I am laying out a roadway lighting system into a manufacturing facility consisting of several metal poles with cobra head type fixtures. All the poles are to be mounted on concrete bases each with a separate ground rod. The associated ground conductor is bonded to the pole by mechanical means. Due to the length of the the feeder run we are feeding the fixtures at 480V. The fixtures are energized by a photocell controlled contactor in an MCC bucket. The 480V MCC bus that feeds the contactor employs TVSS protection. A question has been raised concerning surge protection on the 480V lighting circuit conductors. If a lightning strike were to occur on the lighting poles, should we be installing surge protection on the load side of our lighting contactor to prevent it from arcing across the contactor contacts when they are open? I have never done this and am not aware that this is a common practice. I was just wondering if anyone has any thoughts on the merits of this approach.