Architectural lighting

Light that belongs to the architecture.

JR Lite focuses on architectural lighting for hospitality, retail, residence, and exterior work. Products, references, notes, and catalogue access are grouped for quick specification work.

Project scope
Interiors, facades, circulation, and landscape edges
Control options
DALI, 0-10V, and scene-based dimming
Light quality
Low glare, high CRI, and careful beam control
Support
Specification notes, submittals, and project coordination
Warm architectural lighting in a brick pavilion at dusk
Warm accent light at ground level keeps the architecture visible without flattening the space.

Product lines

Four families cover most briefs.

See the full catalog

Linear

L-Series

Continuous profiles for lobbies, shelving, corridors, and ceiling edges.

CRI 90 UGR < 19 DALI

Spot

S-Series

Compact accent fixtures for artwork, reception counters, and merchandise.

Zoom lens 30 to 60 deg Tilt / rotate

Wall wash

W-Series

Uniform vertical illumination for textured walls, displays, and brand surfaces.

Asymmetric Soft edge Recessed

Outdoor

O-Series

Facade, path, and threshold lighting built for weather and long service life.

IP65 Marine grade 3000K

Selected references

Compact case studies with real lighting language.

Browse projects
Curved interior corridor lit by concealed warm cove lighting

Project reference

North Atrium Walk

A gentle curve of concealed light guides the circulation path while keeping the ceiling quiet and the finish materials readable.

  • circulation
  • concealed cove
  • warm white

Retail

Low glare display layers

Track and recessed accents were used together so the merchandise stayed bright without filling the room with stray spill light.

2026 concept reference

Hospitality

Lobby edges and material warmth

Wall grazing and low-level path lighting were balanced to keep stone and timber warm but not overlit.

selected reference

Facade

Night identity without glare

Exterior uplights were placed off-axis so the building reads as a composition instead of a wall of bright points.

project support

Topics

Short notes that read like a working studio.

Read all notes
Curved interior lighting corridor with warm ceiling lines

Design note

Choosing beam widths for hospitality ceilings

Wide beams flatten finishes; very narrow beams make the ceiling read noisy. The middle ground is usually the most useful.

low glare
Brick pavilion lit from below at night

Field note

Facade lighting should reveal depth before brightness

A building feels more expensive when shadows remain legible and light lands on edges rather than washing the surface flat.

facade
Bright white interior corridor with arching structure

Studio note

A simple catalog structure

Products, projects, and support notes follow the same structure many lighting teams use when comparing options.

catalog structure

Company

Product support and project coordination in one place.

Products, references, notes, and catalogue access are grouped for quick specification work.

Project support

Specification notes, submittals, and control guidance for design teams.

Low-glare lighting, clear beam control, and efficient product selection.

Catalogue

A compact route to the current brochure.

Open catalogue page

JR Lite Catalogue 2026

Product families, application notes, and the current project entry points are gathered into one 100-page brochure-style data book.

Request the full spec set

For schedules, project files, or a tailored selection, use the contact route on the catalogue page.