Bird Safe Hampton Roads
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Spring 2026 Campaign
The spring "Lights Out" campaign starts on March 15 in Hampton Roads.
As part of this voluntary program, the Cape Henry Audubon Soceity and its partners urge property managers, businesses, tenants, government agencies, and residents help to prevent night-time bird collisions with building by turning off and/or blocking as many external and internal building lights at workplaces as possible at night to help prevent injury and death of migrating birds, especially from 11 pm to sunrise.
During migration, birds rest during the day and fly at night. During their long-distance flights, birds become disoriented by the bright, artificial lights of cities and are drawn into hazardous urban areas, where building collisions are a leading human cause of bird deaths, killing around 1 billion birds each year.   Learn how you can help at Bird Safe Hampton Roads.
Please help by turning off lights visible outside after dark. Research conducted over 50 years by scientists at the Field Museum in Chicago quantified the bird-saving potential of turning lights out in downtown buildings. Halving lighted window areas decreased collision counts by 11 times in spring and 6 times in fall. Lights Out has secondary benefits in protecting moths, reducing light pollution, reducing energy costs for businesses, and reducing the region's overall carbon footprint.
If you want to learn more about the campaign or want to volunteer to help with outreach or monitoring, please e-mail us at
capehenryaudubonsociety@gmail.com
Bird Safe/Lights Out Hampton Roads Year-End Report 2025
Our Bird Safe/Lights Out campaign has completed its second full year. We've seen some progress in our advocacy efforts to make buildings bird safe in Norfolk and around Hampton Roads. But we still recorded a fretful toll of dead and injured birds in our monitoring efforts in downtown Norfolk.
Outreach and Advocacy Accomplishments
The renovation of McArthur Memorial Museum and administrative offices will include the installation
of
bird safe
glass and DarkSky-compliant lighting.
Conservatory at Norfolk Botanical Garden
The Norfolk Botanical Gardens' new conservatory is nearly finished!
The entire structure is constructed of
an
ultraviolet-patterned
bird safe
glass with an etched dot pattern
n the first surface of the glass.
Once opened, the Garden staff has arranged for monitors to check the new conservatory for bird strikes as well as the older building in the garden.
The Cape Henry Audubon Society has given two presentations on bird safety at the Gardens
one for the public and one to train the Gardens staff on
monitoring
best practices.
The Norfolk Architectural Review Board is
in the process of
updating the Design Guidelines for the Historic District.
The draft version includes a section on lights and migratory birds as well as
DarkSky
principles.
We are grateful that they have been listening to our suggestions!
Norfolk City Hall
The City of Norfolk has promised to apply a patterned film
on
the first-floor windows of City Hall and some of the windows on the first floor of Circuit Court facing the green space in 2025.
Installation is still pending. Adding patterned film to skywalks connecting parking garages is
planned for later this year.
The new Norfolk Casino agreed to use downward-facing light fixtures on the first level of the building and
bird safe
glass on the first 40 feet
up from
grade level.
However, this does not include the glass-fronted main entrance, which still poses a high risk for birds.
The Norfolk Downtown Council continues to assist us in monitoring the downtown streets for dead and injured birds. We are very appreciative of their efforts.
The City of Chesapeake included languages in its revised Comprehensive Plan
recognizing
that light and noise pollution impacts both humans and wildlife, including during bird migration seasons. It states that light pollution can be limited throughout the City by choosing exterior fixtures that are not brighter than necessary, are directed towards the ground, have full cut off, and use warm tones, among other practices.
The Piedmont Bird Club has asked us for advice on starting a Lights Out campaign for Charlottesville. They hope to be up and running for spring migration.
Pending
Added
bird safe
glass features to the Cuffee Aquatic Center,
being
built in Chesapeake, are still under consideration as part of design additions being negotiated with the contractor
The renovation of Chrysler Hall and Scope
will
begin later this year. We've urged Norfolk to budget for
bird safe
glass because we have observed that these two buildings are among the deadliest in downtown.
Monitoring
Northern Flickers
Photo by Kevin Lane
Overall, since we began monitoring downtown Norfolk on April 30, 2024, we have documented 727 dead or injured birds. In 2025, the monitoring team documented 78 dead or injured birds
in
the spring and 324 dead and injured birds during the fall migration. As a rule of thumb, we suspect that for every bird we find, there are 5 more dead birds that we don’t find because they were removed by scavengers or managed to fly away before succumbing to internal injuries.
Just last fall, we recorded 26 American Woodcocks and 64 White-throated Sparrows as victims of window strikes.
Sadly, we
think
that as flocks of sparrows settled in a particular location, such as Fountain Park at Commercial Place and Plume Street, Scope,
and
Chrysler Hall, one by one they hit the windows and died until most of the flock was wiped out.
By
mid-December
, there were hardly any to be found in these locations. We speculate that the high number of dead woodcocks resulted from their local territory being disturbed by construction, forcing them fly through the city where they collided with windows.
Dead birds delivered to Walters Lab at ODU for study
What You Can Do At Home
See our
Bird Safe At Home
page for more information!
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Mission
Bird Safe Hampton Roads is a partnership led by the Cape Henry Audubon Society with multiple organizations and concerned community members working to make Hampton Roads safer for birds that live in our area or pass through during the annual spring and fall migrations. The particular focus of this effort is to reduce hazards caused by urban and suburban development such as disorientation by artificial lighting, building and window collisions, and habitat encroachment.
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Partner Organizations
Bird Friendly Building Factsheet