A desirable environmental quality for a reading room of a library could be to have generous, natural and diffuse light that does not produce glare. Buenos Aires has a particularly strong sun, especially during the summer, which can not only induce visual discomfort to the users, but also add excessive heat indoors and in this case, it can also rapidly deteriorate the old books. The large window facing north exposed the stored books and reading table to the direct sun for at least 8 hours a day during summer and the mid-season, which induced all the above-mentioned problems. The simple modification of the glazing properties for a frosted and less transmissive glass provided the space with diffuse light, eliminated the degradation issue and reduced the heat gained inside the room. A slight modification in window opening allowed to cross-ventilate more effectively.
Interior solar radiation
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Solar radiation adds heat to the room and light intensity, which degrades sensitive objects faster and produces glare to read.
Shading mask of the north facing window
Daylight Glare Probability before and after intervention
Lux levels
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Cumulated lux are an indication of how fast sensitive objects will degrade. The less amount of cumulated lux, the longer objects last in time.