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LEUKOS
The Journal of the Illuminating Engineering Society
Volume 10, 2014 - Issue 4
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Articles

Predicting the Daylit Area—A Comparison of Students Assessments and Simulations at Eleven Schools of Architecture

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Pages 193-206 | Received 28 Mar 2014, Accepted 26 May 2014, Published online: 02 Jul 2014
 

ABSTRACT

In recent years, climate-based metrics, in particular daylight autonomy, have found their way into North American standards and green building rating systems. The authors showed in an earlier pilot study that subjective space evaluations by architecture students correlated well with daylight-autonomy-based daylit area simulations in a single north-facing studio space in Boston. For this article, the authors collaborated with educators at 11 schools of architecture and applied the method consistently to 13 spaces within the participating schools. The schools are located in Brazil (2), Canada (1), Egypt (1), and the United States (7). The authors also introduce the concept of a “partially daylit area” metric based on a minimum illuminance threshold for daylight autonomy of 150 lux. The two metrics correctly determined in 18 out of 24 cases which parts of the study space are fully or partially daylit. The authors accordingly propose a two-tier evaluation system to rate the daylight availability in spaces.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors warmly thank all building science instructors who participated in this study, namely, Diane Bastien, Mary Ben Bonham, José Candanedo, Pinar Ersu, Ashraf Nessim, Karen Kensek, Solange Maria Leder, Kris Nelson, Fernando Rutttkay Pereira, Ulrike Passe, Matthew Tanteri, Tyler Tucker, and Kevin Van Den Wymelenberg.

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