Interior Lighting for Designers

(Elliott) #1

winter provide natural climatic control when
placed in front of south-facing windows.


Glazing Materials


Glazing materials are available with a wide
range of heat and light transmittance, color,
and prismatic control. Because of its resis-
tance to abrasion, glass is the preferred
material; where breakage is a concern,
acrylic or polycarbonate is substituted. Both
glass and plastic can be tinted in warm, neu-
tral, or cool gray tones to reduce the trans-
mission of light and heat yet remain
transparent to vision. Saturated colors are to
be avoided except in carefully designed art
(“stained”) glass windows.
Translucent glazing materials that trans-
mit diffused light but obscure vision include
etched, sandblasted, opal, and patterned
glass and plastic. Many translucent materi-
als become excessively glary with exposure
to the sun and will be distracting when seen
from task areas. Because they prevent a
view of the outside, their psychological value
is minimal. As diffusion increases so does
the area of luminance and the possibility
that the window or skylight will become a
source of glare.
Selectively transmitting materials allow
the desirable wavelengths of the visible


spectrum to pass but reflect or absorb the
radiant heat energy. Directionally selective
glass blocks and prismatic glass or plastics
refract light for directional control.
When installed vertically, prismatic glass
block walls are used to reflect daylight onto
the ceiling of a room, increasing illuminance
values deep in the interior and removing the
glaring sky from view (figure 5.18). When
installed horizontally, as with glass-block
pavers, they transmit light yet maintain a low
surface luminance even when exposed to
direct sun.

Quantity


Because of the great variety of changing sun
and sky conditions, it is impractical to pre-
dict precisely the interior illuminance pat-
terns derived from daylighting. By knowing
the size and position of windows and using
tables of average daylighting conditions for
various locations and orientations, the aver-
age amount of available daylight that will
enter a space can be determined, but not
the precise amount at any moment.
Interior daylight illuminance values are
often expressed as a daylight factor. The
daylight factor accounts for light received
directly from the sky, light reflected from
external surfaces, and interreflections within

INTERIOR LIGHTING FOR DESIGNERS


Figure 5.16Skylight shades.
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