Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore

This paper presents a field study that explores lighting qualities within higher educational classrooms in Singapore. Eight classrooms of three types—computer labs, collaborative learning spaces and lecture halls—are studied. Lighting simulation models are calibrated and validated by measurements ta...

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Main Authors: Zhe Kong, J.Alstan Jakubiec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2021-12-01
Series:Frontiers of Architectural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095263521000376
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spelling doaj-6d6d40d9608b43228666622f81dbad4a2021-10-01T04:57:07ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Frontiers of Architectural Research2095-26352021-12-01104787802Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in SingaporeZhe Kong0J.Alstan Jakubiec1School of Architecture, Southeast University, Nanjing 210096, China; Corresponding author.The Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design, University of Toronto, Toronto, CanadaThis paper presents a field study that explores lighting qualities within higher educational classrooms in Singapore. Eight classrooms of three types—computer labs, collaborative learning spaces and lecture halls—are studied. Lighting simulation models are calibrated and validated by measurements taken onsite and utilized to generate both instantaneous and annual physical lighting data. A questionnaire survey is distributed to 333 participants to gather subjective responses to current lighting perception. The results show that electrically lit lecture halls present more uniform distributions of lighting environments, while daylit computer labs and daylit collaborative learning spaces present relatively lower daylighting conditions. For daylit computer labs, horizontal illuminance is an effective predictor in terms of controlling lighting levels; For electrically lit lecture halls, the mean luminance of the horizontal 40° band is an effective predictor in terms of subjective lighting comfort.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095263521000376Lighting qualityHigher educational classroomsLighting simulationsTropical skies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhe Kong
J.Alstan Jakubiec
spellingShingle Zhe Kong
J.Alstan Jakubiec
Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore
Frontiers of Architectural Research
Lighting quality
Higher educational classrooms
Lighting simulations
Tropical skies
author_facet Zhe Kong
J.Alstan Jakubiec
author_sort Zhe Kong
title Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore
title_short Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore
title_full Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore
title_fullStr Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in Singapore
title_sort instantaneous lighting quality within higher educational classrooms in singapore
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Frontiers of Architectural Research
issn 2095-2635
publishDate 2021-12-01
description This paper presents a field study that explores lighting qualities within higher educational classrooms in Singapore. Eight classrooms of three types—computer labs, collaborative learning spaces and lecture halls—are studied. Lighting simulation models are calibrated and validated by measurements taken onsite and utilized to generate both instantaneous and annual physical lighting data. A questionnaire survey is distributed to 333 participants to gather subjective responses to current lighting perception. The results show that electrically lit lecture halls present more uniform distributions of lighting environments, while daylit computer labs and daylit collaborative learning spaces present relatively lower daylighting conditions. For daylit computer labs, horizontal illuminance is an effective predictor in terms of controlling lighting levels; For electrically lit lecture halls, the mean luminance of the horizontal 40° band is an effective predictor in terms of subjective lighting comfort.
topic Lighting quality
Higher educational classrooms
Lighting simulations
Tropical skies
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095263521000376
work_keys_str_mv AT zhekong instantaneouslightingqualitywithinhighereducationalclassroomsinsingapore
AT jalstanjakubiec instantaneouslightingqualitywithinhighereducationalclassroomsinsingapore
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