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Question of the Day - 18 May 2019

Q:

Why don't hotels have a ceiling light in their rooms? I'm not talking about super-deluxe suites (which might be different, as we never get one), but the regular rooms. The lights by the bed, over the desk, maybe a floor lamp, or one in the hall as you enter the room do not light up the whole room very good, as there can be dark areas. Just wondering, is there is a reason?

And the link to the results of the poll on the primary purpose of respondents' last visit to Las Vegas is at the bottom of this answer.

A:

While he shares your fondness for overhead lighting, Sacramento-based architect Vincent Maloney has an explanation, “The primary reason in hotels is that the floor-ceiling assembly is fire-rated and installing lighting in it would compromise the system. In a lot of hotels, in fact, that floor is a single concrete slab with the ceiling finish directly applied to it.”

Raving Consulting hotel-design expert Brett Magnan adds, “The short answer is that properties (many casinos and some traditional hotels) value-engineer out soffits and only have them over the bathroom due to cost. Better properties will have a small channel soffit that runs the length of the room to hold cans or other pendant light fixtures over the bed or desk.”

Now we'll put it into layman's terms. 

"Floor-ceiling assembly" is the term used to describe how the floor of a room on, say, the 15th floor of a hotel combines with the ceiling of the room directly underneath it on the 14th floor. Walls and floor-ceiling assemblies with fire resistance rated in hours are required between sections of commercial, industrial, and multifamily residential buildings (sound is also factored in). Building this way leaves no cavity between floors through which to run electrical wire.

Placing permanent ceiling lights in hotel rooms would also render layout (both where the rooms go on a floor and where the furniture goes in a room) less flexible. For example, what if five years down the road, a hotel wants to remodel the room? The new plan would need, at least in part, to be arranged around the permanent light fixtures.

Also, some people who share rooms or beds want to operate out of sync, one sleeping while the other burns a reading light, so it's common to provide a desk lamp on each side of a queen or king bed. Others also want task lighting at the provided desk. 

Add it all up, including the ease of plugging lamps into the wall in lieu of overhead lighting, and you’re left with a low likelihood of entering a reasonably priced hotel room with sufficient overhead lighting.

We didn't know any of this until we started looking into the question. Thanks for asking; it's interesting and we'll remember it during future hotel stays.

And here's the link to the results of the previous poll on the primary purpose of respondents' last trip to Las Vegas.

 

No part of this answer may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the written permission of the publisher.

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Comments

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  • Pat Higgins May-18-2019
    Pat H
    thanks for your response to my question.  It was most informative and well researched.  

  • Dave in Seattle. May-18-2019
    Hotel rooms.
    It's usually to dark to read by.They save money by using 7 watt 
    (CFL)fluorescent light bulbs. The bathroom lighting is usually the brightest.I have taken a 14 watt florescent bulb with me to brighten up a room B-4.(4 to 7 day stay).I won't leave the old ones  there,because I don't trust them to recycle properly.

  • Jackie May-18-2019
    Hotels are cheap
    Any high rise or commercial building lives by the same codes but they have 10 foot high raw finished rooms then do a 2 foot drop from the ceiling to install lighting.  Room heights will vary and false ceilings (as they are called) may or may not exist as in warehouses.  Basically it costs a lot less to build shorter rooms without false ceilings for "temporary" customers.  Of course, the high roller suites would have false ceilings. 

  • O2bnVegas May-18-2019
    outlets
    As usual I digress, but I have lately appreciated the placement of lamps and alarm clocks that have outlets built in for phone chargers (regular elec. outlets) on the bedside tables and other convenient locations.  No more having to plug my charger into a socket one foot above the floor.
    
    Just an observation.

  • ocliffgirl62 May-18-2019
    Electric Outlets
    Candy Wright, we used to bring a 12-ft extension cord for my husband's CPAP machine due to lack of outlets.  Also, once we had to have hotel maintenance men come up and move the bed so we could access an outlet.  Good times!  

  • O2bnVegas May-18-2019
    the little things
    Yep, ocliffgirl62, it's those details that make a big difference sometimes.