lighting lab online presented by: omar yehia omar elshrief by: konstantinos papamichael web address:

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Lighting Lab Online Presented By: Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief By: Konstantinos Papamichael Web Address: http://www.architectureweek.com/2003/0129/ tools_1-1.html Topic Number : 120 : 120 Date: 29 January 2003

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Page 1: Lighting Lab Online Presented By: Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief By: Konstantinos Papamichael Web Address:

Lighting Lab Online

Presented By:Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief

By: Konstantinos Papamichael

Web Address:http://www.architectureweek.com/2003/0129/tools_1-

1.html

Topic Number : 120: 120

Date: 29 January 2003

Page 2: Lighting Lab Online Presented By: Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief By: Konstantinos Papamichael Web Address:

Lighting Lab Online -To help architects, engineers, lighting designers, and consultants meet or exceed the increasingly stringent requirements of the California building energy efficiency standard known as Title 24, Southern California Edison and other utility companies have been developing tools for the Savings by Design program. These tools aim to help building designers, owners, and managers who often lack an easy way to assess daylighting and electric lighting performance.

-Informed lighting include window size and orientation decisions take into consideration key factors that affect energy use and the quality of the luminous environment. These factors, glazing type, luminaire types and layout, and reflectance of interior surfaces, among others.

Page 3: Lighting Lab Online Presented By: Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief By: Konstantinos Papamichael Web Address:

-To consider daylighting and electric lighting performance properly, decision makers need to use lighting simulation tools, which compute work-plane illuminance and, in many cases, surface luminance values. However, such tools often have long learning curves and may be time consuming to use, which can increase design costs. -To provide an option for assessing lighting designs without running detailed simulations, we at the Building Technologies Department of the Environmental Energy Technologies Division (EETD) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) are developing a Web-based tool that allows lighting and daylighting designers to quickly and easily assess the effects of key parameters on qualitative and quantitative aspects of daylighting and lighting performance.

The Virtual Lighting Simulator displaying

differences in daylight due to two glazing

types in a small office.

A simulation of changes in electric lighting system and

wall/ceiling reflectance in two

small offices.

Page 4: Lighting Lab Online Presented By: Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief By: Konstantinos Papamichael Web Address:

Simulating Lighting ScenariosSimulating Lighting Scenarios The tool uses a large database of images and statistical data, which were generated through many parametric lighting simulations in prototypical architectural spaces. The data were generated with the Radiance lighting simulation and rendering software. The new Web-based tool, known as the "Virtual Lighting Simulator," allows users to change the values of key design and context parameters and displays the corresponding images and data for qualitative and quantitative assessment of luminous performance. The current version includes two main modules, one for assessing daylighting in a small office space and the other for electric lighting in five space types: a classroom, a small office , a large open office with partitions, a large warehouse, and a small retail store.

False-color" display of the lighting

differences between two configurations

of a classroom setting.

Display of the difference between

camera exposure (left) and human perception (right) in a warehouse

space.

Page 5: Lighting Lab Online Presented By: Omar Yehia Omar Elshrief By: Konstantinos Papamichael Web Address:

Presenting ResultsPresenting Results -The Web-based user interface allows quick and easy selection of values for the key parameters that were varied in the simulations, and the tool provides an instant response in the form of a display of previously calculated images and data.

-The user interface is designed to allow side-by-side comparisons of alternative scenarios or of the same scenario in different display modes. The four display modes are a "camera exposure" display, which is the equivalent of what a camera would produce in an average exposure mode; a "human perception" display, which adjusts the image to reflect the sensitivity and adaptation of the human eye; and "iso-contour" and "false-color" displays, for quantitative assessment.

-The output includes perspective views of the architectural spaces, showing luminance values, and plan views, showing work-plane illuminance values. Quantitative statistical information is also provided in the form of minimum, average, and maximum work-plane illuminance.