College Station’s orange-colored street lights are being replaced.
A contract to install $2.6 dollars of L-E-D bulbs was approved at the last city council meeting.
Electric utilities director Timothy Crabb says the new bulbs have a life expectancy of 30 years.
Crabb also says the new bulbs will provide more security.
And the city has the ability to change the brightness at individual locations.
Crabb says the company that was hired is responsible for the disposal and/or recycling of the old bulbs.
The project is supposed to be finished by next June.
Additional information from blog.cstx.gov:
The $2.6 million contract with Seimens Industries will replace the city’s 5,500 street lights with more efficient LED (light emitting diode) fixtures. When the city installed the state’s first street light monitoring system in 2009, it used high-quality bulbs with a plan to investigate LED replacement options when the bulbs’ six-year warranty expired. College Station Utilities estimates a 7-8 year payback on the new system, which should have a 30-year life expectancy.