LEDucation Conference to Offer 39 Educational Sessions
Key Highlights
- The event features 39 educational sessions led by recognized experts, covering both technical and design aspects of lighting.
- Virtual programming on April 9–10 provides deep dives into digital workflows, AI, 3D printing, and health lighting innovations.
- In-person sessions on April 14–15 focus on practical design applications, regulatory compliance, and emerging industry trends.
Show organizers for the LEDucation 2026 Conference in New York released some additional information on what should be another packed event. This year’s conference will feature 39 educational sessions presented by recognized experts and thought leaders in their fields. Interactive virtual programming on April 9–10 will be followed by rich in-person sessions April 14–15. LEDucation offers a total of 42.5 continuing education credits.
“LEDucation offers attendees an opportunity to take a moment, look ahead, and return to practice with an elevated view of what matters,” said Craig Fox of ETC Inc. a member of the LEDucation Presentation Committee, in the press release. Fellow committee member Wendy Kaplan, of Kelvix, added, “The seminars address both the broad pressures and exciting opportunities reshaping the field today.”
Attend Online
For a registration fee of $50, attendees gain access to all virtual sessions. For individuals seeking credits, this equates to an average of $3.50 per credit, making it a cost-effective option for participants worldwide.
The virtual sessions on Thursday, April 9, offer deep dives into digital tools: BIM, Revit, GIS and a whole alphabet of workflow skills. AI and 3D printing continue to push the boundaries of how products are conceived and delivered.
On Friday, April 10, the focus shifts toward people: labeling, maintenance protocols and the lived experience of PoE systems. In lighting for health, Xander Cadisch (Light Tribe by Phos) explores trauma-informed biophilic lighting. Then a team from Aleddra LED Lighting, Matthew Maa and Judy Luo, will introduce virtual attendees to light-based, brain-wave–stimulation technology aimed at Alzheimer’s prevention.
In-Person
Twenty-five in-person presentations on Tuesday and Wednesday, April 14 and 15, bring the conversation squarely back to the working designer. It’s a strong mix of technology and design practice led by industry experts such as Dr. Mariana Figueiro (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), designer Francesca Bastianini (Sighte Studio), and filmmaker Tal Lazar (Latent Images).
“As lighting systems grow more complex, the definition of roles and communications have become every bit as critical as photometry,” said LEDucation Presentation Committee Member Shaun Fillion of RAB Lighting and the NY School of Interior Design, in the press release. “The panel sessions in particular bring new perspectives to everything from lighting concepts to punch lists.”
JP Bedell of SDA Lighting joins lighting design principals Scott Hay (Reveal Design Group), Michael Hennes (Cline Bettridge Bernstein Lighting Design), C. Brooke Silber (Borealis Lighting Studio at BR+A), and Dorothy Underwood (KGM Architectural Lighting) to explore the critical distinctions between lighting design and lighting consultation in “Lighting’s Blurred Lines: Where Design Ends and Consultation Begins.”
In “Whose Daylight Is It Anyway?” three designers face off against one manufacturer to unpack scope, risk and responsibility in daylighting design and controls integration.
Ubiquitous regulatory and compliance challenges now stretch from tariffs to codes to testing expectations. Paul Kennedy and Veena Cagle of U.S. Outdoor Lighting will provide professionals at all levels with tools for compliance challenges in "BABA, BAA, and Tariffs: Tools for Executing in a Complex and Changing Landscape.”
Tech fundamentals will cover everything from evolving power electronics and VR to infrastructure and data integration. And sustainability is examined far beyond efficacy. Andy Letwin (EN-POWER GROUP) shares six philosophies that have guided 140-plus New York City projects, generating over $25 million in energy savings.
A session of particular local interest is “Light and Perceived Safety of Subway Platforms,” presented by Hyesoo Chun of The Lighting Practice.
Click here to register and explore the full program offerings
