The Residential Edition

Lighting
for Living

Most homes have light. Few are designed with it.

The Position

Light and shadow, considered

A well-lit room is not a brightly-lit room. The most common mistake in residential lighting is treating every ceiling as a problem to be evenly solved — a grid of downlights, washed across the room, lighting everything at once. The result is flat. Lifeless. A room without a focal point is a room without a feeling.

Architectural lighting works the other way. It uses light and shadow — not just light — to give shape to the space you live in. It picks out what matters and leaves what doesn’t in restful quiet. It treats a hallway differently from a reading chair differently from a dining table. It layers three sources, controls them independently, and lets the room change with the time of day.

This is the thinking we apply to museums, hotels, and the cultural landmarks we’ve lit for fifty years. It belongs at home too.

The Guides

Start with the room you're working on

Each guide takes one room, names the principle that defines it, and ends with the fixtures we’d specify — drawn from the brands below.

Residential living room at dusk with layered architectural lighting — recessed downlights angled toward features, accent spots picking out artwork, and a warm portable lamp at human scale.
Guide 01

The Living Room

The most multi-tasked room in the home. Three layers of light, three independent controls, and the principle that decides where each one lands.

Guide 02

Living with Art

Museum-grade thinking at residential scale. Beam control, glare management, and the fixtures that let the work — not the lighting — be what you see.

Guide 03

The Garden

Lighting that holds up to Hong Kong weather and rewards how you actually use a garden after dark. Restrained, considered, and quietly architectural.

The Collections

The brands we'd specify for your home

The same professional ranges we install in galleries, hotels, and Asia’s most considered buildings have residential collections built for the home. Four brands, four distinct positions on what good lighting is. Each collection page covers the line in detail, with the latest catalog available for download.

BEGA
Germany · since 1945

The benchmark for engineered lighting. Studio Line for interiors, Calm Line for ambient living, House & Garden for outdoor. Built to outlast the buildings they’re installed in.

ERCO
Germany · since 1934

The light, not the luminaire. Beam-controlled downlights and accent fixtures behind the world’s most considered residential and gallery spaces — the same optical precision used in the Louvre and the Prado.

FLOS Architectural Italy · since 1962

Italian design precision. Magnetic track systems, miniaturised profiles, and adjustable spots designed by Vincent Van Duysen, Antonio Citterio, and Michael Anastassiades. Five Compasso d’Oro awards. A permanent place in MoMA’s collection.

MP Lighting Canada · since 1994

The detail layer. Trimless recessed downlights for joinery and display — specification-grade, designed and assembled in Vancouver.
A Recurring Thread

The layer that makes light adaptive

Casambi

Wireless control is what turns three layers of light into three scenes — morning, evening, late — without rewiring or replacing a fixture. Dim a room from your phone. Switch from working light to dining light to a single accent. Change how a space feels without changing what’s installed.

William Artists is Casambi 4C certified — the highest level of partnership in the wireless control standard most professional ranges support. Every room guide in this hub returns to this layer, because it’s what makes the difference between a room that is lit and a room that is lived in.

Browse the range, or tell us about your project

Browse our residential lighting collections and download the latest catalogs from our partner brands — or tell us about your project and we’ll come back with a layered specification.

Search

Illuminating the way to a greener future.

How can we help?