Indoor Trampoline Park Lighting

Chicago, IL

Indoor Trampoline Park Lighting


Duvon™ delivered controlled-batwing trampoline park LED with house-side shielding on the spectator rail — flicker-free smartphone capture and a soft preset for non-peak hours.

Trampoline parks present an unusual lighting brief: bouncers move vertically inside the lit envelope, parents and guests photograph constantly, and the visual environment needs to feel energetic without provoking sensory overload in younger users.

Duvon's specification used CoreBay 150W heads in a controlled-batwing distribution above the trampoline beds, with house-side shielding on the spectator-rail-facing fixtures. The optical platform's 70 CRI and < 0.10 TLM flicker make smartphone capture clean, and the dimming preset profile shifts the venue between high-energy public hours and lower-key birthday-party scenes.

The completed venue holds 37-fc maintained average across the bed area, sub-0.10 flicker for clean photography, and a noticeably softer feel during non-peak hours.

Highlights

Lighting Class:  EN 12464-1 indoor recreational

Average Illuminance:  37 fc maintained horizontal at bed level

Uniformity:  1.3:1

Fixtures:  LED Indoor Lights (5000K, batwing)

Energy Savings:  Up to 60% vs HID


Baseline Perspective Capture

Baseline Perspective Capture

ENGINEERING EXCELLENCE

Controlled-batwing distribution above the trampoline beds with house-side shielding on spectator-rail fixtures. 70 CRI and < 0.10 TLM flicker for clean smartphone capture.

USTA / SPORT STANDARD STATEMENT

Not applicable — verified to IES RP-7 and EN 12464-1 indoor recreational practice.

DARK-SKY COMPLIANCE STATEMENT

Indoor venue; no external spill.

Industrial Design

Industrial Design

Technical Data

Core Engine CoreBay 150W LED Indoor Lights (5000K, batwing)
Standard Designed to EN 12464-1 indoor recreational standards.
Efficiency Gain Up to 60% vs HID
Warranty 10-year system warranty

Engineering & Support

Design • Supply • Verification

Duvon Lighting provides expert-led consultation to architects and facility managers looking to optimize North American sports environments.

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