Company holds illumination ceremony to mark the occasion SYRACUSE — National Grid (NYSE: NGG) says the first phase of exterior upgrades and repairs to the company’s landmark building at 300 Erie Boulevard West in Syracuse are complete. The company on Dec. 17 marked […]
Company holds illumination ceremony to mark the occasion
SYRACUSE — National Grid (NYSE: NGG) says the first phase of exterior upgrades and repairs to the company’s landmark building at 300 Erie Boulevard West in Syracuse are complete. The company on Dec. 17 marked the occasion by lighting up the building for the first time in more than a year. LightSpek, a Dallas, Texas–based architectural and commercial lighting and control company, designed the new lighting and control system; Connors-Haas of Ontario in Wayne County served as the general contractor on the project; Chicago, Illinois–based JLL managed the project in cooperation with National Grid’s facilities department; Nelson Associates Architectural Engineers of Clinton provided electrical-design services to the project; O’Connell Electric Co. of Syracuse worked on the electrical circuitry; Jerome R. Durr Studio in Syracuse repaired glass panels on the façade; and Integrated Marketing Services of Clay provided additional support for the project, per a Dec. 18 National Grid announcement. The lighting upgrades were part of a multi-phase, exterior renovation of the building that will continue through 2025. The new lighting system can display millions of colors, as well as add motion and fading to lighting schemes. And, in keeping with National Grid’s efforts to encourage smart energy use, the lighting system utilizes energy-efficient LED (light-emitting diode) fixtures, the company said in its announcement. “Our Downtown Syracuse building is more than an office,” Alberto Bianchetti, regional director of customer and external affairs, said in the National Grid announcement. “It’s a point of civic pride for people in this community and a part of our region’s history and character, as one of our nation’s finest representations of art deco design.” Representatives of the City of Syracuse, Onondaga County, downtown Syracuse businesses, and local historic preservation entities joined National Grid officials to throw the switch, turning on the building’s more than 600 LED light fixtures at 5:41 p.m. on Dec. 17. National Grid says the illumination started with glowing white, eventually fading into National Grid’s identifying colors. The illumination then continued scrolling through a series of pre-programmed lighting schemes that will be used to celebrate holidays such as Independence Day and Christmas; celebrate local institutions including Syracuse University and Le Moyne College; and commemorate solemn events like the September 11th attacks and Pan Am 103 bombing.
About the structure
The historic Art Deco building on Erie Boulevard West was built in 1932 as the main office of the Niagara Hudson Power Company — a predecessor of Niagara Mohawk and, later, National Grid. Designed by the late Melvin King of Syracuse with consulting architects Bley & Lyman from Buffalo, the building is adorned with a 28-foot winged stainless-steel sculpture called “The Spirit of Light,” representing the spread of electricity during that era. The building is part of the
National Registry of Historic Places. Exterior lighting on the building was one of its original features, but its use was discontinued in 1939 for public safety during World War II as part of community blackouts, National Grid explained. A renovation completed in 2000 restored the lights, adding colors to the lighting capabilities.