The Reston Association Board, the Design Review Board (DRB) and the Covenants Committee opened a joint session Tuesday evening by focusing on outdoor lighting regulations after a recent lakeside complaint highlighted gaps in enforcement. The board president said the meeting’s goal was "to improve cohesion, transparency, and collaboration in how we create, revise, and interpret our design guidelines and maintenance standards."
Why it matters: Residents and board members said current guidelines that use subjective terms leave too much room for disagreement and make it difficult to sustain legal enforcement. Several participants urged moving toward objective measures — such as color temperature (Kelvin), foot‑candle maximums or an enforcement‑grade light meter at the property line — so complaints can be resolved with verifiable data instead of differing impressions.
Board member Director Brown pressed the legal and practical case for objective standards: "It's gonna be very hard to enforce a covenant that has a qualitative standard," he said, urging use of metrics that a judge or an outside consultant could verify. DRB members and architects agreed that color temperature limits (for example, 2,700K for warm light) are straightforward to specify, but they also noted that brightness and reflected glare can vary by site.
Several speakers described a recent case in which a homeowner installed extensive exterior lighting near a lake. Neighbors and board members said glare from reflections amplified the impact. Michael Wood, chair of the DRB, recommended considering both brightness caps and limits by facade: "If we had a specific objective ... you cannot have more than you can if it's more than 6, you have to go to the board to get an approval," he said, arguing numeric thresholds would create a clear enforcement trigger.
Staff said the association previously had lighting consultants for high‑profile cases and could likewise recruit a local professional or check past committee memberships for a resident lighting expert. One director referenced existing tools — Fairfax County code and the Dark Sky International guidance — as possible reference points.
Next steps: The board directed staff and committee members to consider a narrower set of proposals — measurable thresholds, a light‑meter procedure and where reflection (adjacent water bodies, for example) should factor into rules — and to bring concrete language to a working group for drafting. No formal rule changes were adopted at the meeting.