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								 Dutch designer Daan 
								Roosegaarde's "Urban Sun" installation seeks to 
								harness ultraviolet light to reduce the amount 
								of coronavirus in the air in busy spaces and 
								lessen the risk of transmission. 
 "This is not instead of a vaccine or the 
								government rules, it's an extra barrier, an 
								extra safe zone for schools, hospitals, train 
								stations," said Roosegaarde.
 
 The pandemic has led to a boom in interest in 
								UVC, or ultraviolet light in wavelengths of less 
								than 280 nanometres, an effective killer of the 
								coronavirus and other viruses.
 
 Commercial manufacturers do not recommend that 
								people be directly exposed to UVC due to worries 
								that it may harm skin or eyes. The actors 
								involved in the project were only exposed to the 
								light for a few minutes at a stretch and had 
								been tested for coronavirus.
 
								
								 
 Roosegaarde, who blends science and design in 
								his projects, created the Urban Sun after 
								studies that suggested ultraviolet light in the 
								222 wavelength, slightly less than the industry 
								standard, is generally safe.
 
 "ROOM FOR IMAGINATION"
 
 His concept is to use visible light, shining 
								above the black orb, to illustrate where the 
								invisible ultraviolet light is present: directly 
								underneath. The effect is a little like an 
								eclipse.
 
 Roosegaarde, who has briefly shown the 
								installation twice in Rotterdam, said his hope 
								was "to create places which are safer, instead 
								of being stuck in this Zoom screen all the 
								time".
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								 He hopes to set up his 
								installation at dance festivals in the summer as 
								COVID-19 restrictions ease.
 The Netherlands currently bans public gatherings 
								of more than two people, and has a nighttime 
								curfew in place from 9 p.m.
 
 Roosegaarde said his hope was "to create places 
								which are safer, instead of being stuck in this 
								Zoom screen all the time."
 
 Jet Bussemaker, who chairs the Dutch Council of 
								Public Health & Society, said artistic 
								creativity had a role to play during the fight 
								against the pandemic.
 
 "Maybe we also have to create room for 
								experiments, creating room for imagination and 
								not only for the very safe, technical, medical 
								arguments," Bussemaker said.
 
 "It is a very dangerous virus," she added, "but 
								at the same time we have to keep moving on with 
								our lives."
 
 (Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Gareth 
								Jones)
 
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