Vancouver’s Jack Chow Building: 2017 IES Lighting Control Innovation Award

August 17, 2018

Believed at one point to be the world’s shallowest freestanding commercial building, this landmark structure at 8 Pender Street West measures 4’11” (1.50 m) deep on the ground floor and 6′ (1.83 m) on the second floor.

In 1912, the City of Vancouver expropriated 24 feet (7.3 m) of what had originally been a standard-sized lot to widen the street. In 1913, the lot owner commissioned architects Brown and Gillam to build on the remaining space. The main floor housed shops; the second floor, living space. The basement, which extends under the sidewalk, housed public baths and a barbershop. Today, the building is a tourist attraction and office for Jack Chow Insurance.

The current owner’s vision for the lighting project was to exploit the various levels and unique types of three dimensional glass elements in this architectural oddity. This was not to just highlight architecture, not just to provide functional lighting for an insurance office, but to re-imagine a heritage building into an innovative, timeless, theatrical, world class production. Whether this stylistic vision could become reality all came down to how innovative the control could be.

A turning point which took the project to the next level was the change from originally specified single driver one colour per stair tread at a time LED RGB strips to multi-channel DMX LED RGB neon like tubes. This gave the ability to create full pixel mapping, build innovative custom effects from scratch, and provide for infinite channel by channel engagement among the various virtually mapped zones.

By employing experienced expert talent in live theatrical lighting, storyboarding pre-visualization, human driven cue point music analysis, hue assignment based on musical instrument tones, emotion characteristics, and other abstract concepts, this all combined to achieve full artistic control of the multi-layer dynamic pallet of light. Programming was done on a professional live theatre lighting console with the completed shows streamed to a cue driven architectural controller to allow for complete flexibility, efficiency, end user maintainability and expandability of control.

Multiple layers of RGB and white light within this block wide 3D facade are choreographed to create a series of innovative street-side symphonic presentations.

Special effects are multiplied to the power of infinity by the mirrors and polished stainless steel in this neon marquee glasswalk centre all glass walkway.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fully addressable RGB DMX LED Neon tubing in the upper glass and lower staircase are able to create intricate effects through pixel mapping control. The backside of the glass staircase appears as floating neon allowing for vertical motion effects to be combined with horizontal transitions for a vast array of control combinations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Under counter white lights with floating RGB glass countertops to match the glass stair treads. All are fully controllable through a user-friendly mobile interface.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Due to the building’s unique façade and glass elements, interior lighting is also exterior lighting — an attribute that was fully exploited in the control.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even the true neon rainbow, and genuine traffic light have been assigned individual addresses for control purposes, and have been incorporated into the light shows.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RGB cove within the underside of the underside of glass sidewalk combined with 4,000K white allow for coordinated and dimmable lighting for task and atmosphere.

The illuminated glass sidewalk, window wickets and center neon marquee combine to celebrate national holidays, special events and sports teams.

Gentle transitions beautifully light up each of the upper glass staircase translucent treads to create a sensational viewing and intimate walking experience.

100% interior and exterior dimmable white & RGB LED lighting all home run to a lighting panel outputting to 6 universes of 2,600+ DMX channels controlled by a multi-universe architectural DMX controller. Timer and dimmer functions were programmed for energy efficient operation.

The lighting was designed by EOS Lightmedia. Photography by Rod Chow. Lighting controls include the ETC Ion 2500, ETC Nomad 2500, ETC SMPTE Show Control, Capture Polar Visualization, Ubuiquity P2P Wifi Antenna, Interactive Technologies CueServer 940, Pathway DMX Nodes, IT SP8R DMX Splitters, BluePoint DMX to 0-10V Protocol converters, IT CueStation Button Stations, IT CuePad iPad App, and Strand A21 Dimmer/Relay Panel.

This article is reprinted here with the permission of the Lighting Controls Association; https://lightingcontrolsassociation.org/2018/07/18/the-jack-chow-building-wins-2017-ies-lighting-control-innovation-award/.

Related Articles


Changing Scene

  • March 3, 2026 - Leviton - Certolux Visioneering (Viscor) Announces Walter Lai as New Purchasing Manager

    Leviton – Certolux Visioneering (Viscor) Announces Walter Lai as New Purchasing Manager

    Leviton – Certolux Visioneering (Viscor) is excited to welcome Walter Lai CSCMP to the team as Purchasing Manager! Walter brings over 20 years of expertise in purchasing, inventory management, and supply chain operations. His strong background in supplier management, cost optimization, and leading cross-functional teams will be a tremendous asset as they continue to strengthen… Read More…

  • Feb 27, 2026 - Lumorphéa A Designer Lighting Exhibition by Mac’s II Agencies - March 5-15, 2026

    Lumorphéa: A Designer Lighting Exhibition by Mac’s II Agencies – March 5-15, 2026

    Lumorphéa has arrived. Rooted in metamorphosis, Lumorphéa explores the transformative power of light — how it reshapes perception, emotion, and space. Not simply display, but experience. From March 5–15, The Gallery George becomes a living, tactile lighting gallery where product, art, and application collide. Curated installations, project imagery, and sculptural lighting moments invite you to… Read More…


Design

  • RENO Lighting Highlights Rittal Canada Lighting Project

    RENO Lighting Highlights Rittal Canada Lighting Project

    It’s great to see projects grow from one phase to the next! RENO Lighting has partnered with Rittal Canada to supply lighting for their new office and warehouse. As the renovation continues, they are proud to showcase the next step in their transformation. From industrial environments to modern workplaces, each phase requires thoughtful lighting design… Read More…

  • Intertek: DLC Solid State Lighting V6.0 & LUNA V2.0 Fact Sheet – The Next Generation of Lighting Requirements

    Intertek: DLC Solid State Lighting V6.0 & LUNA V2.0 Fact Sheet – The Next Generation of Lighting Requirements

    Stay ahead of evolving rebate requirements with Intertek’s DLC SSL V6.0 & LUNA V2.0 technical guide. This fact sheet breaks down new efficacy thresholds, controls and field-adjustable reporting updates, expanded eligibility, and critical 2026 deadlines that could impact your product listings. Learn how to reduce delisting risk, streamline recertification, and align your testing strategy to… Read More…


New Products

  • Dals: Boulevard Architectural Linear Collection

    Dals: Boulevard Architectural Linear Collection

    Dals Boulevard is more than a fixture, it’s a complete architectural system. A single, disciplined line of light moves effortlessly from ceiling to wall, from interior to exterior, creating continuity across every space it touches. One system, expressed four ways, unified by proportion, performance, and purpose. Available in standard 120V or multi-voltage configurations (120, 277,… Read More…

  • Eralux: OSIRIS – Track Fixture

    Eralux: OSIRIS – Track Fixture

    Eralux’s OSIRIS features a distinctive design with a smooth heatsink and a vertical driver enclosure. It is available in three different sizes and offers power options of 20W, 27W, and 51W, delivering 74-92 lumens per watt. Users can choose from three beam distributions: narrow flood, flood, and wide flood. Made from durable aluminum die-cast material,… Read More…