Data Centre Setup Guide: Lighting Standards, Installation, and Energy Metrics Explained
- Executive View of Data Centre Setup
- Lighting as a Core Infrastructure Layer
- Standards That Shape Lighting in Data Centres
- Product Spotlight: Durable Fixtures
- Installation Considerations Contractors Face
- Efficiency and Energy Metrics (PUE + Lighting’s Share)
- Emergency and Backup Lighting Requirements
- Procurement & Setup Timelines
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Key Takeaways
| Question | Quick Answer | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| What does data centre setup involve? | Coordinating power, cooling, racks, cabling, and lighting into one standards-compliant system. | CAE Lighting |
| Why is lighting critical? | It ensures safety, efficiency, compliance, and directly impacts cooling load. | Squarebeam Elite |
| Which standards guide lighting? | TIA-942-C, ISO/IEC 22237, ASHRAE 2021, NFPA 101, UL 924. | Best Practices Guide |
| How does lighting affect PUE? | Small load, but inefficient fixtures raise cooling demand. Smart LEDs + sensors reduce both. | Lighting Solutions |
| What about emergency lighting? | Exit signs, dual-circuit battens, and battery-backed fixtures required by NFPA 101 & UL 924. | Emergency Lighting |
1. Executive View of Data Centre Setup
A proper data centre setup is not just racks and cooling units—it’s a system where every layer affects the others. The sequence moves from site selection and power availability to MEP infrastructure, then down to lighting, cabling, and commissioning. Lighting often gets relegated, but it should be planned alongside UPS, HVAC, and fire suppression.
Lighting has three missions:
- Safety: technicians must move in aisles without hazards.
- Efficiency: fixtures should reduce watts and cooling strain.
- Compliance: standards like TIA-942-C (2024) mandate illumination levels.
CAE Lighting positions its products for these environments, balancing lux levels, glare reduction, and emergency compliance.
2. Lighting as a Core Infrastructure Layer
Lighting in data centres is critical infrastructure. Distributed lighting reduces accident risk and supports uptime since shadows can obscure cabling or labels.
- Thermal compatibility for high ambient heat.
- Optics to minimize glare (low UGR).
- Durability against vibration and 24/7 operation.
3. Standards That Shape Lighting in Data Centres
Standards govern data centre lighting:
- TIA-942-C (2024): Illumination in pathways/work areas.
- ISO/IEC 22237: Safety/environmental lighting requirements.
- ASHRAE 2021: Fixtures tolerating high-density hot aisles.
- NFPA 101 & UL 924: Emergency lighting compliance.
4. Product Spotlight: Durable Fixtures
Different fixtures for different areas:
- Squarebeam Elite: Precise beam for aisles.
- Quattro Triproof Batten: IP65 for humid zones.
- Budget High Bay: For warehouses/logistics.
5. Installation Considerations Contractors Face
Lighting clashes often happen with cable trays, raised floors, and containment. Poor planning can cause shadows or blocked access. Best practice: align with hot/cold aisles, use suspended or surface-mounted options. Linear battens like the SeamLine Batten reduce install time significantly.
6. Efficiency and Energy Metrics (PUE + Lighting’s Share)
Lighting contributes <5% to IT load but impacts cooling. Inefficient lights dump heat, raising HVAC demand. Smart LEDs/sensors keep PUE lower.
- Industry average PUE (2024): 1.56
- Hyperscaler PUE: 1.09–1.15
- Bad lighting adds 0.05–0.1 to PUE
7. Emergency and Backup Lighting Requirements
Emergency lighting covers:
- Exit routes (UL 924 signs).
- Battery packs in battens.
- Dual circuits for instant failover.
Non-compliance can delay commissioning. Always specify compliant fixtures like dual-circuit battens early. See Emergency Lighting Guide.
8. Procurement & Setup Timelines
Lighting procurement follows MEP schedules. Fast trials matter—CAE Lighting can ship samples in 24–48h, allowing mock-ups and approvals quickly. This keeps the build on track.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q1: How much does lighting contribute to PUE?
A: Typically <5%, but poor efficiency raises cooling demand.
Q2: Which standards cover data centre lighting?
A: TIA-942-C, ISO/IEC 22237, ASHRAE 2021, NFPA 101, UL 924.
Q3: Do I need different lights for aisles vs. mechanical rooms?
A: Yes. Aisles need precise optics (e.g., Squarebeam Elite), while plant rooms need sealed IP-rated fixtures (Quattro Triproof).
Q4: What’s the safest emergency lighting setup?
A: Dual-circuit battens + UL 924 exit signs, tested for 90 minutes minimum.
Q5: How fast can I get samples for testing?
A: CAE Lighting offers 24–48h shipment for trials via Contact CAE Lighting.





