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Light

 And  Architecture    
 
Masters  Thesis  
Supervised  by:  Dr  Samir  El  Tawil  –  Presented  by:  Maria  Akl  

L e b a n e s e   U n i v e r s i t y   2 0 1 1  
Light And Architecture
Masters Thesis

Presented by:
Maria AKL

Supervised by:
Dr. Samir El Tawil

Presented to :
Dr. Shadia Senno
Dr. Mosbah Rajab
Dr. Nahed Ghazal
Dr. Samir El Tawil

Lebanese University
Faculty of Fine Arts and architecture
Branch III
2010-2011

Date: May 5, 2011

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TABLE OF CONTENT:

FOREWORD  AND  ACKNOWLEDGEMENT..........................................................5  

I-­  INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................6  

II-­  HISTORICAL  REFERENCE  OF  LIGHT  IN  ARCHITECTURE .................... 10  

III-­  LIGHT ................................................................................................................. 15  

1-­  A  DEFINITION  OF  LIGHT ............................................................................................15  


a-­‐  Tone: ..................................................................................................................................................15  
b-­‐  Intensity: ..........................................................................................................................................16  
c-­‐  Focus: .................................................................................................................................................16  
d-­‐  Natural  effects  of  light:...............................................................................................................16  
e-­‐  Light  as  material: ..........................................................................................................................17  
2-­  EFFECT  LIGHT  HAS  ON  MOOD  AND  PSYCHOLOGY ......................................................18  
a-­‐  Brightness  contrast: ....................................................................................................................22  
b-­‐  Subjective  impressions ..............................................................................................................24  
c-­‐  Degrees  of  stimulation: ..............................................................................................................26  
3-­  EFFECT  LIGHT  HAS  ON  SPACE ....................................................................................26  
a-­‐  Forming  functional  zones .........................................................................................................26  
b-­‐  Defining  spatial  borders............................................................................................................29  
c-­‐  Emphasizing  architectural  features......................................................................................32  
4-­  SHADING  VERSUS  LIGHTING ......................................................................................35  

IV-­  WINDOWS......................................................................................................... 40  

1-­  TYPES  OF  OPENINGS: .................................................................................................42  


a-­‐  Sidelighting  systems....................................................................................................................42  
Historical  evolution:................................................................................................................................... 42  
Types  of  systems: ........................................................................................................................................ 44  
b-­‐Toplighting  Systems:....................................................................................................................48  
Historical  evolution .................................................................................................................................... 48  
Types  of  systems.......................................................................................................................................... 49  

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c-­‐atrium  and  glazing.........................................................................................................................52  

V-­  ARCHITECTS  AND  THE  LIGHT ..................................................................... 53  

1-­  LE  CORBUSIER ............................................................................................................53  


2-­  LOUIS  KAHN ..............................................................................................................55  
3-­  NORMAN  FOSTER ......................................................................................................57  

VI-­  LIGHT  IN  LEBANON........................................................................................ 59  

1-­   SOCIAL,  CULTURAL  AND  ECONOMIC  FACTORS .......................................................59  

2-­  HISTORICAL  EVOLUTION  OF  WINDOWS ....................................................................61  


a-­‐  rectangular  window ....................................................................................................................61  
c-­‐  small  openings ...............................................................................................................................63  
c-­‐  Triple  Arched  Window ...............................................................................................................64  
d-­‐  The  bay  window............................................................................................................................65  
3-­  OURRENT  SITUATION  IN  LEBANON ...........................................................................65  
Lebanese  rules  and  regulations...................................................................................................66  
Commentary ........................................................................................................................................67  

VII-­  MUSEUMS  AND  THE  LIGHT........................................................................ 69  

1-­  TYPES  OF  MUSEUM  LIGHTING ....................................................................................70  


2-­  LIGHTING  DESIGN  TECHNIQUES.................................................................................71  
3-­  CONSIDERATIONS  TO  BE  TAKEN ................................................................................73  
a-­‐  Glass  display  cabinet ...................................................................................................................73  
b-­‐  Surface  reflectance ......................................................................................................................74  
c-­‐  Contrast.............................................................................................................................................74  
4-­  CASE  STUDIES ............................................................................................................75  
a-­‐  National  Etruscan  Museum  ‘Pompeo  Aria’,  Marzabotto,  Italy ..................................75  
b-­‐  Archaeological  Museum  of  Delphi ........................................................................................76  

VIII-­  CONCLUSION ................................................................................................. 78  

IX-­  BIBLIOGRAPHY ............................................................................................... 80  

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Foreword and acknowledgement


The   Masters   thesis   is   the   crown   work   of   all   the   knowledge,   research   and  
information   that   I   have   accumulated   throughout   my   four   previous   years   in  
University,   these   years   that   have   brought   me   much   more   than   I   expected   them  
to,  both  academically  and  socially.  

Therefore  I  would  like  here  to  say  THANK  YOU  to  all  those  who  have  made  
this  possible.  
 
First   and   foremost,   I   would   like   to   thank   each   and   every   one   of   my  
professors   at   university,   who   have   held   me   by   the   hand   and   led   me   across   the  
architectural  path  all  the  way  HERE.  A  special  thank  you  to  Dr  Shadia  Senno,  Dr  
Mosbah  Rajab,  Dr  Nahed  Ghazal  and  Dr  Samir  El  Tawil  who  have  supervised  this  
thesis  step  by  step.  
 
I   would   also   like   to   immensely   thank   our   University   director,   Mr.   Ali   el   Ali,  
whose   efforts   are   what   are   still   keeping   our   university   going,   and   our   head   of  
department,   Mr.   Wassim   Naghi,   who   is   constantly   working   on   improving   our  
department  and  who  has  never  denied  any  of  us  help  should  we  ever  ask  for  it.    
 
A   big   thank   you   to   all   my   classmates   and   friends   in   university,   who   made  
this   ride   not   only   educational,   but   also   fun,   and   my   parents   and   family   who  
always  encourage  me.  

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I- Introduction

It is pretty curious how the world evolved in the past few decades.
Photography, means of transportation, Internet, media and other technologies
assured the fact that all countries are today open to what is going on in other -
even far- parts of the world. Hence any new development that happens in one
place only takes hours, minutes even, before reaching the other end of the
globe.

This universalisation is not only about technology, it is also applicable on


ideas, techniques, materials, visions, concepts and different other prospects. It
allows us to always be updated to any new happenings and breakthroughs, and
share our own with the rest of the world.

As a result of the stated above facts, we today exchange architecture. It is


no longer a definition of the region it is in, vernacular architecture is fading away
more and more with every day, replaced by the bright ideas of leading architects
around the world, new technologies and techniques that make construction

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faster, easier and more efficient; new visions and concepts that redefine the
very meaning of architecture from being a “space” to satisfy a need, into being a
functional piece of art, every aspect of which serves a certain purpose. Studies
are made for the betterment of this functionality, on different fields that affect
architecture one way or another. Hence topography, soil study, weather study,
energy consumption, isolations ….etc have all become a necessity to envisage
before the conception of any project. A project is then the outcome of the sum of
all these fields put together; it is the optimal solution an architect reaches in
order to satisfy at the same time the needs and the constraints. Those
constraints are no longer those taken from a physical point of view of the land
and project itself, but nowadays, with the expansion of the fields of psychology
and human study, those aspects now play an important role in the conception of
an architectʼs design.

Henceforth the built and the living are not divided from each other, but one
is part of the other, and the architect has to envisage how the building will affect
the person psychologically, will it change his mood, does this feeling the person
gets walking in serve the purpose of the architecture? In parallel, the architect
should wonder how will human presence affect the architecture of the project,
and he should use this presence to enrich the project not impoverish it. He
therefore has to look into the smallest details of what he is creating: The
volumes of the interior, the colors, the lights, the height of the ceiling, the
materials used for the interior as well as the exterior, the openings and
windows, the types of lamps, paints, furniture… etc.

My interest however has always been the light. It is amazing how the
natural light can affect our mood: we feel gloomy on a rainy cloudy day, we feel
exhausted if we stay too long in the hot summer sun… Also the sun, and the
light in general, affect how we see things, depending on the intensity, the focus,
the color…etc It can change shapes and add or subtract emphasis from one

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point or another, it affects how we see volumes whether it was in interior space
or the exterior.

Seeing and reading about architecture of residential and other buildings


abroad, in some parts in Europe and USA, amazed me at how much the effect
of natural light in the first place and artificial in the second place, is taken into
consideration. How complicated is the study of the very window in order to give
the interior the ambiance the architect has in mind.

On the other hand, driving around in Lebanon, and looking at the


residential buildings with their repetitive rectangular aluminum windows of
standard dimensions, opposes harshly these “poetic” (so to speak) ideas. Even
non-residential buildings barely take light into consideration: office buildings
mostly are all about the glass exterior glazing, that does or does not help the
function of the interior, whether it was from the point of view of light, or heat, or
even how it serves the aesthetics.

This stirred my curiosity, how does light really affect the interior and
exterior of a project? How does it change the atmosphere and how should it be
used correctly in order to define the wanted spirit of a room? How should be
used to mold our perception of an architectural shape and the entities inside it?
And how can we, in Lebanon, put to practical use the knowledge about light and
its effects in our buildings and constructions.

Therefore Iʼm writing this essay about the use of light in architecture to
discuss different points that will help me reach a better understanding of the
effect of the light and how to use it correctly in order to benefit from the interior
of architecture in general and museums in particular.

The general plan of the thesis paper will take the following path: The main
ideas to be discussed start with a general introduction of the history of the use

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of light in architecture and its importance for humans, and an introduction of the
properties of light.

The different effects of light are thoroughly discussed, the effect on human
mood and the psychology of light on one hand, and the effect of light on space
on the other hand.

Windows are very important, they are the opening through which the light
comes in, hence their shape and materials are of crucial importance in the
process of making the light that enters the premises, thatʼs why the types and
properties of windows are cited, and the influence of different materials and
construction techniques on those windows. In addition to that, the effect of the
sunʼs location to how the sunrays penetrate the given window into the room are
also of importance to try and narrow down and specify exactly how the sun and
natural light affect the interior space and its architecture; that includes light itself
and the shading, the effect of which is just as important, so both will be further
discussed in the thesis.

The situation in Lebanon is brought up, first a historical outlook on old


houses, followed by a general analysis of the current situation, observation of
residential and non residential buildings, paired with an analysis of the problem
from the legal and social point of view.

Finally, the use of light in museum and the optimal solutions for a best
result of interior space and exposition of works will end the essay, with some
views of world renown architects about light and its relation to architecture.

The aim of this thesis is not to simply state already established facts about
light, but to try and find a better understanding of the relation between light,
architectural space and humans, and see how to best apply it in our community
as a whole (residential or not) and in museums in particular.

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II- Historical reference of light in architecture

Light has played an important role and functions in architecture throughout


the time. Architecture is the story of how the human being adjusted to the
elements he is presented with, and many times was this architecture affected by
his belief systems.

From the times of the Menhir and worshipping light, to Egyptian


architecture and its ornamented light, the precise light of Classical Greek archi-
tecture. All through the time, light has been used to serve different functions.

In Ancient Egypt, the Divine Father


was the sun god Ra, the supreme ruler of
all creation. The religious beliefs related to
the sun influenced and informed the town
planning and the architecture of ancient
Egyptian cities. The Pharaonic city of Iunu,
referred to by the Greeks as Heliopolis or
ʻthe city of the sun,ʼ represented the
geographical center of the sun cult that

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existed in ancient Egypt. The layouts of Egyptian temples such as Karnak were
usually informed by the movements of the sun and accommodated seasonal
variations.

The Greek expressed a respect for the sun and its many powers; this is
clearly visible in the architecture of places of worship and social gatherings. The
ancient Greeks typically oriented the front façade of their temples towards the
east. Important religious ceremonies took place in the eastern section of the
temple, which was illuminated by the early morning rays of the sun. The Greek
vernacular architecture was mainly based on a play between light and shadow.
Buildings were built with thick walls that transferred warmth of the winter sun, or
the coolness of the summer nights inside. The walls were painted white to usher
light into the interior.

Socrates wrote about the sun in his book, Xenophonʼs Memorabilia, saying:

“Now in houses with a south aspect, the sunʼs rays penetrate into the
porticos in winter, but in the summer, the path of the sun is right over our heads
and above the roof, so that there is shade. If then this is the best arrangement,
we should build the south side loftier to get the winter sun and the north side
lower to keep out the winter winds. To put it shortly, the house in which the
owner can find a pleasant retreat at all seasons and can store his belongings
safely is presumably at once the pleasantest and the most beautiful.”

In Roman times, the light that is distilled as it


passes from the outside to the interior of their
architecture (for example the Pantheon), the divine light
of spaces devoted to the liturgy, the protective light that
inclines people to meditation in Romanic architecture
are what characterized it. In the Pantheon, The oculus
on top of the dome of the main rotunda captures the sun
rays that heat and illuminate the rotunda, which is an

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obvious example of the importance of sunlight in roman architecture.

That wasnʼt the case for only places of worship, Many Roman houses had
ʻheliocaminusʼ in their houses. Resembling the modern sunrooms, the
heliocaminus was a separate space within the house where solar heat could be
trapped and then distributed to other quarters of the house as needed. The
Romans are the ones who first started the technology of glass window, which
were used to warm their houses by trapping the solar heat. They also used
solar energy in large public buildings such as public baths.

Also we knew the humanized light of the Renaissance, the sublime light of
the Baroque period and the fluid light that allows us to use glass enclosures in
contemporary architecture, which almost manages to eliminate the difference in
light between the interior and the exterior.

The supernatural light through stained glass windows in gothic times was
one of the most breath-taking phenomena. People would appreciate the
buildingsʼ dominant scale from the exterior. But once they entered, they would
discover a mystical world where sunlight behind stained glass brought scenes
from the Bible to life in front of their eyes. In a world without film or television, a
dark room full of brightly back-lit stained glass windows would rival fire and the
night sky as the most visually exciting things anyone in the middle ages had
ever seen.

During the mid-eighteenth century, the early years of the Industrial


Revolution, in Western Europe a huge number of people migrated from rural
areas to the city to look for work in the growing number of factories, causing
enormous economic and social changes. Demands for housing were growing
rapidly due to the growing amount of people; this caused the appearance of
overcrowded and unsanitary ghettos in many cities in Great Britain and in other
countries of Western Europe. Buildings were built back-to-back, in narrow

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streets with very little exposure to sunlight, with open sewers and a density of
population, this led to the appearance of many diseases such as cholera,
tuberculosis and other deadly diseases.

This was described by Charles Dickens in Oliver twist, he said:

“There exists the filthiest, the strangest, the most extraordinary of the many
localities that are hidden in London, wholly unknown, even by name, to the
great mass of its inhabitants. To reach this place, the visitor has to penetrate
through a maze of close, narrow, and muddy streets, thronged by the roughest
and poorest of waterside people, and devoted to the traffic they may be
supposed to occasion.”

Awareness of the importance of light in peopleʼs lives grew when Dr Niels


Finson received the Nobel Prize in 1903 for proving that sunlight can cure
tuberculosis. In the beginning of the 20th century, architecture changed by the
birth of a new architectural school that rejected the old ways of buildings. The
Modern Movement gained popularity after World War II through the work of
CIAM (Congrés International de lʼArchitecture Moderne) that put principles that
were the basis of rebuilding the new European cities, ruined after the end of the
war. The work of Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, and Mies van der Rohe followed
principles of CIAM and the Modern Movement in architecture. This new
architecture emphasized straight lines and simple, economic forms. It focused
on the use of large windows to maximize natural light and fresh air.

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Artificial light is quite different, invented light that comes from a fixed and
constant source of emission and, therefore its effect does not vary and it
obviously implies consuming energy and, far too often, it also involves visual
“noise”.

And as with good architecture, good lighting, illuminates, clarifies,


stimulates. Bad lighting, like bad architecture, dazzles, confuses and produces
weariness.

Film directors used to say that a good lighting director was just as
important as a good actor for making a film. He said that a badly lit good
expression or gesture is almost worse that a well lit bad gesture and vice versa.

Architects know, or should know, that it is of prime importance to get the


lighting right, whether it is natural or artificial light: the right light enhances and
improves a space, bad lighting degrades it. The best lighting is almost always
one that you do not notice. You sometimes enter a place and you cannot
perceive it or appreciate what it contains, because the light blinds you. Other
times, you go to an exhibition and the reflections of the poor lighting do not
allow you to appreciate what is on display. And not to forget what is told in the
cops and robbers films when they wanted to interrogate somebody, they shined
a bright light in his face to weaken or destroy his physical and mental defenses
and he would end up confessing.

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III- LIGHT

1- a definition of Light
All sources of light have their own particular qualities, some of which are
the result of the light source itself and the some the result of external influences,
such as the weather and the landscape.

The light from the sun, for example, is constantly changing, depending on
the time of day, the time of year, the weather …etc

The quality of any light (whether natural or artificial), can be defined in three
simple ways:

a- Tone:
The tone of a light is defined by its colors temperature. The temperature of
light is synonymous with its color, in the sense that they are both the product of
a specific wavelength. The primary colors of natural light make up the spectrum
of colors that can be seen when the light is split by a prism; at one end of the
scale is ultraviolet (the blue end) and at the other is infrared (the red end of the
visible spectrum).

We light we see is a mixture of all these and is described as “white”, but all
light sources have their own color; meaning that they emit a distinct wavelength
pattern, depending on what they are designed to do.

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b- Intensity:
The brightness of the light is fundamental to the quality of the atmosphere
in a room. That is not to prelude the use of very bright lights, and if used, these
lights are to be carefully controlled. Generally, a number of dim lamps will create
a more interesting atmosphere than a single bright lamp, even if they add up to
the same amount of light. So basically the intensity is not only the physical
amount of light in a certain space, but also how this light is translated in the
space.

c- Focus:
Whether the light is direct or not is the result of exterior influences on the
light that is emitted from the lamp.

The “bulb” of the standard lamp is frosted and throws a diffuse light all
around, producing a bland featureless light. However, if a crown-silvered lamp is
combined with parabolic reflector, the design diffuses a very tightly focused
beam, producing a dramatic light capable of giving life and shape to a room.

The number of designed lamps is incredible and each of them has its own
controlled width of beam, and different lamps are to be used in different places
and serve various functions (emphasis, illumination, etc)

d- Natural effects of light:


The atmosphere we experience in the outside world in the combination of
the tone and the contrast produced by the conditions. We can begin to study
those natural conditions by analyzing the tone, intensity and focus.

The quality of sunlight at noon in the Sahara desert is harsh and bright, with
intense shadows. By contrast, in a deciduous wood on a wet day in the northern
hemisphere, the light is muted and soft with very little obvious shadow, the
whole effect being diffuse and vague.

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Humansʼ mood is strongly influenced by these conditions, the feeling tend
to vary in a certain way about a place or scene, depending on the quality of the
light.

The search for understanding the relationship between light and mood was
of primary importance to the impressionist school of painters at the turn of the
century. They sought to represent light with pigment, capturing atmosphere
through color. Studying their work has brought important information about the
color of light and its effect on mood.

e- Light as material:
Architects thoughts always seek the material of finished product while they
work out the puzzles of the volume or proportion of space. Different materials,
including stones, brick, steel, glass, wood, tile, plaster, paper and cloth render
different qualities in architecture. Light is an equally and sometimes more
influential element in determining the result. It can even highlight or damage the
value of architectural materials themselves.

Lighting fixture is an important tool for architectural lighting design that


distinctively offers specific function. Each fixture has a different purpose
according to the architectʼs intention. Be it spots or lamps or chandelier, these
fixtures are the architectʼs accessories to producing the space.

However, the fixtures should stay behind the scene, the goal of light is to
create a miraculous situation whereby the right amount of light is floating in the
air comfortably.

The ideas for lighting design usually do not come out of the blue. Because
architecture is a mean of various space functions, a function of light is also
hidden for each of these segmented spaces. Liberal ideas full of creativity
should be employed after thoroughly examining how the space should function.

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2- effect light has on mood and psychology
“Light affects our bodies in two ways. In the first, light impinges on the retina
of our eyes and, through our vision system, affects our metabolism and our
endocrine and hormone systems. In the second, it interacts with our skin by way
of photosynthesis and produces vitamin D. Daylight serves as a catalyst for the
secretion of hormones from the pineal gland namely serotonin and melatonin.
The level of melatonin determines the energy and activity levels in our bodies. At
darkness or low light levels, melatonin secretion increases and drowsiness
occurs. Daylight suppresses the production of melatonin and fosters an alert
state of mind by secreting serotonin. People who live and work in window-less
environments or in places lacking adequate light may be at risk of having their
internal clock continually disturbed. Melatonin is an important anti- oxidant and
can neutralize some agents. Serotonin, a hormone first discovered in 1933, is the
neurotransmitter identified in many psychiatric disorders. During long periods of
high stress, serotonin is used up, exceeding its replenishment rate. Prolonged
stress lowers serotonin levels in the brain and a stress-induced depression may
take place. The less serotonin available in the brain, the more severe is the
depression and related symptoms.” (1)

So light has a direct effect on our mood and feeling, from a scientific
medical point of view. Light acts on the production of cortisol, serotonin, and
melatonin, three important hormones that affect our internal clock and our mood
states, among many other effects. It is important to keep these hormones in
proper balance. Low levels of serotonin (the daylight hormone) cause
depression. Light therapy, be it artificial or natural, has been found to be an
effective antidepressant but only when the light is bright enough.

Light not only affects the psychological state of the person, but also has a
direct effect on what he feels in a certain ambiance.

(1) Mohamed Boubekri; Daylight, Architecture and Health: building strategies, England,

Elsevier (Architectural Press) 2008

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An architectural space accompanied by a satisfactory function of light has
the power to move people. The crux of architectural lighting is how it can cater
not only to the biological, but also to the psychological needs of humans. The
way architectural spaces are perceived generally vary from a person to another,
but there is something known as an emotional impact, which is rather common
among people. However, different studies have shown that the light color and
intensity may affect people differently according to their age and gender: a study
showed that young adults (of around 23 years old) preserve a negative mood in
a warm (red tones) atmosphere, while older adults (65 yeas old) the cool (blue
tones) conveyed the same negative effect when it came to cognitive
performances.

Light, its color and intensity, vary according to the function of the local it is
in. Thus, a hospital room, a classroom and a living room of a residential home
should have different lighting whether it was artificial or natural (variation of
opening types and spaces). Hence, Light is often used by architects as a
metaphor, a mood-giver or a carrier of a meaning in and of itself.

The chapel of Notre-Dame-du-Haut at Ronchamp, France, by Le Corbusier


is a boldly expressive free-form structure in which the symbiotic association
between the form and the interior natural light identifies the essence of the
building, making it the central element of the design concept. Through
irregularly sized and shaped windows piercing the southern thick masonry wall
of the chapel and from three light towers emerging through the roof much like
wind catchers, light enters the space from multiple directions, bouncing off richly
textured surfaces, and through colored glass that imparts unequalled poetic and
spiritual qualities that have made the building one of the icons of modern
architecture.”

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Notre-dame-du-haut Chapel, Ronchamp, France

In the Chapel of Light by the Japanese


architect Tadao Ando in Japan, light enters
from behind the altar through a cruciform cut
in the concrete wall that extends vertically
from floor to ceiling. Light emerges through
the crucifix as an abstract and universal event
in contrast to the darkness of the concrete
wall. The effortless simplicity of the space is
contrasted only by the intense brightness of
the luminous crucifix, making it the
centerpiece of the chapel and of the spiritual
experience sought by those who frequent it.

The effect of light on architecture this became a main concern to


researchers, who started looking into the relationship between light and the
mood of the occupants, not only in religious places, but in any social place,
because anywhere, a human experiences mood changes according to dramatic
change in light.

Psychologists and behaviorists believe that even in places where the


change in lighting is not as dramatic, small changes in light may also affect a

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personʼs mood or his emotional state. Apparently, the presence or absence light
can produce a positive or negative effect.

The sensations that come along with good lighting are excitement, alertness
and dominance. However, with poor lighting comes dullness, boredom and
submissiveness. These states affect the social behavioral responses of the
occupants and their ability to make proper decisions. When people are in a
good mood, they tend to perform better in a work place and vice versa.

Most research on the effect of light and mood has focused on the artificial
electric light. Unlike electric light, daylight is a more difficult field to study due to
its dynamic and constantly changing aspect and its properties that are not static
(as are those of artificial light). This changing character of daylight that varies
from one minute to another makes experiments rather difficult, however there is
a general natural preference for daylight over artificial light. This could be
related to its spectral quality (the spectrum of daylight being the fact the white
daylight is in fact the compilation of 7 colors – those of the rainbow) that triggers
hormonal and physiological progresses. These progresses affect our
psychological wellbeing. That however is not a proven fact, but whatever the
reasons are, the fact remains that most people prefer natural lighting to artificial
one.

The individual impressions of a space depend on the relationship of


surfaces that are lit to those left in the dark, and on the focus of the surround or
background, i.e. the emphasis on a space or another.

It is through the wits of the architect that the manipulations of light,


brightness and contrast, focus and color, will give the desired emotional impact
of an interior, though different degrees of stimulation.

The degree of brightness contrast evokes emotions in the same way as


background music. It affects:

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• The performance of task
• The behavior of people at work or play
• The amount of containment and pleasure, and emotions in general.

This brightness and contrast hence affect the way the person perceives the
architectural space and how this space will affect him.

a- Brightness contrast:
Low contrast environment, everything is of equal emphasis

Mid contrast environment, combination of emphasis

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High contrast environment, high bright and dark areas

Very high contrast environment – extreme high bright and dark areas

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b- Subjective impressions
These are 6 different ways to light the same space and see how light
different effect and the feelings/impressions it conveys to the occupants.

Picture 1: direct lighting on the table gives a strong contrast, is too harsh
for lighting faces and It gives a strong impression of confinement and haziness.

Picture 2: shows lighting on all the walls, with low intensity. This lighting
promotes the impression of spaciousness and increased height, at the same
time gives a pleasant impression to the occupants of the room.

Picture 3: lighting of cove above, low intensity. This lighting is pleasant for
near and distant faces and promotes a quiet impression.

Picture 4: direct lighting on table and lighting of small wall. It promotes a


relatively strong feeling of pleasantness and gives the impression of length to
the room.

Picture 5: direct lighting on table, and lighting of cove above. It gives a soft
subdued effect and is pleasant for near faces, it also promotes the feeling of
spaciousness.

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Picture 6: lighting of cove above, and lighting of walls flat, shadow free. It
gives a strong feeling of pleasantness and clarity and promotes the
spaciousness of the room.

Other types of subjective impressions are shown below:

Impression of
spaciousness: the room
appears larger or
smaller.

Impression of
perceptual clarity:
the room appears
public or private.

Impression of
pleasantness: the room
appears friendly or
sociable.

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c- Degrees of stimulation:
Environmentalists use the terms High-load and Low-load to describe the
degrees of stimulation or arousal. The more stimuli that must be processed by a
person, the higher is the load.

Environments that are complex, crowded, asymmetrical, novel, unfamiliar,


surprising or random are High-load, where as environments that are simple,
symmetrical, conventional, unsurprising and organized are Low-load. High
levels encourage participations and increase enjoyment where as low level help
a person feel contented, comfortable, focused and relaxed.

Although individuals react differently to the same environment, there is a


high degree of similarity in peopleʼs reactions to light.

3- effect light has on space


Light plays a central role in the design of a visual environment, the
architecture, people and objects are all made visible by the lighting, since it is
what enables “what we see”.

Our perception of architecture will be influenced by light:

• Light defines zones and boundaries


• Light expands and accentuates rooms
• Light creates links and delineates one area from another

The challenge of a qualitative lighting design is to develop a design concept


that combines the technical and aesthetic requirements of complex guidelines.

a- Forming functional zones


Distinct contrasts between individual zones and their surroundings remove
them from their special context, whether itʼs with the use of natural daylight
(windows) or artificial light. Also the same technique can be used outside to
form exterior functional zone, or inside, to form interior ones.

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Interior:

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exterior:

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b- Defining spatial borders
Horizontal

floor illumination emphasizes objects and pedestrian surfaces.

Indirect lighting of a ceiling creates diffuse light in the room with lighting
effect being influenced by the reflectance and color of its surface.

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Examples of defining horizontal spatial borders

Vertical:

• Vertical borders are emphasized by illuminating wall surfaces.


• Uniform light distribution emphasizes the wall as whole.
• Bright walls create a high level of diffuse light in the room.
• Vertical illumination is used to shape the visual environment.
• Room surfaces can be differentiated using different levels of illuminance to
indicate their importance.

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• Uniform illumination of the surfaces emphasizes them as an architectural
feature.

• Grazing light gives the wall structure by adding patterns of light.


• A decreasing level of brightness across a wall is not as effective as uniform
wall lighting at defining room surfaces.
• Lighting effects using gazing light emphasis the surface textures and become
the dominant feature.

Examples of defining vertical spatial borders

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c- Emphasizing architectural features

• The illumination of
architectural details
draws attention away
from the room as w
whole towards
individual components.
• Columns appear as
silhouettes in front on
an illuminated wall.

• rooms can be given a


visual structure by
illuminating the
architectural features.
• Narrow-beam down lights
emphasize the form of the
columns.

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• Grazing light accentuates
individual elements or
areas and brings out their
form and surface texture.
• Grazing light can cause
highly three-dimensional
features to cast strong
shadows.

• By using different levels or illuminance, different part of a room can be placed


in a visual hierarchy

Some example of emphasis of architectural features:

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Some types of lighting

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4- shading versus lighting
“Shadow design is now being called for on the lighting scene. When
spreading a white drawing of architectural design, we must reverse the
colors in our minds and picture a blackened drawing. We must start from
darkness (as opposed to the statement “in the beginning there was light”)
and carefully add the figures of light to space. To design shadows is to
design light for no space exists without shadows.”(1)

Shading is an almost essential part of passive building design. there are


many different form of solar shading and different uses for it. A part of it is
essential to:

a- Reduce the solar heat gain to the room


It is of greatest importance to the south elevations, that are most exposed to
the sun. The shading is hence necessary to limit the amount of light coming in
the room on one hand, and the amount of solar heat on the other. The shading
system used hence has to be controlled manually of automatically, to allow the
most of light and heat to come in during cold and cloudy days when light and
heat is needed, and limit them during hot sunny days.
b- Reduce glare
Glare usually results from a direct view of the sun, or by reflection from
outside sources as well as inside sources (items inside of the building). Glare is
annoying and gives a feeling of unease and irritability, hence it has to be
controlled by shading the sun or the source of reflection and allowing only light
to come into the room (not the sun rays themselves)

c- Allow a level of privacy

Some buildings and especially residential buildings, need a level of privacy for
the inside, hence curtains for example are used.

(1) Designing with light and shadow: Kaoru Mende + lighting planners associate Inc.

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However, the use of curtains minimizes the income of light from outside and
sometimes requires the use of artificial light in days where it shouldnʼt be
needed.
So the best solution is the use of some translucent material, which lets
through the maximum amount of daylight but breaks the internal image as seen
from the outside.
There are many ways to provide this shading, and they are an important
part of the design phase, since they are placed on the windows and seen in the
elevations. The solar shading systems are now an important industry, high tech
and of many aesthetic choices.

In the picture above, we see a movable shading device (such as blinds).


These are only opened when there is a surplus of light and shade is needed.
They donʼt affect the lighting in days with poor daylight.

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In the picture below however, we see an example of fixed lightshelf. The first
illustration shows the amount of light coming in without the lightshelf, it is too
much for the room and causes glare and surplus of light. The second illustration
shows the effect of the lightshelf in sunny days: it allows part of the light to
come in while reflecting another part into the back of the room. And finally the
last illustration shows the action of the light shelf in cloudy days: it allows all of
the sky light and there are no harmful sunrays.

This is only a couple of example of shading devices; lightshelf systems will


be further explained in more details in the next chapter.

This shading is an intrinsic part of lighting design. However, some more


particular form of shading may be used, not just to immerge the room in the

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exact quantity of light required by its function, but to play a game of shadows
and thus give the room the ambiance that the architect had planned for it. In this
kind of shading, the shadow plays an important role and the architect has to
carefully plan the imagery drawn by the shadows in the interior according to the
sun position and the styles, types and forms of the window he is using (the
frame, the bars or lack of in the window, etc..). The shadowing hence is the one
that would give the interior the ambiance required and would masterfully
become the art inside the room (if used correctly)

A simplification of the shadow-play concept is shown in the illustrations


below (these are cut plans of a room with the window on the right):

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This clearly shows how the sunʼs position affect the way in which the rays
reach the interior and what wall theyʼd illuminate more, as well as how the
framing of the window casts a shadow on the wall. This shadow as well varies
throughout the day and time of year. If the architect chooses to make the
shadow an important part of his design, heʼd have to study the sunʼs rotation
during the day and the year. This will change according to what elevation the
window is on (north having very little direct sun rays, while south has a
considerably large amount).

The choice of the frames of the window, its height, width, and elevation from
the ground, as well as the divisions (if any) inside the window itself, all influence
the way the light reaches its destination and more importantly, the shadow the
window casts. It thus becomes a matter of “vide et plein” i.e. solid and void.

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IV- Windows

Daylight is inextricably linked to windows and openings within the exterior


envelope of a building. The two cannot be separated under typical design
approaches, although it is technologically possible to bring in daylight without
windows through the use of light pipes and other strategies.

Windows play several roles and have more than one effect on a room and
its occupants. The changing character of daylight adds a dynamic qualitative
dimension to the ambiance of the room that is not easily achievable with an
electric illuminant. Windows allow diffuse daylight and sunlight inside a room
while providing views to the outside, thereby adding a sense of openness,
spaciousness, and orientation. Because of the technological advances of the
last five decades, we are able to design buildings with large glass façades that
permit daylight to enter and allow views to the outside.

The importance of the connection with the outside world can be observed in
the behavior of people who live and work in windowless spaces. They appear to
use twice as many visual materials to decorate their workstations than do their

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counterparts who have windows. Landscape scenes and nature-related themes
seem to be the prevalent content of these visuals, an indication of a need to
connect with the natural world. Attention to the outside world proved an
important ingredient to relieve a sense of enclosure.

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 roof lights, the first allow the light coming from the sun to
come inside the room, called sunlight, and the second lets the light coming from
the sky, called skylight to come in. A successful daylighting strategy is one that
maximizes daylight levels inside the building but optimizes the quality of the
luminous environment for the occupants. Daylighting design is not only about
maximizing light levels. Excessive sunlight in an interior can be extremely
uncomfortable for its occupants. The key word in daylighting design is control,
not only of light levels but also of the direction and the distribution of light.

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1- types of openings:

a- Sidelighting systems

Historical evolution:
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.

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 todayʼs 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.

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 clerestory; found mainly in tall buildings such as
churches, generally associated with other forms of window at lower level to
provide the main daylight. Clerestories are placed at high level to assist in
getting daylight further into the interior and to light the roof structure.

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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 program 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.

London city hall orange operational facility

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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 window can 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.

Types of systems:
Side windows: Side windows are divided to low windows and high windows
(clerestory). Traditional side windows light mostly the area closest to the
windows and the rest of the room is less lit, or even dim when the room is deep.
The light is distributed depending on the sky conditions: when the skies are
overcast the daylight is more diffuse than when the skies are clear; the shadows
are, however, much softer. Other factors affect the spread of daylight in the
room, such as the orientation of the window, its location on the wall, the height
of the window and its width. A single side window may cause high discomfort
glare because of the contrast between the brightness of the window and the
darker background surrounding the window frame. A more balanced daylight
distribution may be obtained by bringing daylight from two different sidewalls,
resulting in a deeper, more balanced daylight distribution and a reduction in
glare.

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Clerestory system: A clerestory is also a side window but one that is
placed high in the wall. It is usually contained in a part of the building that rises
clear of the roof. Generally, it doesnʼt provide views towards the exterior but
permits a deeper penetration of daylight into the room than a standard side
window and gives less discomfort to the occupants of the room. Like a standard
side window, a south-facing clerestory will produce higher daylight illumination
than one that faces north. East- and west-facing clerestories present the same
problems as east and west windows: difficult shading and sometimes high heat;
however, because the frame of the window is higher, the penetration of the
sunlight is easier with clerestory. The area of the illuminated interior area
depends on how high the clerestory is, and its dimensions (height and width).
The higher the window, the deeper the light penetrates into the room.

Combined side-systems: Combined side-systems that include a side


window and a clerestory provide a more balanced distribution of daylight than
does a typical side window or a clerestory window alone. Since daylight levels
are additive, we can combine the daylight distribution from the side window with
that from a clerestory window.

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Lightshelf system: A lightshelf is a device designed to capture daylight,
particularly sunlight, and redirect it towards the back of the room by reflecting it
off the ceiling. As a result, this strategy can lead to a more even distribution of
light throughout the room than is found in a room with only a side window. A
lightshelf divides the window into a lower part that mainly serves the role of
providing a view and an upper window that serves to redirect the daylight
towards the back of the room away from the window plane. As a by-product, a
light- shelf can also provide shade from direct sunlight and reduce glare from
the sky. A lightshelf works best under sunlight conditions. The upper surface of
the shelf is made of a highly reflective material to maximize reflection; it should
not, however, be made of a highly polished surface, in order to prevent glare
and shiny spots on the ceiling. Medium polished surface materials are
recommended.

The design of a lightshelf should be integrated with the fenestration of the


building and planned during the early design stages. Its size and depth depend
on window size and façade orientation. A lightshelf may be combined, exterior
only, or interior only. It can be horizontal or oblique. Exterior lightshelves are
more effective in providing shade than interior ones but reflect less light towards
the back of the room. Oblique lightshelves reflect light more deeply into the
room but provide less shading than a horizontal lightshelf.

Variable area lightshelf system: A variation of the static lightshelf system,


the variable area lightshelf is designed to be a dynamic system whereby the
position of the lightshelf moves to optimize sunlight penetration according to
time of day or season

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A highly reflective film moves between two positions to optimize reflection
inside the space. This system can be automated for higher efficiency.

Prismatic systems: Prismatic glazing is designed to change the direction


of incoming sunlight and redirect it by way of refraction and reflection. As a ray
of light hits the prism, its direction is changed. Part of the light is then directed
towards the ceiling to be later reflected, while the other part comes inside the
room directly. Prismatic glass is commonly used inside electric lamps to
distribute light. However, its application as a daylighting system to control light
distribution in building interiors has been limited and its performance is yet to be
researched further. In principle, the prismatic panel can be placed in the upper
portion of a side window to deflect a portion of the incoming light deeper into the
room. In the case of double or triple glazing, the prismatic panel can be
sandwiched between glass panels to minimize dust and maintenance.

refraction of an incoming sunray


within the prism provoking a change of
direction and improving sunlight
penetration towards the back of the
room.

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b-Toplighting Systems:

Historical evolution
While 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 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 rooflights, 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.

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Types of systems
Skylight system: A skylight system is one of the simplest toplighting
strategies. It usually provides a horizontal or slanted opening in the roof of a
building and is designed to capture sunlight when the sun is high in the sky and
diffuse light from the zenithal area of the sky vault, and introduce it into the
portion of the room under the skylight. This daylighting approach can be used
only for the top floor of a multi-story building or for single-story buildings.
Several skylights uniformly distributed across the ceiling lead to a uniform
distribution of daylight. A skylight gives daylight distribution of an inverted V-
shape, where daylight is maximal underneath the skylight and progressively
lessens as we move away from that area. The reflector shown in Figure 6.18 is
used to deflect light from the area beneath the skylight in order to obtain a more
even distribution of light throughout the room. When several skylights are used,
and under diffuse sky conditions, the recommended spacing between them is
equal to their mounting height in order to obtain a fairly uniform distribution of
daylight throughout the space.

Roof monitor and saw-tooth systems: Roof monitors and saw-tooth


systems are toplighting strategies that differ primarily in their shapes. Under
these systems, light is captured through vertical or sloped openings in the roof.
These openings can be designed to capture sunlight at certain times of the day
or of the year, depending on the requirements of the building. Roof monitors can

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be single-sided or two-sided. Single-sided roof monitors and sawtooth systems
provide a directional effect inside the room, especially if the elements are
spaced far apart. Two-sided roof monitors provide a more uniform distribution of
daylight and less directionality, particularly under overcast sky conditions.

Types of rooflight:

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Light pipe system: A light pipe system
is a toplighting strategy designed to bring
daylight into the lower floors of a multi-story
building. This apparatus can be relatively
simple or sophisticated and elaborate. The
typical components of a light pipe system
are a solar collector that gathers sunlight, a
concentrator that focuses solar energy onto
a smaller area, a transport system, and a
distribution system. The solar collector may
be a simple stationary mirror or a
sophisticated computerized heliodon that
tracks the sunʼs movement. Another
possible component of a light pipe system is
a solar concentrator that is made of a
concentrating mirror or lens that focuses the energy collected from a large
collector onto a smaller area so that it can be transported efficiently. The higher
the concentration ratio of the mirror or the lens,
the smaller the cross-section of the
transporting mechanism needs to be. The
transport system can be a simple opening
shaft through the various floors of a building as
shown in, or it can be a prism or fiber optic
system that channels light in whatever
direction is needed. Light is transported within
the fiber optic walls by being inter-reflected
within the walls of the fiber.

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c-atrium and glazing
The word atrium started as the central court of a roman house, admitting
light and air to the surrounding space. Today, it is described in the “CIBSE
LG10 daylight and window design” as the following:

“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 allows the daylight into central areas, modern atriums are most
commonly covered by a glazed skylight that monitors the light that reaches the
inside while keeping out the rain and reducing the need of air-conditioning.

Atrium has many advantages: it gets daylight into deep plans, giving a
sense of orientation, information of time, weather and keeping the occupants
connected with the outside of the building. Also, atria save energy by helping
the ventilation and admitting daylight.

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V- Architects and The Light

Lao-Tse had said: architecture is not four walls and a roof, it is the air
that remains within, the space that these enclose.

Many great architects understood the importance of light and different


windows in their design and made it their first point of concern in order to better
embody their architectural ideas.

1- le Corbusier
Le Corbusier had said: Architecture is the wise, correct and magnificent play
of volumes collected together under the light.

Le Corbusier not only brought the “Five Points of a New Architecture,” but
he also utilized light to its extents in the process. Light played a key role to
validate all of Corbusierʼs design and make it effective. He raised his structure

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on pilotis, to give the building a sense of floating that is created through the
cooperation of light and shadow beneath on the lower level.

Extending pilotis and using frames as structure allows architecture to open


up and to become a free plan allowing natural daylight into the interior spaces.
Daylight is also utilized through roof top terraces and ribbon windows creating a
free façade. These aspects are evident when investigating structures of
Corbusier.

The weekend house, Villa Savoye, in Poissy, France, adequately


demonstrates each of Corbusierʼs five points. In the living room, ten meters of
full height glaze opens to a roof terrace allowing for the glass to slide open.
Natural daylight is essential to display the form within the structure. On the
exterior of the villa, the use of a white façade draws attention to the already
intrinsic nature of the form showing contrast.

At the “Unite dʼHabitation”, located in Marseilles,


France, light shows up in different fashions. As a
machine for living and known as the “vertical garden
city,” this unconventional apartment complex allows
for individual units, often different in appearances, to

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be joined together. These two-story units are arranged in a fashion so that each
can display frontage and a private balcony on both sides of the building. Full
height glazing allows light to reach deep into the plan, which is protected from
overheating by a concrete “brise-soleil”. There is still a roof top terrace creating
indescribable space.

2- louis Kahn

Louis Kahn also uses light as a key factor when designing a structure. A
center for biological research, the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California, keeps site
context as an important aspect by angling each part of the towers toward the
Pacific Ocean in forty-five degree geometry. Focused around a central
courtyard each laboratory invites natural daylight to penetrate interior spaces
through this angle. In the center of the courtyard is a central water channel
leading to a reflecting pool ensuring not to miss-guide the viewer from the
Pacific Ocean. Acting like ancient ruins, Kahn wanted the sun to follow the
building throughout the day allowing
natural daylight within by using screens.

Also, at the Kimbell Art Museum in


Fort Worth, Texas, light is the sole factor
of the design. The play of light and shade
on masonry forms create subtle changes
to different spaces within the galleries.
Day lighting is essential, but the control of

natural light is at the utmost importance.


There is a need to illuminate the interior,
but also to keep harmful ultraviolet rays from
damaging the precious artwork. The structure of

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the museum is the maker of light through reflection. The roof is vaulted and
splits down the center using reflectors to cascade light down the walls. At mid-
day, the roof illuminates silver.

Louis Kahn also expressed light through designs that are bold in geometric
forms. One of his early buildings the Yale Art Gallery in New Haven,
Connecticut, he focused on the distribution of light in a low interior space. His
solution was a ceiling formed of joined tetrahedrons and serves as space for
lighting conduits, which Kahn said, is good for illuminating the room as a whole
without minimizing the chance for specific illumination.

Understanding the importance for various sources, type and intensity of


light, Kahn design the library at Phillips Exeter Academy to take advantage
light's many properties. Kahn provided three distinct areas of light for the each
of his important spaces. The areas for reading in the Light received natural light
that was skillfully designed to enhance without bothering the ability to read,
Glare is bad in the library; wall space is important. “Little spaces where you can
adjourn with a book are tremendously important”, Kahn wrote about the Exeter
Library.

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Kahn believed the potential of learning was just as great from looking out
the window as from reading a book, however he also understood the need to
limit the outside distractions, both of people and of light. At the perimeter he
allowed the light to bring the reading area to life, yet he controlled the glare at
the reading carrels, through window height and the use of sliding shutters. In
areas of more serious study, he limited the windows to a source of light from a
clerestory. Because the rays of direct sunlight are harmful to books, Kahn used
dim fluorescent lighting in the place of books, offering only enough to allow the
user to find a book. As a result of ever-changing external conditions, the interior
space comes alive with a constant income of light and shade. The room exists
in the kingdom of shadows, that is, between the silence of ideas and the light of
material reality.

3- norman Foster
Norman Foster is another great architect to master the use of light in
architecture. The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, located in China, is tiered
and steps each layer of the tower allowing daylight into the spaces and atop the
roof terraces. The lower ten stories are dedicated to an atrium with a mirrored
ceiling that receives sunlight from a giant reflecting sun scoop outdoors
originally made to track the sunʼs path. Due to this aspect of so much natural
daylight within the structure, ample lighting is given to the underground level
due to a translucent floor installation.

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The Willis, Faber and Dumas Headquarters office building in Ipswich,
United Kingdom, revolutionized skeleton construction and the use of iron and
glass. Without window mullions, ample daylight can enter interior spaces and
create a spacious atrium at the heart of the building. The solar-tinted glass wall
around the perimeter is uninterrupted exposing each façade.

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VI- Light In Lebanon
The sun in Lebanon is an important factor, given the fact that itʼs a sunny
country generally speaking. The sunny days prevail in number in comparison to
cloudy ones, thus making daylighting a given element in architecture. Lebanese
windows have thus been modeled by the geographic properties of the sun the
the country in a way to increase heat and light inside during the winter days,
and reduce them during the summer.

Natural elements suck as the sun arenʼt however the only criteria that
affected the evolution of windows architecture in Lebanon. There were as well
social, cultural and economic factors.

1- social, cultural and economic factors


Lebanon has always been, throughout the history, the crossroad of different
civilizations and cultures. These diverse currents kept introducing new forms
and concepts that would meddle with the local customs thus creating what is
known as Lebanese architecture. The west provided Lebanon with technology
and some socio-cultural aspects, while the Arab identity is what molded the
Lebanese identity, whether it was in social behavior or architecture.

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Lebanese society with the different classes that arose was clearly shown in
the architectural aspect of Lebanon. Classes where known by their residence:
rectangular houses, with little decorative features, were the housing of the poor.
Middle classes would occupy the “beirutie” house, or the mansion.

Elements that today constitute what is known as Lebanese architecture are


taken from different times and cultures. Columns of the Roman, arch-shaped
windows from the Italian and roofing tiles from Venice, all were introduced by
artists or architects brought to the country by emirs and rich families, thus
shaping new fashions and forms as well as decorative patterns. Other elements
such as “moucharrabieh” came as a result of religious customs that would seek
to protect the woman from the curious eye; Islamic culture also narrowed the
window and introduced the pointed arched window.

During the second part of the 19th Century, as major cities in Lebanon
especially Beirut became trade centers; the presence of foreigners living on a
permanent basis revolutionized the concept of the window. The small protective
character gave way to the big exposing window not only to see but to be seen.
The new facades with large openings giving a view towards the sea or the street
were definitely an evident rupture with the past.

Around the 1850ʼs, cities in Lebanon became important commercial centers


that were home to a great number of foreigners. This changed the concept of
the window from being small, for the protection, to becoming big exposing
windows that would allow to see as well as to be seen. This era presented new
facades with large openings, that was clearly a leap from the past.

According to their religion, the Lebanese had different preferences in


architecture. However, ornamentation was always used, it was a symbol of
good wealth. The more original and innovative the ornament details, the richer
was the house and the higher was the social class. With the appearance of

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rental houses, this however deteriorated: there was a mass production of
ornamentation and later on collage on the facade, which replaced the unique
designs and elaborate work on details that masons did before.

2- historical Evolution of windows

a- rectangular window
It is the simplest and most common shape of windows. It changed and
evolved through the history affected by climate and foreign style. It is used in all
house types and went from small, thick openings constructed roughly to
become an ornamental element with a lot of details.

The first elaborate form of vernacular architecture was the rectangular


house, remains of which can be seen in all Lebanese regions. Dating from
5000BC, the windows in this type of houses was defined by thick masonry
walls, it was limited in size (depending on its climatic zone) and in number.
Evergreen trees were used on the outside to provide shade, and later shelves
were introduced to cast shade in the summer and stop the rain from reaching
the interior in winter. Wooden shutters were sometimes also used. The
orientation of these windows was a result of the natural setting.

“Depending   on   the   climatic   regions,   openings   in   rectangular   houses   differed   in   size  


and   location.   On   the   coastal   region,   where   solar   gain   and   humidity   are   factors   to  
consider,  windows  are  places  were  maximum  ventilation  can  occur  in  contrast  to  the  
high-­‐  mountain  region  where  window  size  and  number  is  kept  to  a  minimum.  North-­‐
side  open-­‐space  is  usually  rendered  for  outdoor  summer  activities  during  the  day  in  all  
climatic   regions.   Whereas   in   the   inland   region,   window   openings   seldom   occur   due   to  
the   characteristic   feature   of   grouping   houses   therefore   minimizing   external   climatic  
exposure.  In  the  Beqa'a,  the  grouping  of  closed  rectangular  houses  predominates;  the  
detached  house  is  rare  .  Also  in  the  high-­‐mountain,  region  variations  of  reducing  heat  
loss   conditions   in   north   walls   include   backing   the   building   into   a   sloped   hillside   or  
providing  a  berm  (the  level  area  separating  ditch  from  bank  on  a  hill-­‐fort  or  barrow),  
both  of  which  reduce  the  exposed  north  area  to  cold  winds  and  heat  loss.”(1)  

(1) Windows as Environmental Modifiers in Lebanese Vernacular Architecture: Habib Melki

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The major aim of this type of housing was the protection against the natural
climate. There was anther type of housing, called the “riwak house” it consists
in rooms connected with a gallery. The gallery was orientated north, giving
space for outdoor activity, its orientation gave it a natural cooling.
The windows are placed mainly within the riwak (gallery), putting to use the
shaded area as well as the cross ventilation, result of openings on opposite
walls of the room. The gallery has also an important social role, for the
gathering that happens within in and it connects all the parts of the house
together.

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The liwan is a space that opens to the outside and continues by connecting to
the space in front of it. Often found in the high mountain region, the liwan is a
space used for circulation, social activities and

Storage space which is covered but always open to the outside. Cross-
ventilation was achieved by internal windows or vents between the rooms and
the central space, which originally was permanently open. Furthermore, the very
position of the central living space, be it the liwan or the central hall,

Throughout the development of different house typologies, rectangular,


gallery, and liwan, the rectangular window evolved mainly because of
environmental considerations. Whereas the features that influenced the
transformation of the rectangular window into the triple arched, in the central
house typology, were mainly socio-cultural and economic.

With the evolution of these typologies and the increase of use of interior
space (As opposed to the fact social gatherings, even within the family, used to
happen outside) it became important to use windows not only for heat gain but
also for natural ventilation and daylighting. Larger windows imply solar gain and
improved quality of daylight, this became very popular and soon curtains and
shading devices were introduced for situation with excessive sunlight.

c- small openings
Throughout Lebanese
vernacular architecture,
small openings were used
for purposes that enhanced
environmental strategies of
natural ventilation and
daylighting.

Their position was

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critical because they had to achieve their aims of adding daylight and balancing
ventilation, especially during winter.

The openings were located either on the upper part of selected walls
(above or next to the windows/doors), depending on orientation. The upper
openings increased in number and in some case were found on different
orientations for the purpose of daylighting, whereas ventilation openings were
placed depending on prevailing winds. The use of these openings was evidently
more flexible in the original rectangular house since the walls had similar
thickness whereas the vaulted houses in all typologies restricted their use to the
central part of the vaults. Within the gallery, liwan and central houses, these
small openings developed to become an ornamented feature within the façade.

c- Triple Arched Window


With the turn of the 20th Century and the wide use of sheet glass, people
began to feel the need for social expression through eclecticism and the
influence theyʼve experienced. Although the central hall type of houses
appeared at a later stage than the ones described before, itʼs the true Lebanese
house which attains the highest degree of identity.

The triple arch consists of three arches connecting above slender columns
and either tie to a wall or are supported by half columns. In some cases, the
number is extended to four or five arches. The total is a combination of a door
which opens to a balcony or a rail-protected protrusion, and two windows
forming a parapet. The arches were generally plane and open, until later
periods when glass came in use. Wooden frames were fitted into the columns
and arches with intricate designs and patterns of plane or colored glass.

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d- The bay window
Typical to Arab architecture, the
musharrabiya, or bay window, was more
common in Islamic communities and served
as lookout for the harems. Resting upon
stone corbels, the structure was mainly
made of wood in a way to allow seeing
without being seen.

3- Current situation in Lebanon


In recent days we can no longer clearly formulate a pattern of window
typologies in the modern architecture in Lebanon. There isnʼt one type of
windows spread across Lebanon, thereʼs a huge diversity in dimension, styles,
and even materials used.

The current universalisation of construction technique, of architectural


styles, ideas and concepts made the whole world one giant architectural scene.
Thus Lebanon is observing a loss of the native identity when it comes to the
construction, and especially the windows.

As exposed in the parts above, the vernacular architecture (ex: rectangular


houses), thanks to its instinctive nature, used to take the light strongly into
consideration, whether it was on the level of urban planning or the individual
residences. Today however, we notice a standard -seldom blind- copying of the

Maria  Akl  –M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     65  


western windows, which is mostly a commercial, economical approach, mostly
seen in commercial buildings for sale or rent, where the façade is spotted with
aluminum windows and doors or the same shape and dimensions.

In buildings like these, the leading factors controlling the windows


orientation, size and shape are governmental rules and regulations that are far
from being environmentally conscious, or taking into consideration the effect of
daylight on mood and space.

Lebanese rules and regulations


According to the construction law in Lebanon (revised in 2007):

Article 9, part 1 discusses the “legal” area that should be outside a window or
opening for that opening to be legal. The law defined that area to be 4.5mx5.5
m, given that rectangle touches the opening itself, or the balcony/terrace
adjacent to the opening (if any).

Some conditions are stated such as:

The depth of the room inwards from the opening shouldnʼt exceed 5 times the
height of the room.

The area of the room to lit shouldnʼt exceed 10 times the area of the opening
(thus a 2m2 opening is enough for a 20m2 room)

Article 9, part two states all the rooms that are legally exempt from having
openings from natural daylight, some of which :

Stairwells, hallways, maids rooms, kitchens of 8m2 or smaller, lobbies, clubs,


restaurants, cafes, libraries etc.

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Article 9 part three mentions rooms that require ventilation but not daylighting.

Commentary
So as it was clear from the summary of the article, the Lebanese law has
one law and standard when it comes to daylighting, for all the facilities without
taking into consideration the function of said facilities and rooms. In the face of
the law, the minimum to light a living room is the same as the minimum to light a
hospital room, as the same to light a museum. Its is not a full law and doesnʼt
cover all the basics as they should be covered, by dividing the lighting according
to function. Not to mention that some of the rooms that donʼt require lighting are
absurd such as the maidʼs room, or the library. In fact the Arabic word for
“library” is ambiguous, it could also mean book store, but the law doesnʼt take
the trouble to make that clear and thus according to the law, a library doesnʼt
have to be naturally lit! Architects such as Louis kahn have thoroughly studying
lighting in libraries and the law allows to “keep it dark”.

Shy attempts are being done to correct the current situation by studies
carried out by the UNDP and building legislation authorities, but so far no results
are seen.

As a conclusion of the previous, the authorities and laws donʼt take into
consideration the difference in human needs when it comes to lighting,
depending on what the person is doing or isnʼt doing in the room to light, they
are mostly taking a general minimum of light requirement. The commercial
buildings of today are satisfied with this requirement, and that leaves them dimly
lit in the interior, especially that a 4.5x5.5 space is small when there are many
buildings around, more so when all of them are tall, or if the room in question is
on the first floor, be it residential or an office.

Maria  Akl  –M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     67  


Lebanon is a country with a lot of sun but this natural resource is not fully
benefited from. Hence it is the architectʼs duty to take it into consideration and to
try to make his designs environmentally better, to take advantage of the
presence of the sun and day lighting (in a country where the electricity is not
even always available) and to give his projects the ambiance that would fit them
best, with the use of natural light. And above all, architects of Lebanon should
try as much as possible to restore the Lebanese national identity, with the use
of modern material and new sustainable technologies, especially that Window
design today has brought flexibility to concepts of orientation, shape and size
which makes the aim easier to achieve, and which opens new design
opportunities.

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VII- Museums and The Light
Light has a special importance in museums, because the main function of a
museum is the display, hence the items shown should be clearly visible without
causing any irritation of the sight to the viewers or discomfort. On the other
hand, light should be illuminating the museum as a whole to allow circulation
and other functions.

So to summarize this, there are two types of light in the museum, Task
Lighting (the illumination of art and exhibited items) and Ambient Lighting (the
general use of light within the museum).

Museum visitors usually prefer to see objects that are displayed under
daylight. The daylight may be provided by side windows or rooflights and may
be highly controlled or partially controlled. The effects of daylight in a space are
much more noticeable from side windows than rooflights but is more difficult to
control to ensure avoidance of glare and poor viewing conditions. Highly
controlled rooflights may however fail to give a good impression of daylight and

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it must be questioned whether they are worth the cost. An evaluation of energy
payback is needed.

1- types of museum lighting


a- Ambient lighting

It defines the general experience of light within a gallery, the light that
illuminate the gallery as a whole, without taking in consideration the lighting of
the works. Many of the advantages attributed to natural light actually deal with
the psychological mood that it conveys within an interior space. The two most
important advantages of natural light are: the experience of not being confined
within an enclosed space and the changing quality of natural light over time.

b- Task lighting

It deals with illuminating works of art without regard for its effect on the
overall physical space.

When designing task lighting, two of its aspects is most important to take
into consideration: spatial distribution and the intensity of the light.

Spatial Distribution

Shadows and gloss on a surface are caused by directional sources such as


incandescent lamps. Both shadow and gloss are harmful for viewing any work
of art and most items that are usually exhibited in a museum, so many ways are
used to eliminate them: non-directional diffuse light is used, making surfaces
appear flat and matte, thus eliminating shadows. Veiling reflections caused by
non-directional sources (natural or fluorescent light through a diffusing daylight)
result in a loss of colorfulness. From a practical standpoint, many naturally lit
galleries use some diffusion to reduce the high intensity of direct sunlight and to
distribute light uniformly around a room. Diffuse daylights also hide ductwork,
light louvers, and other distracting elements hidden in the ceiling zone. But too

Maria  Akl  –  M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     70  


often, such diffusion also destroys much of the quality that we associate with
natural light.

Properly designed reflected light can provide general control and still
maintain directionality, although it is difficult to provide acceptable light
distribution in all directions at the same time.

Intensity

Humans generally prefer high light levels, while to conserve the pieces
exhibited lower light levels are favored. Therefore, the intensity of the light
directed at the works should be taken into consideration when designing the
light: it should be high enough not to cause discomfort for humans and favor
their well-viewing, yet low enough to preserve the objects.

There are many examples of artworks that have been damaged by daylight,
which has more potential for harm than most conventional artificial sources of
illumination. The museum designer must know both the dangers inherent in
various light sources and the visual advantages of the sources to find a proper
balance between aesthetic and conservation concerns. Ultimately, the
seemingly opposite requirements of good lighting and conservation must be
synthesized to find a solution that satisfies both goals.

2- lighting design techniques


The overall light exposure permitted on sensitive objects is the sum of the
daylight and artificial light. With highly sensitive objects it is almost impossible to
use daylight. Where such objects are being displayed, especially in any large
museum, areas should be provided where a view out is possible. These areas
may contain less sensitive objects or may simply provide seating for the visitors.
Such an approach can also help reduce the incidence of ʻmuseum fatigueʼ.

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With objects of medium sensitivity a highly
controlled approach may be adopted requiring
automatic shutter control of the louvers that
control the daylight, and of artificial light. A
more passive approach might be adopted
where by daylight may provide between 40%
and 70% of the total yearly lighting demand.
Such a system would normally have
differential louver controls on the daylighting
for summer and winter, and be relatively more
transparent in winter than summer.

Vertical space is usually the preferred space in museums particularly for


hanging paintings. Hence it is frequently found that vertical windows have been
blocked up or covered in museums that have been created from refurbished
buildings of other types. However, it is not just the lack of space that causes
problems with vertical windows: Objects displayed against windows have a very
bright background, thus the eye takes longer to adapt to them and a lot of detail
and color of the object is lost, it often appears more like a silhouette.

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With lower levels of light, the use of a dark background reduces the
adaptation level of the eye, thus increasing the apparent brightness of the
viewed object. For instance, in the ʻTurner Watercolorʼ room at the Tate Britain
Gallery in London where the vertical illuminance on paintings is maintained at a
low reflectance, maroon background is used.

The choice of background reflectance and, indeed, color plays an important


role in the visibility of the objects. Backgrounds of high chroma (strong color
intensity) can impose their own color on a room. Photographs may exaggerate
this effect as the eye searches for a reference or ʻwhite balanceʼ within a room
in an effect sometimes known as ʻcolor constancyʼ. Neutral surfaces (except
white) tend to produce a gloomy, cold appearance. The best compromise is
usually a low chroma background with a reflectance of 20% – 60%, chosen
according to the necessity to reduce the adaptation level of the eye.

Galleries exhibiting modern art have a tendency to use a white background


where the reflectance may exceed 80%. This will often work with modern art
consisting of strong primary colors, such as the works of Andy Warhol, but not
necessarily so well with Picasso and, in particular, dark sculptures.

Care should be taken, however, if a design that was originally conceived


with highly reflective walls is to be replaced with walls of lower reflectivity. This
is because in schemes with high reflectivity the contribution of the reflected light
to the total amount of light is very high and a reduction in that reflectivity will
severely compromise the total amount of light in the room.

3- considerations to be taken

a- Glass display cabinet


High brightness sources, either artificial light or daylight, may produce
reflections in the glass of display cabinets thus affecting the visibility of objects
within the cabinet. They may be particularly noticeable if the objects within the

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cabinet are poorly lit and it contains no additional light source. The perception of
the ʻveiling reflectionʼ depends on the balance between the brightness of the
reflection and the brightness of the object. The issue is quite complex, however.
A low reflectance surface in the background of the cabinet can reduce the
adaptation level of the eye and, in theory, improve the visibility of the object
reducing the adaptation level of the eye may make the veiling reflection visible.
Careful analysis is needed in each case.

b- Surface reflectance
Surface reflectance can have a major impact on the level of illuminance in
the room. The more the surface is reflective, the more light fills the room, for a
lower quantity of light sources. The reflectance is increased by the color of the
surface, so a white room with white floors, ceilings and walls is of very high
reflectance and luminance.

The color of the surfaces and the materials used on the inside of the room
are thus of great importance in respect to the lighting of the interior and affect
directly the need for light sources, be in natural or artificial.

c- Contrast
Diffuse illumination, where light comes equally from all directions, will allow
an object to be seen, but will do little to reveal the form or texture because of the
lack of shadows. The lack of shadow, and thus the lack of contrast, is then
harmful to the object seen (from the point of view that the object is not well
expressed under these circumstances). The gradation of the reflected light
(brightness) over the surface of an object reveals its 3D nature. Applying light at
an appropriate angle helps express the texture of the object.

Contrast is not just essential for seeing the object, but as expressed in
chapter III (2-a) it affects directly the way the interior itself is perceived, and how
the occupants of the room feel psychologically.

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4- case studies

a- National Etruscan Museum ʻPompeo Ariaʼ, Marzabotto, Italy


The new exhibition space of the ʻPompeo Ariaʼ National Etruscan Museum
in Marzabotto, has south facing vertical glazing that needs sun control with
regard to both thermal gains and daylighting. The service/ energy solution
chosen involved the use of an external wooden balcony, an observation point
towards the archaeological area that also connects to the new multimedia room.

Moreover, the balcony acts as an external shading system, designed to


allow solar gains in winter and avoid overheating during summer season.
Internal baffles and louvers, together with a curved ceiling, diffuse daylight and
allow a uniform illuminance inside the exhibition room and a more variable one
in corridors.

The following images show RADIANCE simulations of the proposed


solution under an overcast sky and a sunny sky on 21st March at noon.

Museums: energy efficiency and sustainability in retrofitted and new museum buildings: European
Commission directorate- General Energy and Transport - University College Dublin, Ireland 2004

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b- Archaeological Museum of Delphi
The museum at Delphi had two distinct types of gallery. In most galleries
the objects are not sensitive. The clerestory-lit galleries (e.g. the Apollo and the
Athenians) tended to suffer from sun patches on the objects, particularly from
the east-facing windows during the morning. The Siphnians room had a
traditional rooflight, with light penetrating through the roof into the roofspace and
then through diffusing glazing into the room.

Museums: energy efficiency and sustainability in retrofitted and new museum buildings: European
Commission directorate- General Energy and Transport - University College Dublin, Ireland 2004

Maria  Akl  –  M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     76  


There was no control. An even level of light was produced in the room with
poor contrast. In the vertical plane, the walls had a higher illuminance than the
large objects in the room (generally placed toward the centre of the room). The
clerestories were fitted with external shading, while east-orientated screened
rooflights, were added. The artificial lighting strategy incorporates a combination
of fluorescent and spot lamps with ceiling-reflected light.

The diffusing ceiling in Hall V (Siphnians Room) is being replaced by an


egg-crate based internal system, with external shading louvers allowing no
penetration of sunlight, reducing the luminance of the background while
maintaining the illuminance on the objects.

Museums: energy efficiency and sustainability in retrofitted and new museum buildings: European
Commission directorate- General Energy and Transport - University College Dublin, Ireland 2004

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VIII- Conclusion

“And in the beginning there was light”

The importance of light has always been acknowledged, but not often is the
light carefully studied in architecture as to provide not only global illumination of
the interior, but to set a mood, an ambiance, and a vision.

As shown in the thesis, light has many roles and can have many different
uses. It has a direct effect on the wellbeing of humans from a physical and
psychological point of view, and affects the way the occupants perceive the
interior space, whether it was artificial or natural light.

It is common knowledge that artificial light is easily controlled and


manipulated to reach the desired effect, but natural light can also be
manipulated and control using a set of ways. The windows shapes, placements,
orientation, dimensions and shading devices placed on them help control the
light and balance it to the wish of the architect, as well as create a game of light
and shadow in the interior that can set a mood as much as interior decoration,
hanged paintings or walls color.

Many architects, old and new, have given great importance to the light.
Discussed earlier are some of the most light-oriented works by Louis Kahn, Le
Corbusier and Norman Foster.

Maria  Akl  –  M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     78  


Despite extensive work and studies done on the lighting systems and light
techniques, Lebanon seems to lack nowadays of correct lighting ideology. Both
in the mind of people and in the sets of laws, light takes a small, if any, portion
of the design phase, problem which should be worked on and attended to by the
architects, who should know better than to build only “commercially”

Finally one of the institution that require most study on the light are the
museums, because their main aim is to “show”. The main problem in museums
is that a great number of them are a restoration of old buildings and facilities
main function of which was not museum. Careful light study hence has been
done on them and the restoration shows a great deal of wit and use of modern
technologies.

To put more of an emphasis on the Lebanese situation, it is a very hard job


to fix all the problems of the modern constructions, aiming in majority on the
commercial outlook. Shouldnʼt however be denied the praise those few facilities
and buildings that respect light to a great extent, mainly in Beirut and the area.
The problem however is far from being solved. The start should be in the
legislations, this would point to the problem, awaken people to the importance of
light and incite them to take lighting into consideration not as an accessory, but
as a main element.

Maria  Akl  –M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     79  


IX- Bibliography
Books:

[1] Between the silence and the light: John Lobell & Louis I. Kahn – Boston,
Shambhala (2008)

[2] Daylight, Architecture and Health: building strategies: Mohamed Boubekri -


England, Elsevier, Architectural Press (2008)

[3] Daylighting: natural light in architecture: Derek Phillips- England, Elsevier,


Architectural Press (2008)

[4] Designing with light and shadow: Kaoru Mende & lighting planners
associate Inc. , Australia, Images Publishing Group Pty (2000)

[5] Energy and environment in architecture: Nick Baker and Koen Steemers -
London, Taylor & Francis Group (2000)

[6] Human Factors in Lighting, Boyce, P.R, London, Applied Science Publishers
(1981)

[7] Lighting Modern Buildings: Derek Phillips- England, Elsevier, Architectural


Press (2000)

Maria  Akl  –  M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     80  


[8] Museums: energy efficiency and sustainability in retrofitted and new museum
buildings: European Commission directorate- General Energy and
Transport - University College Dublin, Ireland 2004

[9] Rehabilitation: Traditional Lebanese Architecture: Corpus Levant -


Leogravure, Beirut, (2004)

[10] The complete home lighting book: James Davidson - London, Cassel 1997

[11] The role of vitamin D endocrine system in health and disease: Reichel H.,
Koeffler, H.P. and Norman, A.W. - New England Journal of
Medicine 320 (1989)

[12] Windows selection: Ian D. Collins and Eric I. Collins, London, Newnes-
butterworths, 1977

Articles:

[13] Effect of light on human mood: Hamzeh Karbasi -arefianatelier.com (2009)

[14] Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy: United States Department of


Energy (2005). http://www.eere.energy.gov/buildings/info/design

[15] Light and architecture: Cesar Portela –cesarportela.com (2007)

[16] On light and dematerialization in architecture – John C. Klopf


klopfarchitecture.com (2000)

[17] Windows as Environmental Modifiers in Lebanese Vernacular Architecture:


Habib Melki (The 23rd Conference on Passive and Low Energy Architecture,
Geneva, Switzerland, 6-8 September 2006)

Maria  Akl  –M2   LIGHT  AND  ARCHITECTURE     81  

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