Derek--On Tuesday, July 13, 2010 2:35 AM +0200 Pablo Segundo Garcia <pablo2garcia@gmail...> wrote:
Also, if you want to shade the window a lot but want natural light inside the rooms and not only near the window, some people use white areas or reflective materials to channel the light horizontally or upwards. Those lighting devices can be at the bottom of the window, and then you can shade with a classic roller shutter; or I have seen horizontal "window hoverhangs" that were not above the window, but at its highest third, and shaded elevated summer light (for south faces), and reflected some light to the insight aiming at the ceiling.On Tue, Jul 13, 2010 at 12:28 AM, Dave Howorth <dave@howorth....uk> wrote:
On Mon, 2010-07-12 at 23:10 +0000, Neale Brickwood wrote:HI I guess the only solutions would be a roof overhang or veranda or maybe film on the windowsThere are a few other possible techniques as well: - add a brise soleil - grow deciduous plants such as vines to shade the windows - add traditional shutters or roller shutters to the windows Cheers, DaveOn 12 Jul 2010, at 19:39, SWallat wrote: > Hello, > > our "passive solar" (proper location of the windows in outer walls) > during autumn/spring time works fine to support heating the house > during > the cooler seasons. > During summer we get heat through the windows inside. Any > ideas/recommendations what could be installed to the windows of the> outer walls to protect from "sunray heating"? We have strawbale
infill
> walls with wooden panel/cover to protect clay from rain as outer > walls.____________________________________________________ European strawbale building discussion list Send all messages to: Strawbale@amper....muni.cz Archives, subscription options, etc: http://amper.ped.muni.cz/mailman/listinfo/strawbale ____________________________________________________
-- Pablo