Dezeen Magazine

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Synapse LED lighting system by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Dezeen promotion: lighting brand Luceplan has launched its Synapse extendable lighting system by Argentinian designer Francisco Gomez Paz.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

The lights are formed from three-branch modules, which clip on top of each other to create snowflake-shaped patterns.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

This double-sided format allows them to be suspended to form partitions as well as mounted on the wall.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Ends of the arms also clip to other modules to create various shapes and sizes.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Variable-colour RGB LEDs between the modules can be regulated by a remote control.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

For more details about the Synapse lighting and more Luceplan products, visit the company's website.

Read on for more details from Luceplan:


Synapse by Francisco Gomez Paz

Innovation is always a wager because it changes the status quo: only time will tell if the novelty will establish itself, finding its way into the social, cultural and psychological fabric, becoming habitual and perhaps leading to another step forward.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

In industrial design innovation often has its roots in technological breakthroughs. But to be successful it has to proceed in step with them, while at the same time guiding, interpreting and translating them into solutions that respond to latent or openly expressed desires of people and their styles of living.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

In this perspective, it is possible to assert that Synapse, the latest creation of Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan, is a highly innovative and particularly contemporary solution.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Not just because it has appeared and exists thanks to the use of a digital light source, LEDs, taking full advantage of their technical and aesthetic qualities, but also because it proposes a new typology for lighting in the home and collective spaces, that of the luminous divider, responding to clearly evident behavioural needs of the present.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Synapse is a complex, multifunctional lighting system that can be positioned by suspension, but also on the wall, or at the centre of the room, like a light partition.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

It is composed of a variable number of parts composed of two polycarbonate shells with three lobes that protect the light sources: a printed circuit with three variable-colour RGB LEDs.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Activating them by means of a remote control, it is possible to mix the hues and to transform the atmosphere of a room at will. Thanks to an interlocking device, the individual modules can be joined to form an infinite range of shapes, of vertical or horizontal extensions.

Synapse lighting by Francisco Gomez Paz for Luceplan

Synapse, then, is not just a new product, but a new lighting typology. With it, Luceplan makes a wager on the future, applying industrial design in the original sense of the term, that of a link between technology and constantly evolving lifestyles.

www.luceplan.com