Such lanterns would be jokes and not proper streetlamp. But my guess is, it is the use of wrong specs lanterns, too short poles or improper installation. Normally the optic is designed to provide as uniform illumination on the target surface as possible with the given light source and reasonable size and cost. With LEDs this leads to near perfect uniform rectangle underneath the lantern. But the problem often is, all these designs rely on the way how the lanterns are installed, mainly the aspect ratio between the pole distance and height: Standard says the pole distance should be 4x their height. If they are longer distance from each other (or someone used shorter poles than their positioning was designed for), the space inbetween is not adequately illuminated. And because the LED optic uses to be quite precise, it leads to a rather sharp cutout on that edge, so when the distance is wrong, it leaves not illuminated patches inbetween. Same problem would be with many modern high efficiency HID systems as well, as with the modern precise faceted optics the nearly ideal beam pattern was also feasible.
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