Officer of Swan Lake Park discusses installation
Jul/090
Nancy Levine, Swan Lake Renaissance Officer, discusses the recent installation of solar-powered outdoor lights near Woodstock NY.
We started Swan Lake Renaissance in 2004. And across the street from the park there is another project that we did by the waterfall and then we did the park the following year. The park was a success. Everybody uses it, it’s beautiful. People would go there at night but it wasn’t lit. It wasn’t welcoming at night and there was a safety factor also. We have a boardwalk along the lake and we have a gazebo near the lake and the only light we had was along the road – the light post along the road. So that was it.
So now that it’s lit… It’s a beautiful light and it’s very soft, it’s not glaring at all and it lights up the major parts of.. The boardwalk is all lit up – they go down the boardwalk and then by the parking lot. So it lights up the places in the park that need to be lit up and it also left out a dark part so that there is one secluded part.
Oh, it’s gorgeous, it really is!

Solar-powered LEDs Light up Swan Lake park, Woodstock, NY
When I saw the lights at the display I didn’t like them at all, and I think it was probably because of the setting they were in. They were in a building, they just looked humongous and they didn’t look appealing. But then I saw them up at Bethel and they did look very nice It’s not something you would think would fit in nicely, but they do and they enhance the park rather than detract from it.
I would say we have 10 times more people at night than there were before. The first two summers we didn’t have the lights. So basically after dusk there weren’t too many people there. There’d be a couple of people sitting in the gazebo or something but not people sitting at the tables or walking around there.
We have a boardwalk. It’s very close to the lake and we didn’t want to put up a railing because people sit on the edge of the boardwalk and they fish from there, and it just wasn’t something we wanted to do. It’s fine during the day but at night it was an issue. So the lights going along the boardwalk alleviated that problem.
And also just lighting up the rest of the park so that people feel safer being there. And also had kids that destroyed a few things – whether intentionally or unintentionally. With the lights here I think we’ve had less incidences of vandalism.
When we did the park, there was no consideration of the lights because at that time we knew nothing about it. But when the lights were proposed to us, Tommy and Mark LaGattuta of E & T Landscaping said yes, go ahead and do it. And he met with the engineer. He donated everything that you would see at the park except for the furniture and the gazebo
And so we started with flowers in hanging baskets and then we did a landscaping project with the waterfall – I think it’s even prettier than the park. It’s on a smaller scale but it’s magnificent.
So we did that and we won first prize with the Renaissance for that project and so we won $10,000 so we took that and invested it in the park.
Enlighter.com posts photos
Jan/090
Hadco has offer up some nice photos, just published in Enlighter.org of the recent installation at Massachusetts Maritime Academy.
Lawn & Landscape Mag covers solar-powered street lighting
Oct/080
Swan Lake Park is one of the first public parks in the United States to specify solar-powered streetlights for a landscape application. The economic benefits were obvious to Swan Lake, but according to Lawn & Landscape magazine landscape contractors shouldn’t overlook solar-power lighting as a business opportunity either.
Contained in one of four hamlets in Liberty Township, N.Y., Swan Lake Park is one of the first of its kind in the country to use solar-powered LED lighting technology for commercial outdoor applications. The new lighting was part of a beautification project promoted by the Liberty Community Development Corp., which is funded by the local government, as well as the locally based Gerry Foundation. The effort also was part of a solar street light demonstration project co-funded by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority.
Six 14-foot-tall, solar-powered LED streetlights installed along a pathway at Swan Lake Park were supplied by Framingham, Mass.-based SolarOne Solutions. The fixtures use round strings of small LEDs powered by photovoltaic cells. A computer regulates the system to ensure that the lights are always on.
Energy Management Canada about Maritime Academy
Oct/080
The Canadian magazine, Energy Management just published the story about Massachusetts Maritime Academy’s installation of solar-powered pathway lights.
Capt. Allen Hansen championed the alternative energy project and is vice-president of operations at the school.
We now have a beautifully lit walkway students are using extensively, day and night.
We searched for a solution that was visible to visitors and didn’t add to the footprint of the Academy. And it is visible enough, that people who visit point out to us that, ‘hey you’ve got photovoltaic lights, don’t you’.
So we can share that story with them.The SolarOne lighting really has met all of our requirements. They’re attractive, they provide a good light for our students in the areas we wanted, and they haven’t added to the expense of operations on the campus.
Benefits of landscaping with high-powered solar-powered LEDs
May/080
Take a look at how Architectural Stone and Landscape Design Magazine explains the key benefits of landscaping with high-powered solar-powered LED lights.