Gantri just reinvented the wireless light. Now you can, too
Ian Yang saw a business opportunity sitting on the table of a restaurant. In the darkness of the room, a small portable light meant to make it easier to read a menu jumped out to him as just the kind of product his lighting company, Gantri, should be making. The challenge was that these common restaurant lights are all wireless. “They’re very dim, they’re very small, they’re not really fully fledged, like residential full-power products,” Yang says. But, he thought, they could be. [Photo: Gantri] That instinct led to three new wireless lighting product lines being released this week by Gantri, alongside a new digital manufacturing platform that will make it easier for other designers to create their own take on the wireless light. Designed in collaboration with the design studio Ammunition, the three product lines are the first wireless lights to use Gantri’s Helia system, a modular approach to the components inside a wireless light. Also designed by Ammunition, this system consists of a battery, customizable LED modules, a touch-sensitive control, and a charging puck. The guts of the system can be tucked inside almost any shell a designer can imagine. [Photo: Gantri] “All these components get assembled into a 3D printed enclosure, and everything is routed where it needs to be,” says Achille Biteau, director of industrial design at Ammunition. “It simplifies things a lot because all of a sudden you have that same platform that can be used on a range of designs. It could be in the hundreds or the thousands of designs.” Gantri and Ammunition have worked together since about 2018, and first started thinking about wireless lighting design three years ago. “We were just talking a lot about mobility and portable lighting and this idea that, well, people are very used to mobile things and charging has become just part of lifestyle,” says Robert Brunner, founding partner of Ammunition. [Photo: Gantri] L