Understanding the Tech — and Control
“When I started in lighting, my then-boss Paul Marantz used to walk through the studio with a basket of bulbs and challenge the designers to identify bases, shapes, and sources,” says Burya. Things are entirely different now. “The designer now needs to understand protocols, constant current versus constant voltage, wiring topology, and many other aspects to be intuitive and high-value.” That’s where the model-building aspect of the Tirschwell process is especially useful: Even the most junior designer needs to be able to turn concepts into practical, operational designs.
“I might be asked about a detail and if it is right or if it will work,” says Burya. “My response to that designer is: ‘What do you want to see? If you know, build it and prove it.’”
Burya’s on a mission to bring control up to date — and align it with current technology. “I’ve seen too many projects that embrace LED technology from 2024 but are controlled by systems that belong in 1974, so it’s no wonder the results are disappointing.” He’s constantly striving to create control solutions that are as powerful and high-performing as they are intuitive.
Crestron is an exceptional collaborator in this regard, says Burya. “Crestron has a more robust non-proprietary open architecture than others, which makes them a ‘go-to’ solution,” he says. “Crestron has a native ability to work with DALI and DMX. We use digital protocols to save money, improve, and minimize the wiring infrastructure.”
“For example, we can take a design that might require up to a dozen panels and get better performance only using one panel. By designing with those advanced protocols, we’re keeping the architects happy: They need to reserve fewer spaces for those panels and their cooling infrastructure.”
Ultimately, though, all that technical knowledge is a means to an end, an end that every architect, designer, and integrator recognizes: A client who’s been “shown the light,” pardon the pun. Burya sums it up with the restructuring of a quote that’s been misattributed to Leonardo DaVinci:
“What they never knew existed,
“What they never knew they wanted,
“Now they cannot live without.”