There’s No Good Architecture Without Daylight: How to Promote Designs Molded and Nurtured by Light


NOKKEN Kindergarten / Christensen & Co Architects. Image © Christensen & Co Architects

NOKKEN Kindergarten / Christensen & Co Architects. Image © Christensen & Co Architects

Humans spend almost 90% of the time indoors; that’s approximately 20 hours a day in closed rooms and 9 hours a day in our own bedrooms. The architectural configurations of these spaces are not random – that is, they have been designed or thought of by someone, and are at least slightly “guided” by the conditions of their inhabitants and their surroundings. Some people inhabit spaces specially catered to their needs and tastes, while others adapt and appropriate designs made for someone else, perhaps developed decades before they were born. In either case, their quality of life may be better or worse depending on the decisions that are made. 

Understanding the importance of carefully designing our interiors, particularly through the lens of access and enjoyment of natural light, was the purpose of the 8th VELUX Daylight Symposium, held on October 9 and 10 of 2019 in Paris. This year, more than 600 researchers and professionals attended and reaffirmed the importance of natural light, presenting a series of concrete tools that could help quantify and qualify light by designing its entry, management, and control with greater depth and responsibility.

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