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world record Christmas lights
Christmas lights are switched on in Canberra to raise money for sudden infant death syndrome. The lights set a new Guinness World Record for the number of Christmas lights switched on at one time. Photograph: Alan Porritt/AAP Image
Christmas lights are switched on in Canberra to raise money for sudden infant death syndrome. The lights set a new Guinness World Record for the number of Christmas lights switched on at one time. Photograph: Alan Porritt/AAP Image

Australian Christmas lights set Guinness world record with 1.2m bulbs

This article is more than 9 years old

Lawyer strings up 120km of wire in the nation’s capital to create the largest ever image made of LED lights

An Australian lawyer has set a world record by stringing up almost 1.2m Christmas lights in the center of the national capital.

Guinness World Records on Friday confirmed that the 120km (75 miles) of multicoloured wire strung in the shape of three interconnected giant, wrapped Christmas gifts in a downtown Canberra mall was the largest ever image made of LED lights.

Lawyer David Richards assembled the Canberra light show with the help of an army of volunteers and powers it with electricity donated by a local power company.

He set a world record a year ago for the most Christmas lights on a residential property by cocooning his Canberra home with 502,165 bulbs.

However, traffic snarls in his neighborhood created by 75,000 sightseers who visited the display over four weeks made it difficult for his family to get to and from their home.

“I couldn’t do it again to my neighbours or my family,” Richards said, explaining the move to the city center.

The latest light show will be open to the public free of charge from Friday until New Year’s Eve.

Visitors to the 2013 light show donated $138,000 to a local Canberra sudden infant death syndrome counselling and support service.

Richards said he expects donations to the Sids and Kids ACT charity will be higher with the bigger and more spacious display.

The 1,194,380 twinkling bulbs arranged since Wednesday beat the previous record set in Shurtan in southern Uzbekistan by 181,540 lights.

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