The SIMPLEX LDF modules consist of a specially designed enclosure, in which the LED blocks are placed. The metal front of the enclosure is perforated and RGB light is projected on it. The perforation can be created in a repeating pattern or a special design drawing. The modules are delivered to the building site fully assembled and ready to mount on a facade. They can be assembled in a combined array, thereby using the entire facade as a single unified screen, or the modules can be mounted on different parts of a facade, combining them with other SIMPLEX modules.
The array of digital multi-colour LED tubes transforms a building facade into a giant computer-controlled video screen. This screen can reproduce both static images, “live” video and various light-dynamic effects on the building facade, providing a solution for decorative colour lighting and visual dynamic advertising in the dark (or on darker days). LDF technology can economically provide festive night lighting and the illumination of buildings in all colours of the rainbow and a wide range of visual effects. Large area dynamic light facades can be divided into several virtual screens that can simultaneously reproduce different visuals.
Further details about LDF technology: The elements that make up the screen of the dynamic light facade are 2 or 1 metre long multi-colour light-emitting diode (LED) tubes made of polycarbonate. The screen resolution of these tubes is generally 16 pixels per meter. The pixels are addressed and managed by a special computer system. Both vertically and horizontally, the large LED tubes are transformed into a light-dynamic screen, controlled by a computer and dedicated signal switching controllers, and by a separate controller rendering ”stitched” video effects and saved video files. Finally, the system allows the reproduction of various media files and/or the dynamic display of a computer screen on the facade.
For a relatively low cost, the SIMPLEX LDF façade can give a whole new meaning to architectural objects, while providing decorative lighting and advertising (or other) imaging directly on facade walls.







































































