His portfolio includes eight AIA COTE Top Ten Awards. His work also spans Living Building Challenge projects, Net Zero buildings, and LEED Platinum–certified facilities. |
C. Webster Marsh
Lighting Controls Designer
Sladen Feinstein Integrated Lighting
| C. “Webster” Marsh is a Lighting Controls Designer at Sladen Feinstein Integrated Lighting and as Education Manager for the Lighting Controls Academy. A Certified Lighting Controls Practitioner (CLCP), Webster is also Director of Education and Programming for ArchLIGHT Summit, creator of Tonight in Controls, and he co-hosts the Lighting Controls Podcast, helping professionals stay connected with the latest in lighting controls. |
Gary Meshberg
Regional Sales Manager
Casambi
| With over 32 years of experience in the lighting industry, Gary Meshberg is a recognized expert and influential leader in the field. Currently serving as Chair of the Lighting Controls Association and Regional Sales Manager at Casambi, Gary has dedicated his career to advancing lighting technology, education, and industry standards. |
Mark Lien
Industry Relations
Illuminating Engineering Society
Mark has designed interior and exterior lighting systems for a wide range of applications including residential, municipal, retail, healthcare, energy audit retrofits and both conventional and nuclear power plants. He started his lighting career managing home centers and a lighting center providing sales and design specifications. Mark has provided lighting education while working, presenting, and teaching across five continents. He serves on over twenty lighting related committees including ASHRAE, ANSI, IEEE, ICC, IUVA, IDA, NALMCO, NLB and the IES. As a part of his work, he monitors over 100 lighting and technology related organizations.
Mark is a columnist for Lighting Design and Application Magazine writing on the changes in our industry and he hosts a podcast on lighting trends and technologies. Mark has served on multiple boards and is currently on several executive committees advising various organizations. Mark ran the educational centers for both Cooper and Hubbell Lighting and was the Director of Government & Industry Relations for OSRAM SYLVANIA before joining the Illuminating Engineering Society. He serves as industry consultant to the IES today through his company, Augmented Illumination. Mark has been inducted into the Michigan Lighting Hall of Fame, has a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Edison Report and Presidential Awards from the IES.
Mark Lien LC, C-GUVMP, CLEP, CLMC, HBDP, LEED AP
David Warfel
Founding Designer
Light Can Help You
| David Warfel, Founding Designer, Light Can Help You David Warfel is an overly sensitive, marginally materialistic, pseudo-tree-hugging Midwestern farm boy turned lighting designer, educator, author, and entrepreneur. He’s been either lucky or talented enough to land design opportunities in residential, hospitality, museum, commercial, and even the super-niche escape-rooms-on-giant-cruise-ships industry. When he isn’t boring someone to tears talking about lighting, David leads his groundbreaking design business, Light Can Help You, into new frontiers that promise better lighting for more people. |