DocumentCode :
1001673
Title :
Building design: impact on the lighting control system for a daylighting strategy
Author :
Verderber, Rudolph R. ; Morse, Oliver C. ; Jewell, James E.
Author_Institution :
Lawrence Berkeley Lab., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
Volume :
25
Issue :
2
fYear :
1989
Firstpage :
198
Lastpage :
202
Abstract :
The unique features of a multistory office building that successfully permit most of the space to be daylighted and the electric lights to be dimmed by a cost-effective centralized system are discussed. This system includes the use of light shelves, sloped ceilings, and proper building orientation and symmetry, and supplies only the ambient illumination. Measurements of the daylight illumination levels and the performance of the lighting control system indicate that daylighting can provide over 70% of the required ambient illumination through the year. Based on the installed cost of the lighting control system, its payback is 2.2 years
Keywords :
lighting control; ambient illumination; building design; cost-effective centralized system; daylighting strategy; electric light dimming; lighting control system; multistory office building; Buildings; Centralized control; Control systems; Costs; Daylighting; Floors; Helium; Industry Applications Society; Job shop scheduling; Lighting control;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0093-9994
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/28.25531
Filename :
25531
Link To Document :
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