* Passive optics, no moving parts, no seasonal adjustments.* Redirects daylight 14 horizontal feet for each foot of LightLouver™ unit height.
* Provides uniform ambient illuminance levels in the daylit space.
* Reduces or eliminates ambient electric light energy use when combined with daylight controls.
* Eliminates direct sunlight penetration and glare above a 5° altitude angle.
* Integrates easily with all fenestration systems and requires less space than light shelves.
* Less expensive than exterior or interior light shelves, and provides superior daylight performance< LightLouver™ Performance
The LightLouver™ Daylighting System outperforms conventional side-daylighting strategies in all performance categories: daylighting contribution, solar control visual comfort, energy savings and installed cost. LightLouver™ units extend the daylit zone, deep into the building floorplate, and completely eliminate glare and direct sunlight penetration onto work surfaces from the daylight window. Energy savings are nearly double that of a conventional light shelf at one-third the installed cost. Below, the LightLouver™ Daylighting System is compared to a traditional light shelf daylighting solution and a conventional fenestration design.
Ray Tracing
Above: A section of the patented LightLouver™ slat shows the path of daylight from different solar angles. All sun above a 5° altitude angle is redirected upward onto the ceiling of the daylit space, providing ambient lighting and eliminating direct sunlight on work surfaces.Below: A photograph of an installed panel, showing the actual ray patterns of reflected light.
What? – What is good daylighting and bad daylighting? What strategies and approaches lead to good daylighting designs, and what should a designer watch out for?
When? – When during the design process should daylighting be considered? How can a designer best integrate daylighting design into the process?
How? – How to design for good daylight; what simulation tools and daylight products are available? Why? – Daylighting Benefits The reasons for using daylight to light a space can be divided into two main groups: psychological benefits and energy savings. Good daylighting has been shown in numerous studies to improve the overall attitude and wellbeing of building occupants. These studies have shown benefits for many different building types and functions: improved retail sales, increased productivity and reduced absenteeism among employees, improved test scores and general performance among students, and improved patient recovery times in hospitals. Exposure to daylight has also been shown to improve general health and circadian rhythm. These psychological benefits can easily justify any extra design effort or added expense related to introducing controlled daylight into a building. Education: http://www.h-m-g.com/downloads.htm http://www.lrc.rpi.edu/researchAreas/daylighting.asp Retail: http://www.newbuildings.org/downloads/FinalAttachments/A-5_Daylgt_Retail_2.3.7.pdf http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy00osti/28069.pdf Office: http://milwaukee.bizjournals.com/milwaukee/stories/1998/06/01/focus3.html?page=1 http://www.h-m-g.com/projects/daylighting/summaries%20on%20daylighting.htm Healthcare: http://txspace.tamu.edu/bitstream/handle/1969.1/4755/etd-tamu-2005C-ARCH-Choi.pdf?sequence=1 Daylighting can result in significant energy savings by reducing electric lighting loads and associated cooling loads. In addition, with proper solar control, solar gains during cooling load periods can be mitigated and solar gains during heating load periods can be utilized, reducing the energy requirements of both cooling and heating a space. What? – Daylighting Design Goals Some of the benefits provided by the introduction of daylight into a space can be negated by improper handling of the daylight being introduced. Uncomfortable glare and thermal conditions, as well as veiling reflections, are examples of unfavorable conditions that can be created by poor daylighting. Therefore, it is important to implement a thorough and efficient approach to daylighting. The recommended approach to daylighting design on a building project is to define daylighting performance goals and then develop and evaluate design alternatives that reach those goals. Presented below are general daylighting performance goals for daylit spaces which represent successful daylighting design characteristics. 1. Quantity
Provide ambient lighting requirements for the majority of the year. 2. Quality
Create uniform distribution of daylight to reduce uncomfortably high brightness ratios. Control direct sunlight when necessary and utilize beneficial passive solar strategies when appropriate. 3. Usability
Allow for user adjustment and override. Ensure adequate daylight to all occupants of the daylit space. Provide view and connection to the outdoors. 4. Building Integration
Fully integrate with the architectural expression of the building inside and out. Fully integrated with other building systems -- HVAC, Electrical, Lighting, Structural, Interiors. 5. Cost Effectiveness
Implement within overall construction budget of the project. Achieve significant energy savings by reducing lighting costs and associated cooling energy costs. When? – Daylighting Design Process Daylight designs are most effective when properly integrated into the overall architecture of a building. Daylighting and solar control strategies that are addressed as an afterthought and added to an existing building design usually have a less streamlined integration with the building design and space layout. Additionally, these types of strategies tend to be more costly to implement and more problematic in general. Therefore, it is best to address daylighting and solar control issues early in the design, when programming the various spaces. How? – Design Methods and Considerations When considering daylighting approaches early in the design process, the following issues should be considered: * Daylighting Appropriateness – For each space in a building, consider whether introducing daylight is appropriate. Spaces with very specific lighting requirements, where excessively high light levels could be problematic, should be a low daylighting priority. Spaces that are seldom used and/or used for short durations, such as storage rooms, restrooms, and copier rooms, should also be a low daylighting priority. These types of spaces would ideally be located in the core of the building where there is limited access to daylight. Spaces that are continually occupied and where daylighting would more significantly impact the occupants and the energy efficiency of the space should be a high daylighting priority. These spaces should be located towards the perimeter of a building where there is more plentiful daylight resources. * Direct Sunlight Tolerance – For each space with a high daylighting priority, consider its tolerance to direct sunlight relative to glare and solar heat gains. In more public, transitory spaces, some direct sunlight, especially during the colder winter months or colder mornings, can be very pleasant, adding sparkle and warmth to the space. These spaces are ideally located towards the south, east, and west sides of the building. To use solar gains to help heat a public space on cold mornings, orient the space to the east. Solar gain control is always important; designers must control direct sunlight penetration, shading the higher summer sun angles but allowing the lower winter sun angles to penetrate the spaces. In addition to horizontal overhangs, consider building layout and opportunities to shade these spaces from direct summer sunlight with other building elements. For example, lower floors could be recessed from upper floors resulting in greater sun shading during the summer. Stairwells or other less critical building components could be located in such a way as to shade more critical spaces from afternoon sunlight. Critical spaces could also be located to the north, where incident sunlight is minimal. Space layout is important, since the location of interior walls can help in providing adequate direct sunlight shading and dictate the cut-off angles required. It is important to consider direct sunlight control strategies early in the design process to avoid having to resort to more expensive and less streamlined solar control strategies down the road. * Views and Connection to the Outdoors – Even when the daylight resource is not adequate to provide the necessary lighting requirements, a view to the outdoors provides much of the psychological benefit of daylighting. For spaces that can be located close to a daylight resource, view lines should be considered when determining the space layout. Consider the use of transom glass and other clear glass applications to maintain views for all building occupants. * Integrated Architecture and Daylight Harvesting - When considering introducing daylight into a building, always consider synergistic strategies; ways to use other building elements (ie architectural, mechanical and structural) to serve dual functions by providing daylighting functionality as well. Solar Control In order for a daylighting design to effectively improve the energy efficiency of a building, it is critical that both the electric lighting and the solar heat gain of the daylit spaces be adequately controlled. Inadequate control can result in glare issues and a reduction in energy efficiency. Dynamic (movable) solar control is often the best choice for east and west facades or cloudier climates, where incident direct sunlight is variable and occurs less than two-thirds of the time. These strategies optimize the daylight resource both when direct sunlight is present as well as under overcast skies when the dominant daylight contribution is from a relatively glare-free sky dome. Static solar control is often the most effective strategy in sunnier climates and for southern facades (within 20o of due south) that receive a lot of incident direct sunlight. Static systems also provide reduced or eliminated maintenance efforts and costs compared to an automated or dynamic strategy. Efficient Electric Lighting Integration Along with adequate solar control, integration with the electric lighting design of a space is essential to the ability of a daylighting design to effectively provide increased energy savings for a building. The following electric lighting design strategies should be considered for non-daylit spaces as well as daylit spaces. These will help to lower the Lighting Power Densities (LPDs) of the various spaces and reduce energy use while maintaining the required light levels.
1. Task/Ambient Electric Lighting Design Approach A task/ambient electric lighting system utilizes two levels of lighting to provide the illuminance requirements of the space. One level provides enough ambient light for circulation and general tasks, and one level provides greater localized illumination suited to the specific tasks that require it. Typically, the ambient lighting is provided in a more diffuse and uniform manner. Ambient lighting is provided by indirect means whenever possible to provide a comfortable and shadow-free environment which often integrates more effectively with daylighting than direct lighting. However, high luminaire efficiencies and ceiling reflectances are important when using indirect systems as they can have reduced efficiency compared to a direct system. The task level of lighting should be provided in a more localized manner only where it is needed, i.e. the desktop, work bench, etc. Since daylighting is an effective method for providing the ambient lighting needs of a space, but is not as effective in maintaining high localized illuminance requirements, a task/ambient lighting approach can integrate effectively with daylighting. The intent is for daylighting to provide the ambient illuminance and to control the level of ambient electric lighting in response. In many cases, a daylighting strategy can be designed to provide adequate ambient illuminance whenever daylight is available, and the electric lighting can be controlled with on/off timer or photosensor-based controls. In addition to better integration with daylighting, a task/ambient system often results in lower Lighting Power Densities (LPD’s), resulting in a greater base level of energy savings, because illuminance is only provided when and where it is needed. <p/>
2. Differentiate Nighttime and Daytime Needs Humans have evolved under high daytime illuminance levels and relatively low nighttime illuminance levels. Therefore, we are psychologically accustomed to these conditions and will often feel more comfortable under lower light levels at night. In fact, recent studies show that light levels are one of the main triggers that keep our human circadian rhythms (the daily rhythms that impact numerous biological functions) in sync. Once disrupted, our out-of-sync rhythms can contribute to various maladies such as SAD (seasonal affective disorder), sleep deprivation, and general lack of energy. Electric lighting designs can take advantage of these rhythmic luminous needs, especially when daylighting is integrated into the lighting design. In spaces with adequate daylight saturation, the electric lighting can be designed to the lower nighttime requirements, since during the daytime it is truly just supplementing the more desirable daylight resource. This results in lower Lighting Power Densities as well as a better psychological rhythm to the luminous environment. 3. Electric Lighting Control Electric lighting control is essential in providing energy savings and can be addressed in several ways from a very simplistic approach to more complex photosensor control systems. In the most simplistic approach, adequate daylight saturation can allow for a general reduction in the electric lighting requirements. If daylight is present throughout the day, the electric lighting is purely supplemental and should be designed for nighttime functions, where reduced lighting levels are often adequate and even preferred. Complex control can allow for maximum energy savings and involves using photosensors, timers, or other central electronic control strategies to turn of zones of electric lighting when the daylight resource is adequate.







