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AI is speeding up design work, but it’s also triggering a new kind of client skepticism and a very real skills crisis. I sit down with Mark Lien to unpack why many people hear “AI” and immediately think lower quality, lower fees, or hidden risk and why a Bentley University study showing 74% of people don’t trust AI should change how creative professionals talk about their process.
We get practical about what’s actually useful right now for lighting designers and lighting engineers, from AI-assisted research to scalable lighting control that can manage thousands of luminaires for weather, events, and changing city needs. Then we pivot into the harder stuff: cognitive atrophy, “AI speak,” hallucinated sources, and the uncomfortable reality that oversight is becoming the most valuable skill even as few organisations train for it. If you care about architectural lighting design, professional liability, and maintaining client trust, this part hits home.
From ethics and intellectual property rights to confidentiality and data privacy, we map the guardrails that help teams use generative AI without letting it quietly degrade craft, judgment, or credibility. We also talk energy use and data centres, plus why the future may reward the people and firms that adapt fastest while doubling down on fundamentals. If this sparks a reaction, subscribe, share the episode with a colleague, and leave a review. What’s your personal rule for when AI is allowed on a project?
More from the Light Talk Desk
Watch my vlogs, industry dialogues and project tours.
Listen to enriching stories, deep insights, and expert opinions in my podcast.
Learn directly from a master, absorbing the knowledge, techniques and the artistry of lighting design through my masterclass.
Sign Up to the AI Fundamentals course for Lighting Designers.
Download and delve into my works 'Light Talk, a Year in the Life of Light' and 'Light Talk 2, 16 Years in the Life of Light' - follow the journey of lighting design through his books.
Check out lighttalk.space
By Martin KlaasenSend us Fan Mail
AI is speeding up design work, but it’s also triggering a new kind of client skepticism and a very real skills crisis. I sit down with Mark Lien to unpack why many people hear “AI” and immediately think lower quality, lower fees, or hidden risk and why a Bentley University study showing 74% of people don’t trust AI should change how creative professionals talk about their process.
We get practical about what’s actually useful right now for lighting designers and lighting engineers, from AI-assisted research to scalable lighting control that can manage thousands of luminaires for weather, events, and changing city needs. Then we pivot into the harder stuff: cognitive atrophy, “AI speak,” hallucinated sources, and the uncomfortable reality that oversight is becoming the most valuable skill even as few organisations train for it. If you care about architectural lighting design, professional liability, and maintaining client trust, this part hits home.
From ethics and intellectual property rights to confidentiality and data privacy, we map the guardrails that help teams use generative AI without letting it quietly degrade craft, judgment, or credibility. We also talk energy use and data centres, plus why the future may reward the people and firms that adapt fastest while doubling down on fundamentals. If this sparks a reaction, subscribe, share the episode with a colleague, and leave a review. What’s your personal rule for when AI is allowed on a project?
More from the Light Talk Desk
Watch my vlogs, industry dialogues and project tours.
Listen to enriching stories, deep insights, and expert opinions in my podcast.
Learn directly from a master, absorbing the knowledge, techniques and the artistry of lighting design through my masterclass.
Sign Up to the AI Fundamentals course for Lighting Designers.
Download and delve into my works 'Light Talk, a Year in the Life of Light' and 'Light Talk 2, 16 Years in the Life of Light' - follow the journey of lighting design through his books.
Check out lighttalk.space