posted on 2016-09-16, 14:53authored byNafsika Drosou, Victoria HainesVictoria Haines, John Mardaljevic, Eleonora Brembilla
Daylight is a non-depleting energy source with the potential to reduce building energy
consumption and contribute to the health and wellbeing of building occupants. The
increased reliance on daylight simulation tools, for the prediction of indoor daylighting
performance, calls for sound benchmarking based on data from actual spaces in-use.
However, due to practicalities such data are limited especially in the case of classrooms.
The mixed method study presented here took a user-centred approach to investigate the
relationship between three aspects of evidence collected from the real world: monitored
illumination data; observed user interactions with the space and its systems (visual
display technologies, electric lights, blinds); and user subjective responses. A UK
classroom was used as a case study and was monitored for three months between
September and December. High Dynamic Range (HDR) imaging was the technique used
to provide (at a 10-minute interval) physical measurements of the luminous environment
and data on the actions users took to maintain or improve visual comfort. A questionnaire
(n=117) recorded the students’ subjective responses to the luminous environment.
Findings from the combined study of these datasets lead to a deeper understanding of the
occupants’ current visual needs and their perception of daylight, which is necessary for
the development of realistic daylighting performance – and subsequently whole-building
energy predictions.
Funding
Ms. Drosou acknowledges funding support from the EPSRC LoLo Doctoral Training Centre
in Energy Demand and the involvement of the case study school; Dr Haines and Professor
Mardaljevic acknowledge the support of Loughborough University and Ms. Brembilla that of
EPSRC and industrial partner Arup (London, UK).
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Published in
BEHAVE 2016 4th European Conference on Behaviour and Energy Efficiency
Pages
1 - 12 (12)
Citation
DROSOU, N. ... et al., 2016. Let there be daylight? Assessing actual daylighting performance of a classroom in use. IN: Proceedings of BEHAVE 2016 4th European Conference on Behaviour and Energy Efficiency, University of Coimbra, Portugal, 8-9 September, 12pp.
Publisher
BEHAVE 2016
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Publisher statement
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/