This research presents a city-scale outdoor lighting system, relying on interconnected IoT units communicating viaIPv6tocreate an adaptive network. Rather than activating at sunset alone, the setup evolves by recognizing recurring behaviors-modifying brightness when motion appears, during rainfall, or if people gather nearby. Information travels frompavement-mounted detectors to neighborhood computing nodes, enabling instant responses prior to forwarding condensed reports higherup. These insights then feed into cloud systems that refine how energy gets used across districts. Maintenance alerts popupnotwhen parts fail, but before they are likely to, thanks to pattern shifts caught by algorithmic tracking. Users interact viasimpleapps - no coding needed - to set schedules or adjust brightness block by block. Firmware upgrades roll out silently, devicebydevice, without disrupting service. Safety improves because well-lit zones follow people, not fixed timetables. Power consumptiondrops since light levels match actual needs, not worst-case assumptions. The whole setup balances speed at the edges withdeepanalysis in centralized hubs. Trials showed a solid boost in power savings - nearly 28% - while upkeep expenses dippedbyabout35%. Control became smoother, thanks to simple apps on phones and browsers that made managing lights easier. This setupgives city teams better tools to handle streetlights without complications. It fits into smarter city systems without forcingchangeor promising miracles.
A Gupta (Sun,) studied this question.