Prism Glass Windows Making a Comeback 89
Steve Daley writes "Prism window glass like Luxfer was big back in the 19th century, but now it seems to be making a high-tech comeback in Japan, where several companies are commercializing similar technology that gets enough natural light into factories and offices to do away with electric lighting. It's easy on the pocket and the planet."
Neat, it is very much like... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Neat, it is very much like... (Score:5, Insightful)
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and office lighting is nearly all flourescent which is one of the more efficiant types of lighting.
so the big questions are
1: can you collect enough natural li
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Actually, I have seen studies showing that varying light levels through the day can enhance productivity. The fiber optic piped sunlight will come from controlled points in the room, so glare on monitors will be no worse than with overhead fluorescent lights.
The other questions remain to be answered. The probable answer is that it makes sense sometimes.
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The roof collectors looked like giant flowers.
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This has been around for years (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.solatube.com/ [solatube.com]
So has the prism glass.
Nothing new here, move along...
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So the headline matches the article (Score:1)
The Sun rises again.
Al Gore makes more hot air.
They might be true. They might be decent summaries of the article, but does that qualify them as "news"?
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But instead, I suggest that you tag the article "accurateheadline".
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Potions... (Score:1)
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http://www.velux.co.uk/Products/SUN+TUNNELS/Product/ [velux.co.uk]
I got two of these installed into the roof last week. I have not seen any non-uniform lighting situations with them so far. They use "privacy" glass on the room end of the tunnel to ensure that the light is diffused.
Re:Neat, it is very much like... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, it does sound like the new thing is that projector at the end of the light tube, which creates a natural window appearance on an interior wall.
Re:Neat, it is very much like... (Score:5, Informative)
It's a good idea, and a pity that it's so expensive. Hopefully the cost will come down again in time.
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The window is one that reflects 70% to the ceiling and lets 20% go straight through to the floor.
Is the point of that that it lets light into the room, unlike a window with closed blinds, but doesn't have too much light going onto the floor like an open window?
That doesn't quite seem worth $5K per window.
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It's a good idea, and a pity that it's so expensive. Hopefully the cost will come down again in time.
The article also doesn't mention whether this is the cost to install such a system during construction, or to retrofit it to an existing building. I expect that costs to pipe light into the interior of multi-story buildings will be significantly higher because of the difficulties in installing light pipes down through several floors of existing office space, while planning for such pipes in an architectural job would lower the cost.
Bonus (Score:5, Funny)
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Not a chance. (Score:4, Informative)
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Slightly better than a window, for 10x the price (Score:2)
Re:Slightly better than a window, for 10x the pric (Score:5, Interesting)
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With regular bulbs it is knd of gloomy, but if we replace just two of the lamps with daylight bulbs the office becomes a light brighter and easy on the eyes. Additional costs $1.00.
I can't stand florescent lights, but i done right with the right color mix for lamps it looks good, and takes away the headaches. Doing it right and keeping it that way though is a bit harder though.
Re:Slightly better than a window, for 10x the pric (Score:4, Informative)
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But if you had widespread adoption [...] being economical for society.
Not if that $5k per window were better spent on something else. E.g., more fuel-efficient cars.
But the $5k spent on a more fuel efficient car could be used to find a more efficient fuel, or that money could be spent to cure cancer, or or or or or or ...
The argument that $x could be spent better by applying it to y is almost always false when it comes to the environment. The fact remains, environmental / ecological change happens on a thousand different fronts. Imagine if we had the most fuel efficient cars possible (zero carbon footprint) yet our factories poured carcinogenic effluent into the at
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The argument that $x could be spent better by applying it to y is almost always false when it comes to the environment.
That generalizes nicely: "An arbitrary statement s about x and y is almost always false for arbitrary values of x and y." Or even "Most arbitrary statements are false."
It sure sounds like you're saying "we should not use logic when it comes to spending money on the envrionment."
The fact remains, environmental / ecological change happens on a thousand different fronts.
Perhaps, but that fact lends no support to your sweeping generalization.
Imagine if we had the most fuel efficient cars possible (zero carbon footprint) yet our factories poured carcinogenic effluent into the atmosphere, our houses ran as efficiently as a dead horse and leaked heat, cold, moisture, etc.
In such a situation you want to put your (finite) resources where they would provide the most benefit. In fact, the only plausible way you would get into
The dollar is weak and the quality is different. (Score:4, Insightful)
The light is way better than an el cheapo flourescent, especially if color matters to you at all. Or if spraying mercury in the room when the bulb breaks does. So plenty of people might be willing to take the penalty.
Obviously that depends somewhat on how sunny your locale is, though.
Daylight is specifically good... (Score:3, Interesting)
I would think that heating and cooling a hospital with that huge
Re:Slightly better than a window, for 10x the pric (Score:1)
- electricity during the middle of the day is at peak usage and cost
- electrical lights (even fluorescent) warm up the room, increasing climate control demands
Taking those items into account, you wind up with a good case for implementing it, not to mention the fact that big businesses love having unique things that they can brag about to customers a
Re:Slightly better than a window, for 10x the pric (Score:2)
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Re:Slightly better than a window, for 10x the pric (Score:2)
This involves very low tech... No fiber-optics, no nanoscale materials, no sun-tracking servos. Just a giant fish-eye lens on the roof, shiny tubes for light distribution, and prisms (an optional, and IMO silly, "feature" for those fixated on the "window" look - you can get good illumination a lot easier by using a ceiling-mounted diffuser box).
If not a total flop, you can expect to see clones at
Re:Slightly better than a window, for 10x the pric (Score:2)
Too expensive for home use (Score:2)
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Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you a world first! A Slashdot post that praises windows!
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nothing new to see here, move along
150 year old house (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:150 year old house (Score:5, Informative)
One of the best ways to design a house for natural lighting is to pretend that youo won't have any artificial lighting. It's a limitation that architects spend centuries finding solutions to. There are plenty of good answers out there. New technology and new materials are helping to create new answers, but it doesn't have to be anything crazy or even innovative. The same thing goes with heating/cooling strategies, there's a bazillion little design "tricks of the trade" that are incredibly straight-forward and easy. You don't need state-of-the-art materials, you don't need computer design tools, you don't need to be a highly educated architect. People were finding solutions to these problems hundreds of years ago when all they had to build out of was mud bricks.
The important part is how we can use technology to augment those techniques (things like low-e glass), or how we integrate those techniques with newer technologies (A/C, solar panels, etc.)
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Some friends had stained glass windows for their apartment staircase - large rectangular windows with the edges replaced with stained glass - red for the corners, blue for the horizontal rectangles and yellow for the vertical rectangles. I
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Replace those with modern triple-paned argon-filled windows and your heating and cooling costs will decrease still further. Your thick walls are great but those thin glass panes provide almost no thermal barrier.
Unfortunately, you probably can't put in modern glass without losing the nifty hand-carved frames. Tough choice.
I hate to be the "old news" guy, but... (Score:2)
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"Making a comeback" means it is new and exciting, a scrappy little underdog technology pioneered by forward thinking individuals. "Hasn't caught on like we want it to yet, despite our decades of
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Yeah right this will save money (Score:2)
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http://natures-lighting.com/products.php?pid=2100 [natures-lighting.com]
I imagine there's no way around the need for augmented
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But to your point - would the number of externally facing windows or the total amount of externally facing glass change significantly? I wouldn't think so.
Random thoughts (Score:2)
Irises can be installed in various places to control intensity depending on user preferences and how intense the sun is at the moment. The irises can be controlled automatically and it will still be more efficient than using electric lights.
How do you keep the concentrated beam of light from starting a fire?
Unintentional benefit... (Score:3, Funny)
Aim it at someone in Sales?
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Cool, but hardly new (Score:3, Funny)
A big deal was made of the natural lighting system at the National Gallery of Canada [gallery.ca] in Ottawa when it was built 20 years ago. There's a NY Times article [nytimes.com]:
The light tumbles in from light monitors lined with Mylar, so it reflects as it bounces down into the gallery, and it is exquisite and constantly changing.
I don't exactly spend my free time hanging out there, but if I was to choose a gallery to hang out in, this would be it.
Very Similar to Sun Tunnels.. (Score:3, Informative)
Sun tunnels [wisementrading.com] pipe light in from the roof of a house to the interior ceiling.
They've been around for years, and look more practical than these things. At $229 for a 14" tunnel, and $329 for a 22" tunnel, they look a lot cheaper. There are many manufacturers [ecotun.com], as well.
The hell with the Windows... (Score:3, Funny)
Eastern seaboard power-outage (Score:2)
Otherwise, I have a few prisms I bought for $5. I won't mind if after crazy-
I want a screen filter like that (Score:3, Funny)