3 Windows
The window is an opening in a wall or side of a building admitting light
and often air to the interior. Early windows were developed before the
introduction of glass, so initially windows were left open to the external
atmosphere, or filled by some form of closure to minimize the heat loss at
night. The more sophisticated buildings would have had thin slabs of
marble, mica or oiled paper for this purpose.
In mediaeval times wooden shutters were installed on the interior, and
these were left open or closed to regulate the light and air. With the
introduction of glass, used first in small panes in Roman architecture, the
window as we know it today had its beginnings. The concept of small
panes of glass, divided by bronze or later lead divisions, as used in early
buildings dies hard and window manufacturers still offer these as alternatives to fully glazed windows in new domestic work, however
inappropriate they may appear.
Windows can broadly be divided into two main types, first the window
set in the side walls of a building, and second the opening light set into
the roof, generally known as rooflights.
The daylight penetration from side windows will depend upon the
ceiling height, and in early buildings where the ceiling heights were low,
the penetration of daylight into the building was severely limited . . . with
the design of the important houses of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries the ceiling heights were raised and daylight was able to reach
further into the interiors. However as buildings became grander, even this was not enough, and the concept of the rooflight was developed to
introduce daylight into interiors far from the side windows.
Illustrations of some window types indicate the variety of window
shapes that have evolved over the centuries, set into the vertical sides of
buildings.
The horizontal window is perhaps the most well known of all, starting
as it did in mediaeval times, limited by the construction methods of the
day. It is still much used in today’s domestic architecture. Provided the
horizontal window is placed high in the wall the daylighting will
penetrate well into the space, but other features of the window need to be
considered, such as the view out which will be prejudiced where the cill
is too high.
A logical development of this type is where the horizontal window
extends the entire length of the external wall, a device used in nineteenth
century industrial buildings to provide even and sufficient light for
machine operators. This type of window required new structural
techniques to overcome the need for vertical support to the structure
above.
Yet a further example is the clerestorey; found mainly in tall buildings
such as churches, generally associated with other forms of window at
lower level to provide the main daylight. Clerestoreys are placed at high
level to assist in getting daylight further into the interior and to light the
roof structure.
A logical development of the extended horizontal window, is the floor
to ceiling window; as structural techniques were perfected, this type of
window has become almost universal in some types of architectural
programme such as the office. The 1930s saw the innovation of the wrap
around corner window as further structural techniques were made
possible.
Finally and in no chronological order comes the vertical window.
Vertical windows were popular from the fourteenth century, having
perhaps their most glorious period in the eighteenth century, when the
Georgian window with its sophisticated detailing was almost universal.
Tall windows, set apart by masonry at intervals, provided a simple
structural solution and this formed the pattern of development in
residential and other building types for several centuries.
The windowcan be said to be the most important architectural feature of
a building; this is the first experience that a visitor will have when seeing
the building for the first time, and architects have naturally considered the
form of the window and its relationship to the exterior to be vital.
The illlustrations of these buildings along the Embankment illustrate
three different approaches to fenestration. All buildings are of the
twentieth century. The first, on the left, shows the more traditional
separate windows, whilst that in the middle is an example of the
continuous horizontal window, where the individual floors are expressed
as important horizontal bands. The building on the right is the further
development where the window becomes a subsidiary part of the
external cladding, for a total glass fac¸ade. The appearance of the buildings
says little about the success of the daylighting, it says more about
architectural fashion.
ROOFLIGHTS
Whilst rooflights could properly have been said to have started with the
central courtyards or atria of the Roman house, these were open to the
sky and rain; and despite providing daylight to the surrounding dwelling
space, would not have modified the exterior climate in the manner of a
roof light.
The rooflight by definition permits daylight to enter from above
through a glazed opening in the roof protecting the interior from wind
22 Daylighting: Natural Light in Architecture
Three buildings on London’s Embankment
DP Archive
and weather. The early rooflights were perceived either as domes such as
that at Chiswick House with ordinary windows in the sides allowing in
the daylight, but by the nineteenth century structural techniques had
developed sufficiently to allow fully glazed barrel vaults or glazed domes
to be placed above areas of building remote from the side walls and the
proximity of windows. Examples of nineteenth century shopping malls
still exist today where these overhead lights permit daylight to reach
deep into the interior of buildings.
Much innovation was used in the nature of these roofights, and it is of
interest to study the section of the Soane Museum, to see the many
different shapes and sizes of overhead light Soane devised to introduce
daylight to the different spaces, in what was at the time his private house.
By the twentieth century the use of rooflights had been reduced almost
entirely to industrial buildings, and the CIBSE Lighting Guide LG10,
‘Daylighting and Window Design’ (published October 1999) illustrates a
number of different types, the most common of which were the shed
roof, the sawtooth, and the monitor.
The advantages and disadvantages are set out in CIBSE LG10
indicating that the original shed roof, the cheapest solution, has serious
defects and is unlikely to be used today; whilst the many different forms
of monitor roof can be adapted to fit most roof situations to solve the
daylighting problems below.
New roof forms are still being developed for the admission of daylight
to large open areas not restricted to industrial buildings . . . from
supermarkets to universities and swimming pools. An excellent example
of an early solution to a factory in which the services are rationalized and
placed inside ducts which are a part of the overall roof structure and do
not obstruct the daylight is shown in Lighting Modern Buildings pp. 138/9,
the York Shipley Factory; whilst the roof design for the Sainsbury
Supermarket in Greenwich (Case Study pp. 164/167) shows an elegant
solution to the roof form, providing a high level of daylight to the store.
ATRIA
Whilst the word atrium started as the central court of a Roman house,
admitting light and air to the surrounding dwelling space, the word has
taken on a wider meaning as described in the CIBSE LG10 daylight and
window design.
‘An interior light space enclosed on two or more sides by the walls
of a building, and daylit from a roof of transparent or translucent
material and, sometimes, from glazed ends or sides. It permits the
entry of light to the other interior spaces, linked to it by glazed or
unglazed openings.’
The atrium is therefore a further development of the dome or vault
allowing daylight into the central areas of the great houses. The modern
atrium will be covered by a glazed skylight, which, whilst slightly
reducing the amount of daylight, monitors the external atmosphere
keeping out the rain, whilst contributing to ventilation, and reducing the
necessity for air-conditioning.
The proportions of the atrium and the reflective capacity of the
enclosing wall surfaces are critical, and those atria which are wide in
relation to their height, will perform better than taller, narrower spaces in
ensuring that daylight reaches the lower levels. Having said this, the
elongated atrium, which can act as an internal street at the low level, has
proved successful in providing the impression of a daylit interior, even if
due to its height the measured level of daylight at the lowest level will be
much reduced.
In order to optimize the daylight at the lower levels one method is to
set back the floor plans at the higher levels to maximize the direct view of
the sky at the lower; but this has planning limitations and economic
implications for the building owner.
Summarizing the advantages of atrium design
First, the human advantages: by getting daylight into the centre of deep
plan buildings, this provides the occupants with a sense of orientation,
information on the time, weather and the world outside the building;
together with a sense of space and expansive views which may
compensate for the lack of external views from the building.
Second, the environmental advantages: there is a potential for savings
of energy, assistance with the problems of ventilation, and a reduction in
the need for air-conditioning. Depending upon the orientation and detail
of the rooflight there may be a need for some solar shading.
On balance the advantages outweigh the disadvantages, as over the life
of the building the cost of the people who work there greatly exceeds
those of its construction, and the work environment is crucial.
Glazing
There is now a large amount of alternative glazing for windows, and it
is necessary for the architect, in conjunction with his services
consultant, to write a detailed performance specification; this must
include the orientation of the window, its thermal and acoustic
characteristics, together with its capacity for solar shading. This is of
course in addition to the main function of the window which is the
admission of daylight and the introduction of the view to outside.
Further factors which may need to be taken into account, are whether it
is thought desirable to have windows which open or are fixed, and its
relationship to ventilation.
But here our concern is with the types of glazing which are available.
As already stated the main purpose of a window is for the admission of
daylight, and associated with this the view to the exterior.
Glazing types which reduce the impression of daylight significantly,
darken both the interior, and the view, whilst the view from the outside
towards the building makes the fac¸ade look black. It is only when
comparisons are made between the view through a clear glass window
and one with a modifying glass that reduces the daylight, that the results
create disappointment . . . it is true to say that it is human nature to
appreciate the natural environment, with all its variations of colour, light
and shade.
This is particularly true of residential properties where some form of
dark glass has been applied to the fac¸ade, giving the impression of a dull
Windows 25
day seen from the interior, as compared to the view through a clear
window.
There are basically three main types of glazing as follows.
1. Clear glazing
This can be single sheet, double or triple glazed or alternatively a ‘thick’
glass, but the more sheets or the greater the thickness of glass the more
the daylight will be diminished, although the impression of the colour of
the exterior will still be perceived as natural.
Clear glass whilst allowing a high transmission of daylight, will at the
same time and on certain building fac¸ades allow a high transmission of
solar radiation. It is this fact that has led to the development of the more
high-tech glasses designed to reduce solar gain, with their consequent
loss of daylight transmission. Other means such as interplane blinds,
located between the panes of glass, may present a solution. These would
only need to to be installed on fac¸ades subject to solar gain and then only
activated when required.
2. Tinted glass
This is of two types: the first where the clear glass is itself modified in
such a way as to produce different radiant heat transmission characteristics,
therefore the thicker the glass the lower the transmission of
daylight, and the greater the control of radiant heat from sunlight.
The second type of glasses are those coated with microscopically thin
layers of metallic oxides which reflect the heat away and out of the
building. These coatings are applied to the inside layer of glass generally
in association with other panes in a sealed double glazed unit as a
protection, since on their own they would be vulnerable to damage.
These coated glasses can be designed to have high daylight transmission,
due to the very thin layer of reflective material; so that they almost
give the appearance of clear glass, and do not suffer from the objections
raised by tinted glasses which reduce the daylight significantly.
Additionally they do not obstruct the view; however they do have cost
implications, and should only be used where the specification demands
it. Highly reflective glasses are available, but need to be used with care to
avoid the danger of glare to other buildings or motorists.
3. Miscellaneous glazing
A number of different types of glazing are placed in this category, largely
because they cannot be lumped together into a single category; they
consist of the following:
Patterned glass, wired glass, laminated glasses and glass blocks.
Patterned glass
Any number of patterns can be rolled into semi-molten glass, to provide
decorative or diffusing sheets for various purposes, though rarely for
windows, since their capacity for light transmission will be modified.
Wired glass
A similar process is used for the manufacture of wired glass, where a wire
mesh is sandwiched within the thickness of the glass. This used generally
26 Daylighting: Natural Light in Architecture
in security situations, and sometimes as a protection to vulnerable
skylights.
Laminated glasses
Similar methods of manufacture are used for laminating sheets of plastic
between sheets of glass, again used for security reasons as resistance to
impact. These reduce the transmission of daylight.
In museums where exhibits are exposed to daylight, it will be necessary
to control the entry of UV light. This may be done by the use of laminated
glasses, where UV absorbing filters can be laminated between the sheets
of clear glass.
Glass blocks
These were a popular form of glass wall in the 1930s, having thermal
characteristics due to the hollow nature of the blocks, which, because of
their structural nature are still in use today for the introduction of
daylight into new buildings, but special openings will be required to
provide a view.
High tech glazing
There are a number of glazing types which fall into this category, the
most advanced of which are the photovoltaics, where the glass itself is
designed to generate electricity from solar radiation on south facing
exposures, which can then be used within the building to reduce the
energy required for the artificial lighting. Some buildings already use this
method, and the UK Government is now putting research money into its
further development. (See Doxford International Building Park. Lighting
Modern Buildings. Case No 11, pp. 124/5).
Two other types of high tech glass deserve mention, but are not at
present economically viable for general use in buildings.
The first are the photochromic glasses, which respond directly to an
environmental stimulus (temperature or light) rather like the special
sunglasses which are already available which alter their transmission
factor depending upon the brightness of the ambient light; alternatively
there are the electrochromic glasses designed to respond indirectly by the
application of an electrical current which alters their visual and thermal
characteristics. These glasses are still at the experimental stage, but are
likely to be developed further to a point where they may become viable.
The choice of glazing in a large complex is one of the greatest
importance, having implications both on first cost, and the cost in use of
the project.
WINDOW DETAILS
The Georgian window developed in the eighteenth century satisfied all
the known criteria at the time. It admitted unadulterated daylight, it
provided ventilation when required, and it could be controlled by
internal shutters, providing additional security. The splay at the sides
(and sometimes at the cill as well) together with the careful detailing of
the glazing bars, assisted in balancing the brightness between the inside
of the room and the outside. However it did little for thermal insulation,
and on sunny elevations problems of solar gain and the possibility of
glare, were considered less important at the time.
Windows have developed a long way from this point, from the
standard horizontal or vertical windows set into the side walls of the
majority of residential properties, to the window walls commonly found
in modern office blocks. The Georgian window, however, provides some
lessons which have apparently not been learnt today, mostly to do with
the subtlety of the detailing.
1. To assist with modern methods of production, the timber sections
used for dividing the opening parts from the fixed glazed areas, tend to
be heavy, interrupting the view out, particularly where they cross the
sight lines of those inside.
2. Where glazing bars are required, between the different glazed areas
they are often very heavy, and where in the Georgian window the
detailing would have allowed the light to flow around the bar, reducing
its apparent size, the modern glazing bar tends to create unsatisfactory
shadows within and a barrier to the view, further reducing the amount of
daylight available.
3. The use of splayed sides between the window and the wall, to
balance the brightness of the window seen against the brightness of the
interior of the room has almost been forgotten, a lesson learnt in our
mediaeval churches, and which is equally relevant today; the use of the
splay to conceal security shutters may however not be required. This is of
course not to deny the advantages of the modern domestic window, in
terms of both thermal and acoustic capacity, with the introduction of
double glazing.
Whilst the majority of windows are of the type discussed, set into walls at
intervals, either horizontal or vertical, each having their own characteristics
in determining the quality of daylight entering the room. It is more
likely that wall-to-wall windows will be used in modern office blocks, and
these will have their own structural detailing; for example there may be
no need to have horizontal divisions since the glass sizes will generally be
able to stretch between the cill and the ceiling level or spandrel, whilst the
divisions between the wide panes of glass horizontally can be minimized
to avoid the break-up of the view.
It will however be important to consider the junction at the point
where the window meets a wall at right angles at a major subdivision of
the space, or the end of the building; here the reflection factor of the wall
needs to be kept high, to avoid a conflict of brightness. Alternatively the
architect may wish to break up the elevation of his building, by the
introduction of structural elements which articulate the perimeter of the
fac¸ade. In such cases the wide horizontal windows located between the
vertical structures might be treated in the same manner as the splays of
the more traditional building. The window elevations of buildings need
to be carefully considered when related to the orientation of the fac¸ades,
with care taken to provide solutions to any exposure where there is a
need for solar shading and protection from glare.
Windows can provide a degree of symbolism; this was apparent on the
type of window used for Anglican churches, which from frequent use
become symbolic of this type of church. Many examples exist of
symbolism in the windows of churches, not least in the stained glass
infilling. A modern example of symbolism in a new extension to an
Anglican church in Boxmoor, where it is clear that the Christian cross is
visible; this may be compared with the original windows.
SOLAR SHADING
This is a subject where expert advice should be sought. There are many
different forms of solar shading; each has its own characteristics,
advantages and disadvantages, and the architect must be sure of the
criteria that should be taken into account when determining the nature of
the shading required and whether some form of adjustability is desirable.
The BRE pamphlet ‘Solar Shading of Buildings’ states that the principal
reasons for needing shading are as follows:
1. To reduce the effect of heat gain from the sun
2. To cut down sun glare experienced through the windows
3. The provision of privacy. This will not normally be a requirement,
but it may be important in certain circumstances.
1. Reduction of heat gain from the sun
At some times of the year this may be of the greatest importance, but its
need will not be permanent; for certain times of the year the heat gain
may be welcome.
The problem is most acute on South facing exposures, but there may be
special conditions in the building such as abnormally high internal heat
gains, or where the building has to be kept at a low temperature.
Since once the heat gain is within the building envelope, it is difficult to
control, the shading system which stops the heat from getting in in the
first place . . . the external system . . . will be better. When contemplating
external shading, it is important to bear in mind the question of structural
stability and the need for periodic cleaning.
2. Reduction of sun glare
Glare may result from a direct view of the sun, by reflection from some
outside source such as the building opposite a North facing exposure, or
by reflection from items inside the building; most noticeably from items
which are the object of attention, such as a business machine or
computer. Glare, unlike heat, can be controlled easily from within the
building.
3. Provision of privacy
This is really the ‘net curtain’ solution, if it is needed at all. Some form of
translucent material which lets through the maximum amount of
daylight, but breaks up the internal image seen from the outside. This
is less important during the day when the light ouside exceeds that
within and there is no disadvantage in placing the diffusing material on
the inside of the window. In certain security situations special materials
have been developed which in addition to the provision of privacy,
capture the shards of glass which occur when a window is broken
Solar shading solutions can broadly be divided into the following three
types:
1 External shading
2 Internal shading
3 Alternative glazing
(Note. The BRE pamphlet further lists as a solution the reduction in the
area of glazing, comparing this with the loss of daylight associated with
the use of some form of tinted ‘sun control’ glazing. On the basis that the
window areas have been calculated correctly in the first place, this must
reduce the daylight available, and for this reason has not been included.)
1. External shading
The following methods are available: Overhangs and canopies, light
shelves, fixed and movable louvres, shutters, vertical fins, deep window
reveals, egg-crate baffles, and roller blinds.
When choosing a method of external shading, the most crucial decision
that must be taken is the long-term viability of the hardware involved,
associated with the climatic conditions which will be experienced on site;
there is also the architect’s preoccupation with the exterior appearance of
the building with which the former is associated.
Whilst it is best to control the heat gain before it enters the building by
external means, any method of external shading can be vulnerable, and
the cost and long-term viability of the method employed must be
established. Comparisons should be made with internal shading methods,
to establish whether the gains in heat control are sufficient to
warrant what will initially be expensive, and possibly a long-term
maintenance problem.
The following list of shading types are some of the options available,
each having their own advantages and disadvantages; although the
visual appearance of each type may have more influence with tbe
architect as to how he sees the impact on the elevation of the building:
Overhangs and canopies
Continental shutters, and awnings
Light shelves
Fixed and movable louvres
Egg-crate louvres
External roller blinds
Brise soleil
2. Internal shading
It must be recognized that any form of shading within the building
envelope is bound to be less efficient as a control of heat gain than an
Windows 31
external device, since the heat which is generated has already entered the
building, and is more difficult to extract; however the type of shade will
be less vulnerable than that outside, will be easier to maintain and to
clean, so that an overall view must take into account all the factors in
coming to a decision. If of course it is not possible to control the solar gain
sufficiently inside, then other means will have to be adopted.
The most common form of control and one used almost universally in
residential building, is the curtain, and provided these are carefully
designed, perhaps with a reflective lining to reduce the solar gain when
pulled across the opening (whilst at night they can keep out the cold) can
be perfectly satisfactory in our temperate climate . . . indeed we welcome
the sun on all but the exceptional day.
A more flexible form of control is the venetian blind, which has the
advantage of adjustability in that it can be raised when not required for
sun control, to permit maximum daylight entry.
The demise of this excellent tool has been predicted for many years, but
it survives, offering excellent glare control, can be motorized when used
in large office projects, can be incorporated within panes of glass to
protect it from damage, and specialist versions are available where the tilt
of the blades can be varied to enable the top of the blind to reflect light up
to the ceiling of a room, whilst the lower blades control the sunlight by
reflecting it away from the building. A further advantage of the venetian
blind is that the surface design of the horizontal slats can be varied to
meet the individual requirements of the building.
The obvious advantage of the venetian blind is that it can and should
be raised when not needed for sun control; the problem is that once
lowered it tends to be left in the closed position. A procedure should be
adopted to ensure that their use is optimized and a simple solution might
be for the office cleaners to open the blinds to ensure that each day starts
with them open to admit the maximum daylight. Venetian blinds have a
lot of life in them yet .
Other types of blind are also available, the vertical hung louvre blind
where the louvre slats can be rotated, or moved to one side offer
flexibility, provide privacy, and together with roller blinds and those of
other materials can provide low-cost solutions in the domestic situation.
The heat gain from the sun can be controlled by the type of glass used,
various options being available, First there are the low emissivity
glazings, developments in this field continue, and the thermal properties
of the glass can now be tailored to give good solar control. Their big
advantage is that they admit higher levels of daylight than the original
tinted versions, and can control heat loss.
Prismatic glazing panels have also proved useful; these are limited to
small panels of prismatic glazing which, when attached to high level
rooflights, can allow daylight to enter, but redirects the sunlight on to the
ceiling of the space, or excludes it altogether.
Finally there are the high tech glazings already referred to under the
glazings available for windows. These include the following:
Electrochromic and liquid crystal glazings, which can be made to
darken on application of an electric current
Photochromic glass, which darkens when sunlight falls on it
Thermochromic glass which alters its transmission value on the
introduction of heat.
None of the latter is in the mainstream of development, and it is
unlikely that these will have a major impact for some years.
32 Daylighting: Natural Light in Architecture
INNOVATIVE DAYLIGHTING SYSTEMS
In 1998 Paul Littlefair of the BRE wrote a seminal paper on this subject,
listing as its aims: to improve the distribution of daylight in a space and to
control direct sunlight.
Of the various methods none can be said to have achieved a universal
application, but each has a specific use and is worthy of mention.
Mirrors. There are many ways in which the interaction of light or
sunlight with a mirrored surface can be used for reflection. From the use
of a large hand-held mirror to throw light into the dark recesses of a
renaissance church for the delight of visitors, to the fixed mirrored
louvres which may be related to vertical windows, installed to direct light
upwards to a ceiling; alternatively there are those which, when related to
glazed openings in a roof, can project light downwards to the interior
(see Case Study of the Central United Methodist Church in Wisconsin pp.
142–143). These tend to be specialist solutions requiring the mirror to be
controlled by a motorized tracking system or heliostat . . . not for general
application.
Prismatic glazing. The principle is to use methods of refraction of light,
rather than reflection. Whilst this method can be applied to vertical
windows, they are perhaps more successful when associated with
systems of rooflight, a good example being Richard Rogers’ redevelopment
of Billingsgate fish market to a modern computer centre (see
Lighting Historic Buildings, p. 64) where sunlight is refracted away from
the occupants to eliminate glare, whilst allowing daylight to the space
below. As these have only a limited application they are expensive.
Light shelves. It is possible by means of comparatively inexpensive
building construction, to provide light shelves. These have already been
mentioned in terms of solar shading, but they are useful also to provide a
view window below the light shelf, with the light above reflected to the
ceiling to redistribute daylight further into the room. It must be
recognized that light shelves do not increase the daylight factors in a
room, but they alter the distribution, assisting in getting light further
towards the back of the room so that uniformity is improved. Light
shelves are relatively cheap to install, and are less subject to damage than
those used externally, but do require cleaning on a regular basis.
Light pipes. Of all the methods of innovative daylighting, the light pipe
has had the most universal application. It is basically a method of
rooflighting, which by means of association with reflective tubes, directs
the light to a lower level. Whilst it can be employed to direct light
through several floors, this has the disadvantage of locating the pipes
through the upper floors, taking up useful floor space.
Light-pipe installations can be associated with a means of ventilation,
and also with sources of artificial light which take over after dark or when
the daylight outside is insufficient, using a light control system. A
particularly useful application has been in domestic buildings, where a
light pipe can be directed to an area in the property, such as an upstairs
landing, which otherwise might receive no daylight.
THE FUTURE
The design of ‘the window’ for a new building is of the first importance,
not only because it will determine the appearance of the building, which
it does, but because it is being asked to take a major role in the control of
the building environment. It will be seen in the Case Studies to follow
later in the book, that with the large increase in ‘passive’ buildings, it is
the window which is at the leading edge of new development,
development of which is as yet far from exhausted.
To quote but one example of leading edge technology; a window
designed by the architects Studio E. and developed to a practical stage by
a manufacturer (Colt) as the ‘interactive’ window, shows an integrated
approach to the environmental control of a building. It is of particular
interest in that it does not demand the need for high tech glass solutions,
using low-cost clear window glass.
The window is designed with the following criteria in mind:
1. The provision of daylight
2. To solve the problem of mechanically controlled building ventilation
without creating draughts
3. To cater for adequate thermal insulation
4. To provide adequate sound insulation for normal circumstances.
5. To control solar gain and diminish sun and sky glare.
The features of the window allow individual control by occupants,
accepted as an important characteristic in user satisfaction as is also the
provision of a view, and can be tailored to suit individual environmental
requirements. This is one example of the way in which industry is being
led by architects to satisfy the needs of the environment.
Finally to quote from conclusions made at a conference at the RIBA in
1996:1
1. Windows are an essential element in building design, for the following
reasons: change, colour, sunlight, modelling, orientation and
view.
2. Window design, associated with the need to reduce energy in buildings,
is leading towards high tech window design, where associated
problems of ventilation, solar gain, glare and noise pollution suggest
an integrated solution.
3. Air-conditioning, at least in this country, will become the exception
rather than the rule.
4. There is a convergence between the provision of optimum visual and
environmental conditions in building, and the world needs to come
to terms with global warming, and the reduction of carbon dioxide
emissions.
Daylighting-Natural Light in Architecture -2
2 Environment
Change and variety . . . modelling . . . orientation . . . sunlight . . . colour . . .
view . . . health
Various aspects of the environment which affect the interior appearance
of buildings have been identified in the introductory chapter, and it is the
purpose here to illustrate these aspects in more detail.
CHANGE/VARIETY
Perhaps the most obvious and certainly the most important aspect of
daylighting is its capacity for change, leading to the infinite variety in
appearance of the daylit interior. Change is at the heart of daylighting,
the human body has a capacity for adaptation, particularly in vision, and
the need to exercise this response.
Perception reacts to a degree of change; it is the natural order of things
that the appearance of interior spaces alter with time; and if we have
confidence in their continuing reality, it is because change in their lit
appearance allows us to continue an exploration of the spaces we inhabit;
an entirely different measure of experience to the static qualities of spaces
lit entirely by artificial sources of light during the day; or where there is
no access to the daylight outside. There is a natural process of renewal in
the photochemical processes of the eye as it adapts to accommodate
changes in daylight
First there is the natural change from day to night, from first light until
dark and the need for artificial sources to take over when daylight fades.
Then there are the changes associated with changes of the weather; from
bright sunny days to dark and cloudy or rainy days, there is little doubt that
the human spirit soars when rising in the morning on a bright day, an
experience which is less likely to happen when it is dark and gloomy outside.
Closely associated with changes in the weather are those of the
changes of season, from the winter snows to summer sunlight; each
season will have its own character, which as human beings we
accommodate to in our own way; but what is important is that the
world outside, as experienced through the window, provides necessary
information of the variety of the exterior world; whilst leading to subtle
changes in the appearance of the interior.
MODELLING
Modelling of a shape derives from its physical form, whether round,
square or otherwise, coupled with the way in which light plays on its
surfaces. This is referred to as its modelling and when this derives from
daylight or sunlight, giving light from a single direction, this provides a
form which is perceived by the eye as having meaning, unambiguous.
This is a different experience again from the form of an object or space
resulting from a room lit by artificial light, where the overall light may be
received from a multitude of light sources.
The most usual daylight modelling is that derived from vertical
windows at the side of a room, giving light from a single direction; this
may be helped by windows from an adjacent wall which adds to the
modelling; as the light will still be from the same overall direction, but
adding to the total modelling.
Two examples might be used to emphasize this, the first, a Greek Doric
column where the light of day gives modelling to the entasis on the
rounded surfaces of the column; light which emphasizes its particular
rounded quality together with its verticality. The second example is the
original David statue by Michelangelo seen in its setting in the art gallery
in Florence, lit from daylight above, where the form changes in time as
the day goes by.
A more modern example of the use of overhead daylight to light a
statue is the Charioteer in Delphi (Case Study pp. 170–171).
Daylight by its nature gives meaning and aids our understanding of a
shape or space by its directional flow; a meaning which is emphasized
even further by the addition of direct sunlight.
Interior spaces are judged to be pleasant, bright or gloomy as a result of
the effects of modelling and interiors are judged by the way in which the
spaces and the objects within them are seen during the day to be natural,
or accord to our experience of the natural world.
ORIENTATION
The importance of orientation in a building must be considered at the
outset, when the architect is planning the location of the building on the
site, the aim being to ensure the maximum availability of useful natural
light and sunlight to the interior.
There may of course be severe restrictions where the building is set into
a rigid street pattern, or where there are severe external obstructions; but
even in these circumstances the best use of the daylighting available
should be considered. The architect will have the greatest flexibility to get
the building orientation right on a greenfield site, where he can plan the
site layout to take advantage of the sun path and the availability of the
daylight.
Taking an example from residential buildings in the northern hemisphere,
and using the simple fact that the sun rises in the east and sets in
the west, it would be normal to ensure that those rooms which might
benefit most from early morning light, such as a kitchen, morning room
or even bedrooms, are placed on the east side, whilst those more likely to
be used in the afternoon or evening such as living rooms face south or
west.
There will of course be debate about the desirability of selecting a
specific orientation for a particular use of room and it will be up to the
10 Daylighting: Natural Light in Architecture
The charioteer statue at Delphi, daylit (See
Case Study pp. 170^171)
London Metropolitan University
architect to discuss this with his client, and there may also be conflict with
the orientation of a room when associated with the ability to enjoy a
particular view.
As with all architecture a compromise will need to be established which
best fits the needs of the interior function. What is essential is that the
orientation of a building and the interior layout takes most advantage of
the daylight available and is a factor taken into consideration at the outset
of the building design.
Each architectural programme whether an office, school or church, will
have its own specific needs of orientation, and this is of special
significance where the interior function is one requiring the inhabitants
to sit in fixed positions, often the case in offices or classrooms.
Another aspect of orientation and one where the mere presence of
daylighting is reassuring, is the subconscious desire of people when
inside a building to keep in touch with the outside world, whether to
know the time of day or the nature of the weather. An example of this
might be taken from the modern shopping centre. The Victorians had got
it right when they introduced overhead daylighting from domes or barrel
vaults to their shopping arcades. But in the 1960s many of our early
shopping centres cut out daylight altogether, leading to people finding it
difficult to negotiate their way around or to find the exits.
In one large shopping centre built in Hong Kong in the 1970s where
daylight had been eliminated, visitors felt so disorientated that extreme
measures had to be taken; whilst at City Plaza, another shopping centre
of similar size where daylight had been provided over much of the
multistorey space, it was an immediate success.
There is little likelihood that any shopping centre built now would not
be daylit, there is a public demand for natural light in large open areas
used by the public during the day and whilst the individual shop may be
lit with artificial light to enhance the goods on sale, the public areas will
assist orientation by the provision of daylight. At night the whole
atmosphere will change, contributing to the variety we associate with the
high street shop with artificial light taking over after dark.
SUNLIGHT EFFECT
In his major work Sunlight as Formgiver for Architecture, Bill Lam asks the
question . . . The Sun: Problem or Opportunity? and then proceeds to
show how the answer can really be both, depending very much on the
location of the building. Clearly in hot climates where the sun is overhead
for much of the day the problem is not so much one of welcome, but of
exclusion.
In Britain where the sun is all too rare the answer must clearly be one
of welcome, and an early decison when an architect is planning the
orientation of his building is to encourage the entry of sunlight. Sunlight
adds to the overall level of light when it is available, and adds to those
other environmental factors such as variety and change, modelling and
the creation of delight. There is a different level of experience when
getting up in the morning to a sunlit world, as experienced from the
interior of a building, and it is important that an element of sunlight is
available for some part of the day.
Architects have used the sunlight effect in buildings to create a specific
atmosphere, as for example the shafts of light entering the south side of
our great cathedrals; and on a much smaller scale the use in houses of
daylight and sunlight entry from above to provide necessary functional
light to interior areas, where otherwise little natural light would be
available.
The impression of sunlight is also important seen from windows which
themselves admit no sunlight, but where the view of a sunlit landscape or
buildings may be enjoyed. Whenever sunlight is available there is a
strong desire to perceive it, and disappointment when it is unnecessarily
excluded.
There is of course the obverse side associated with heat gain and glare,
depending upon the orientation of the glazing, and whether people
working in a building are confined to a fixed position. The effects of
direct sunlight can be a disadvantage. Some control may be required in
certain circumstances at certain times of year, and as far as heat gain is
concerned this is best done beyond the window, and is of a sufficiently
flexible nature to be available only when required, or if fixed, not to
inhibit the view.
One of the methods adopted to control the glare effect is to use forms
of glazing which cut down light transmission; these need to be treated
with care to avoid the impression that the interior of a building is
permanently dim, and some glazing is available which reacts to the
external light available, only cutting down the light when the sunlight is
too bright, and might cause glare.
To sum up, the need for the admission of sunlight is important, the
architect must consider this as a first requirement in planning the location
and layout of the building, but in certain circumstances controls will be
needed.
COLOUR
Whilst the colour of daylight will vary from morning to evening, and with
changes in the sky and weather patterns; it is always regarded as the
reference by which colour is judged . . . daylight is regarded as ‘real colour.’
In early stores, such as Harrods, voids were opened in the roof to admit
daylight to sales areas below; whereas for some years this was ignored.
There were several reasons for this, not least being that it was considered
that means of artificial light were more suitable for display, to show off
the goods ‘in a better light.’
This tended to ignore the environmental advantages of daylight and
natural colour, and this has since been recognized in many new large
shopping areas, where the entry of daylight is encouraged for the
provision of environmental light to the store, but where for display
purposes artificial light may be introduced locally to enhance the product.
The old concept of ‘taking something to the light’, by which was meant
daylight, may be less of a necessity if the environmental light gives
natural colour; whilst from the point of view of the shop worker who
must remain in the same environment all day the advantage of natural
light is obvious.
The same applies to office buildings, where people tend to have to
stay in the same atmosphere all day; if workers are too far from a
window and the impression of natural light is greatly reduced, there is
a sense of dissatisfaction. This is recognized by management, ensuring
that for a part of the working day, for example during coffee breaks or
in the office dining room, there is access to daylight, a change of
environment.
It is generally recognized that vision is enhanced by good contrast,
and that the natural colour of daylight increases contrast; it is argued
that this permits lower illumination levels, whilst increasing visibility1.
IMPORTANCE OF VIEW
Although listed last amongst the environmental factors, the question of
view is of special importance. The view out from the window is our
contact with the world outside; it provides the information, which for
reasons already mentioned, allows us to experience the time of day,
changes in the weather, sunlight and the seasons.
At one level, a view satisfies the physiological need for the adaptation
and readaptation of the eye to distance, providing a visual rest centre. For
this reason any view is better than no view, whilst clearly some views will
be better than others. At a different level the importance of a view has
been recognized in research to show that a patient in hospital will recover
more quickly where a window with a view is available.
The content of a view is clearly of importance, and it is the information
it provides which will determine its success. A view out to a blank wall
may be better than nothing but a view out to open countryside, or a
garden will be a different order of experience.
Various views have been analysed in terms of the information
obtained, depending upon the height of the window. In tall buildings
the view may consist entirely of the sky when seen from the interior of
the space, whilst at lower levels the experience of the ground scene
becomes of more importance.
The quality of the exterior view will depend upon the surroundings of
the building, and the height at which it is experienced, but it is of
importance that where a view is available it should be exploited. There
will be instances in large building complexes where internal views from
one part of the interior to another may be had; these will provide the
visual rest centres to satisfy the physiological requirement, but unless
there are views to daylit areas they will lack the amenities of change,
variety and modelling which inform the natural scene outdoors.
The architect should take the question of view into consideration when
planning his building, and when planning the location and detail of the
windows. Some of the finest windows were those of the eighteenth
century in Britain where the refinement of detail of the glazing bar
ensured that the daylight was captured by the bar, led round it, not
impeding the view. This is less necessary today since the size of glass
available is such as to allow large areas of see-through glazing, with no
need for horizontal obstruction.
There are some architectural programmes where it is thought that a
view out may lead to a lack of concentration, as in a school classroom. It
was the author’s experience that classrooms in his school in the 1930s
had windows at high level, precluding a view out; a view which
prevailed until the new school building programmes of the 1960s. Other
building programmes, such as churches or factories, also tend to ignore
the need for a view, and it is perhaps understandable in a building used
only for a short space of time, that the question of view doesn’t figure
large in the architect’s priorities, and in the case of the daylit factory it
would be reasonable to suppose that there might be dangers associated
with lack of concentration when working with potentially dangerous
machinery if a view out were provided.
The question of ‘view-out’ is necessarily associated with ‘view-in’
raising the question of privacy, which in certain circumstances may be
deemed to be of importance. During the day this will generally not be a
problem, as the level of daylight outside will be greater than that within,
inhibiting the view-in but at night the situation will be reversed, and it
may be necessary to resort to some form of blind or curtain, which can
have the desirable effect of ensuring that the window is not seen as a
black hole from the interior at night.
HEALTH
Daylight has long been associated with health, and in Dr Hobday’s book,
The Healing Sun, he reminds us of the work of Vitruvius in the first
century BC with his ten books on architecture. Among the classic
principles of harmony proportion and symmetry, as Vitruvius set out,
he emphasized that architects should select healthy sites for their
buildings, and that careful design of buildings prevented illness. It was
clear that the healthy site was one which was oriented to permit the
introduction of natural light. Vitruvius was the first to study the
qualitative and quantitative aspects of daylight, proposing explicit rules
to assess whether an interior is well daylit.
We may have moved a great deal further than this now, but poor
daylighting and the lack of sunlight is said to be responsible for what is
described as ‘Seasonal Affected Disorder’ or SAD, which affects a large
number of people at certain times of the year due to the lack of sunlight.
It is not a coincidence that given the choice, people prefer to work in
daylight, and choose to locate close to a window. The presence of natural
light at times when it is available in a building, is an important
environmental consideration.
It is often forgotten that people are the major asset and expense of a
company. To get relative costs into perspective, the annual lighting costs
of a person in an office can be the equivalent to only 3–4 hours salary. If
staff are visually impaired through inadequate working conditions and
poor lighting, their productivity will deteriorate and output may decline
on a scale far greater than the gains which might occur from the
installation of more energy efficient (but less user friendly) lighting.
Poor lighting can affect workers’ health, badly designed or poorly
maintained lighting can cause stress and lead to various forms of
complaint, eye discomfort, vision or posture. Dry or itching eyes,
migraines, aches, pains and other symptoms, often known as Sick
Building Syndrome, can be caused by poor or inappropriate lighting
installations. A purely energy efficient approach to workplace lighting,
which pays little or no attention to user comfort, could turn out to be both
ugly and ineffective.
It would be a mistake to adopt energy efficiency as the principal
measure of good lighting, and whilst important, it should be balanced
against those other factors leading to a comfortable and pleasant
environment.
Change and variety . . . modelling . . . orientation . . . sunlight . . . colour . . .
view . . . health
Various aspects of the environment which affect the interior appearance
of buildings have been identified in the introductory chapter, and it is the
purpose here to illustrate these aspects in more detail.
CHANGE/VARIETY
Perhaps the most obvious and certainly the most important aspect of
daylighting is its capacity for change, leading to the infinite variety in
appearance of the daylit interior. Change is at the heart of daylighting,
the human body has a capacity for adaptation, particularly in vision, and
the need to exercise this response.
Perception reacts to a degree of change; it is the natural order of things
that the appearance of interior spaces alter with time; and if we have
confidence in their continuing reality, it is because change in their lit
appearance allows us to continue an exploration of the spaces we inhabit;
an entirely different measure of experience to the static qualities of spaces
lit entirely by artificial sources of light during the day; or where there is
no access to the daylight outside. There is a natural process of renewal in
the photochemical processes of the eye as it adapts to accommodate
changes in daylight
First there is the natural change from day to night, from first light until
dark and the need for artificial sources to take over when daylight fades.
Then there are the changes associated with changes of the weather; from
bright sunny days to dark and cloudy or rainy days, there is little doubt that
the human spirit soars when rising in the morning on a bright day, an
experience which is less likely to happen when it is dark and gloomy outside.
Closely associated with changes in the weather are those of the
changes of season, from the winter snows to summer sunlight; each
season will have its own character, which as human beings we
accommodate to in our own way; but what is important is that the
world outside, as experienced through the window, provides necessary
information of the variety of the exterior world; whilst leading to subtle
changes in the appearance of the interior.
MODELLING
Modelling of a shape derives from its physical form, whether round,
square or otherwise, coupled with the way in which light plays on its
surfaces. This is referred to as its modelling and when this derives from
daylight or sunlight, giving light from a single direction, this provides a
form which is perceived by the eye as having meaning, unambiguous.
This is a different experience again from the form of an object or space
resulting from a room lit by artificial light, where the overall light may be
received from a multitude of light sources.
The most usual daylight modelling is that derived from vertical
windows at the side of a room, giving light from a single direction; this
may be helped by windows from an adjacent wall which adds to the
modelling; as the light will still be from the same overall direction, but
adding to the total modelling.
Two examples might be used to emphasize this, the first, a Greek Doric
column where the light of day gives modelling to the entasis on the
rounded surfaces of the column; light which emphasizes its particular
rounded quality together with its verticality. The second example is the
original David statue by Michelangelo seen in its setting in the art gallery
in Florence, lit from daylight above, where the form changes in time as
the day goes by.
A more modern example of the use of overhead daylight to light a
statue is the Charioteer in Delphi (Case Study pp. 170–171).
Daylight by its nature gives meaning and aids our understanding of a
shape or space by its directional flow; a meaning which is emphasized
even further by the addition of direct sunlight.
Interior spaces are judged to be pleasant, bright or gloomy as a result of
the effects of modelling and interiors are judged by the way in which the
spaces and the objects within them are seen during the day to be natural,
or accord to our experience of the natural world.
ORIENTATION
The importance of orientation in a building must be considered at the
outset, when the architect is planning the location of the building on the
site, the aim being to ensure the maximum availability of useful natural
light and sunlight to the interior.
There may of course be severe restrictions where the building is set into
a rigid street pattern, or where there are severe external obstructions; but
even in these circumstances the best use of the daylighting available
should be considered. The architect will have the greatest flexibility to get
the building orientation right on a greenfield site, where he can plan the
site layout to take advantage of the sun path and the availability of the
daylight.
Taking an example from residential buildings in the northern hemisphere,
and using the simple fact that the sun rises in the east and sets in
the west, it would be normal to ensure that those rooms which might
benefit most from early morning light, such as a kitchen, morning room
or even bedrooms, are placed on the east side, whilst those more likely to
be used in the afternoon or evening such as living rooms face south or
west.
There will of course be debate about the desirability of selecting a
specific orientation for a particular use of room and it will be up to the
10 Daylighting: Natural Light in Architecture
The charioteer statue at Delphi, daylit (See
Case Study pp. 170^171)
London Metropolitan University
architect to discuss this with his client, and there may also be conflict with
the orientation of a room when associated with the ability to enjoy a
particular view.
As with all architecture a compromise will need to be established which
best fits the needs of the interior function. What is essential is that the
orientation of a building and the interior layout takes most advantage of
the daylight available and is a factor taken into consideration at the outset
of the building design.
Each architectural programme whether an office, school or church, will
have its own specific needs of orientation, and this is of special
significance where the interior function is one requiring the inhabitants
to sit in fixed positions, often the case in offices or classrooms.
Another aspect of orientation and one where the mere presence of
daylighting is reassuring, is the subconscious desire of people when
inside a building to keep in touch with the outside world, whether to
know the time of day or the nature of the weather. An example of this
might be taken from the modern shopping centre. The Victorians had got
it right when they introduced overhead daylighting from domes or barrel
vaults to their shopping arcades. But in the 1960s many of our early
shopping centres cut out daylight altogether, leading to people finding it
difficult to negotiate their way around or to find the exits.
In one large shopping centre built in Hong Kong in the 1970s where
daylight had been eliminated, visitors felt so disorientated that extreme
measures had to be taken; whilst at City Plaza, another shopping centre
of similar size where daylight had been provided over much of the
multistorey space, it was an immediate success.
There is little likelihood that any shopping centre built now would not
be daylit, there is a public demand for natural light in large open areas
used by the public during the day and whilst the individual shop may be
lit with artificial light to enhance the goods on sale, the public areas will
assist orientation by the provision of daylight. At night the whole
atmosphere will change, contributing to the variety we associate with the
high street shop with artificial light taking over after dark.
SUNLIGHT EFFECT
In his major work Sunlight as Formgiver for Architecture, Bill Lam asks the
question . . . The Sun: Problem or Opportunity? and then proceeds to
show how the answer can really be both, depending very much on the
location of the building. Clearly in hot climates where the sun is overhead
for much of the day the problem is not so much one of welcome, but of
exclusion.
In Britain where the sun is all too rare the answer must clearly be one
of welcome, and an early decison when an architect is planning the
orientation of his building is to encourage the entry of sunlight. Sunlight
adds to the overall level of light when it is available, and adds to those
other environmental factors such as variety and change, modelling and
the creation of delight. There is a different level of experience when
getting up in the morning to a sunlit world, as experienced from the
interior of a building, and it is important that an element of sunlight is
available for some part of the day.
Architects have used the sunlight effect in buildings to create a specific
atmosphere, as for example the shafts of light entering the south side of
our great cathedrals; and on a much smaller scale the use in houses of
daylight and sunlight entry from above to provide necessary functional
light to interior areas, where otherwise little natural light would be
available.
The impression of sunlight is also important seen from windows which
themselves admit no sunlight, but where the view of a sunlit landscape or
buildings may be enjoyed. Whenever sunlight is available there is a
strong desire to perceive it, and disappointment when it is unnecessarily
excluded.
There is of course the obverse side associated with heat gain and glare,
depending upon the orientation of the glazing, and whether people
working in a building are confined to a fixed position. The effects of
direct sunlight can be a disadvantage. Some control may be required in
certain circumstances at certain times of year, and as far as heat gain is
concerned this is best done beyond the window, and is of a sufficiently
flexible nature to be available only when required, or if fixed, not to
inhibit the view.
One of the methods adopted to control the glare effect is to use forms
of glazing which cut down light transmission; these need to be treated
with care to avoid the impression that the interior of a building is
permanently dim, and some glazing is available which reacts to the
external light available, only cutting down the light when the sunlight is
too bright, and might cause glare.
To sum up, the need for the admission of sunlight is important, the
architect must consider this as a first requirement in planning the location
and layout of the building, but in certain circumstances controls will be
needed.
COLOUR
Whilst the colour of daylight will vary from morning to evening, and with
changes in the sky and weather patterns; it is always regarded as the
reference by which colour is judged . . . daylight is regarded as ‘real colour.’
In early stores, such as Harrods, voids were opened in the roof to admit
daylight to sales areas below; whereas for some years this was ignored.
There were several reasons for this, not least being that it was considered
that means of artificial light were more suitable for display, to show off
the goods ‘in a better light.’
This tended to ignore the environmental advantages of daylight and
natural colour, and this has since been recognized in many new large
shopping areas, where the entry of daylight is encouraged for the
provision of environmental light to the store, but where for display
purposes artificial light may be introduced locally to enhance the product.
The old concept of ‘taking something to the light’, by which was meant
daylight, may be less of a necessity if the environmental light gives
natural colour; whilst from the point of view of the shop worker who
must remain in the same environment all day the advantage of natural
light is obvious.
The same applies to office buildings, where people tend to have to
stay in the same atmosphere all day; if workers are too far from a
window and the impression of natural light is greatly reduced, there is
a sense of dissatisfaction. This is recognized by management, ensuring
that for a part of the working day, for example during coffee breaks or
in the office dining room, there is access to daylight, a change of
environment.
It is generally recognized that vision is enhanced by good contrast,
and that the natural colour of daylight increases contrast; it is argued
that this permits lower illumination levels, whilst increasing visibility1.
IMPORTANCE OF VIEW
Although listed last amongst the environmental factors, the question of
view is of special importance. The view out from the window is our
contact with the world outside; it provides the information, which for
reasons already mentioned, allows us to experience the time of day,
changes in the weather, sunlight and the seasons.
At one level, a view satisfies the physiological need for the adaptation
and readaptation of the eye to distance, providing a visual rest centre. For
this reason any view is better than no view, whilst clearly some views will
be better than others. At a different level the importance of a view has
been recognized in research to show that a patient in hospital will recover
more quickly where a window with a view is available.
The content of a view is clearly of importance, and it is the information
it provides which will determine its success. A view out to a blank wall
may be better than nothing but a view out to open countryside, or a
garden will be a different order of experience.
Various views have been analysed in terms of the information
obtained, depending upon the height of the window. In tall buildings
the view may consist entirely of the sky when seen from the interior of
the space, whilst at lower levels the experience of the ground scene
becomes of more importance.
The quality of the exterior view will depend upon the surroundings of
the building, and the height at which it is experienced, but it is of
importance that where a view is available it should be exploited. There
will be instances in large building complexes where internal views from
one part of the interior to another may be had; these will provide the
visual rest centres to satisfy the physiological requirement, but unless
there are views to daylit areas they will lack the amenities of change,
variety and modelling which inform the natural scene outdoors.
The architect should take the question of view into consideration when
planning his building, and when planning the location and detail of the
windows. Some of the finest windows were those of the eighteenth
century in Britain where the refinement of detail of the glazing bar
ensured that the daylight was captured by the bar, led round it, not
impeding the view. This is less necessary today since the size of glass
available is such as to allow large areas of see-through glazing, with no
need for horizontal obstruction.
There are some architectural programmes where it is thought that a
view out may lead to a lack of concentration, as in a school classroom. It
was the author’s experience that classrooms in his school in the 1930s
had windows at high level, precluding a view out; a view which
prevailed until the new school building programmes of the 1960s. Other
building programmes, such as churches or factories, also tend to ignore
the need for a view, and it is perhaps understandable in a building used
only for a short space of time, that the question of view doesn’t figure
large in the architect’s priorities, and in the case of the daylit factory it
would be reasonable to suppose that there might be dangers associated
with lack of concentration when working with potentially dangerous
machinery if a view out were provided.
The question of ‘view-out’ is necessarily associated with ‘view-in’
raising the question of privacy, which in certain circumstances may be
deemed to be of importance. During the day this will generally not be a
problem, as the level of daylight outside will be greater than that within,
inhibiting the view-in but at night the situation will be reversed, and it
may be necessary to resort to some form of blind or curtain, which can
have the desirable effect of ensuring that the window is not seen as a
black hole from the interior at night.
HEALTH
Daylight has long been associated with health, and in Dr Hobday’s book,
The Healing Sun, he reminds us of the work of Vitruvius in the first
century BC with his ten books on architecture. Among the classic
principles of harmony proportion and symmetry, as Vitruvius set out,
he emphasized that architects should select healthy sites for their
buildings, and that careful design of buildings prevented illness. It was
clear that the healthy site was one which was oriented to permit the
introduction of natural light. Vitruvius was the first to study the
qualitative and quantitative aspects of daylight, proposing explicit rules
to assess whether an interior is well daylit.
We may have moved a great deal further than this now, but poor
daylighting and the lack of sunlight is said to be responsible for what is
described as ‘Seasonal Affected Disorder’ or SAD, which affects a large
number of people at certain times of the year due to the lack of sunlight.
It is not a coincidence that given the choice, people prefer to work in
daylight, and choose to locate close to a window. The presence of natural
light at times when it is available in a building, is an important
environmental consideration.
It is often forgotten that people are the major asset and expense of a
company. To get relative costs into perspective, the annual lighting costs
of a person in an office can be the equivalent to only 3–4 hours salary. If
staff are visually impaired through inadequate working conditions and
poor lighting, their productivity will deteriorate and output may decline
on a scale far greater than the gains which might occur from the
installation of more energy efficient (but less user friendly) lighting.
Poor lighting can affect workers’ health, badly designed or poorly
maintained lighting can cause stress and lead to various forms of
complaint, eye discomfort, vision or posture. Dry or itching eyes,
migraines, aches, pains and other symptoms, often known as Sick
Building Syndrome, can be caused by poor or inappropriate lighting
installations. A purely energy efficient approach to workplace lighting,
which pays little or no attention to user comfort, could turn out to be both
ugly and ineffective.
It would be a mistake to adopt energy efficiency as the principal
measure of good lighting, and whilst important, it should be balanced
against those other factors leading to a comfortable and pleasant
environment.
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