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Architectural Lighting Systems: Distributed Visualization Daniel C. Glaser Interdisciplinary Doctoral Candidate U.C. Berkeley dcg@cs.berkeley.edu Dissertation Committee John Canny, Ellen Do, Rogers Hall, Susan Ubbelohde BID Retreat: June 17 th 2002
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O. Feng Various people and potential applications Focus is on daylight integration by the lighting designer* Motivation: improved visual environments energy Visualizing Architectural Lighting
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architects/architectural students (direct beam, only) daylight consultant (referencing sky databases) Professionals have Different Skills/Training K. Carrier Y. Yong
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Distributed Visualization Individuals are influenced by organizations, policy, training, design tools, etc. Visualization systems need to reconcile these “external” factors Engineering templates (1950)California Title-24 (2000) A. Iles
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Pilot Study ~20s standard practice ~15s justification for not using daylight ~10s learning ~20s redesign (part 1) 65s Practicing lighting designer (X yrs) Reviewing a simplified visualization plot Office design context (Movie unlinked for privacy)
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BEFORE Single lighting system (3 wall sconces) Balance light with room geometry Static visual field Three lighting systems (daylight + 2 electric) Electric light placement corresponds to daylight Occupant as part of solution AFTER Results
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But who/when/how/why? year selector, K. Carrier SAMSON Data (30x as precise) New techniques will happen Innovation, Part II
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Acknowledgements IESNA Golden Gate Chapter NOAA U.C. Energy Institute Lighting distributions, idealized and measured skies R. Warfield
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