If you were around in the 1990s, the chances are you’ll remember Baz Luhrmann’s long running hit titled Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen). The song split audiences: there were those who loved its pop philosophical bent and positivity, while others hated its patronisingly didactic nature. But whatever our criticism of this song, rarely did we think, well, it’s one thing for us humans to wear sunscreen but what about the buildings we all work in? The fact is that buildings need sun protection too if their employees are to stay comfortable. External louvres for buildings are a totally different kettle of fish. Commonly known in varieties such as brise soleil and glass louvres, they protect buildings’ external shells as well as the things and people inside them.
Brise soleil perform their function by shading the external façade of a building in a stylish and streamlined fashion in keeping with the rest of the existing building. Often modern in their design, they are brilliantly well-suited to public art galleries outdoors. In fact, the Yorkshire Sculpture Park gallery is one example of a building that uses a brise soleil to excellent effect. The shade is designed and positioned in a way that it works with the changing light and temperature according to the season. In summer, much of the large exterior window of the gallery will be kept in shade at noon. In winter, on the other hand, when the light is weaker and the temperature colder, only the top section of this window will be cast in darkness. A possible added feature (not so desirable in an art gallery but rather more so in a corporate space such as a lobby or reception room) with a brise soleil consists of a special design feature that allows patterned light into the room. If you’re the manager of a building that’s been specially built for a particular company, you might consider trying to tailor the pattern of light to the company’s needs: why not reproduce the corporate logo or make a new design suggestive of their brand values?
Glass louvres and external louvres are a little different from brise soleil, meanwhile. Glass louvres can in fact function as independent edifices; think of the famous glass pyramid in the courtyard of the Paris gallery known as the Louvre. One difference is that in Paris, the pyramid actually connects to the central part of the building and is visible when you look upwards from a position underground.
Please visit http://www.maplesunscreening.co.uk/ for further information about this topic.
http://www.maplesunscreening.co.uk/
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