LUCE 328 | Page 31

But if we referred to the indications of the CEI (Italian Episcopal Committee) for the lighting of worship places, we could see that the recommended illuminance values were between 50 and 150 lux for the general lighting, and between 150 and 300 lux for the altar area, so the measured values were always respecting them. The result of the processing of the measured data relating to three significant hours of use of the environment is reported, by way of example, in Table 1. In particular, it was noted that on the worktops the illuminance values were particularly low and always much lower than 300 lx, therefore below the limits suggested by the current standards; the standard prescriptions concerning the bottom area, to which an average illuminance value not exceeding 100 lx was required, was at least partially verified, or rather it was in the presence of natural and artificial light. A solid three-dimensional architectural model of the environment was built, characterizing all the materials, surfaces, and objects with the measured and/or calculated thermo-physical, optical, photometric, and colorimetric aspects. Then, a lighting simulation model was defined, using experimental data both of the internal luminous climate, specifically the measured illuminance and luminance values, and of the external climate, or the sky and sun conditions, the intensity of direct and diffused solar radiation, and the index of sunshine. The informational analysis of the simulation results (on the information content of the light signals) highlighted the distinct separation, in terms of treatment and design of light, between natural light and artificial lighting: a differential demarcation that is present in the very history of the lighting of this space, between the former use a church and as the nowadays use as a library. The lack of integration and optimal combination between the natural and artificial lighting sources can also be seen from the renderings of the distribution and uniformity of illuminance and of the luminance, in the entire environment (Figure 7) and in each zone (Figures 8-9). The lack of balance and homogeneity in the distribution and uniformity of the light is evident. The existing luminous climate also produces a significant energy cost: to be able to see and see well always have energy implications. From the calculation of annual energy consumption and costs, we can deduce: a LENI value of 22-33 kW/m2 per year 9 , with a consequent annual maintenance costs of 3,093 – 4,528 Euros and, therefore, a consumption of 10,300 – 15,100 kWh/year. When the light amount appropriate for a correct vision is lacking, even in conditions of simultaneous presence of natural and artificial lighting, we can no more than note the same 1 SO 16331-1. 2012. Optics and optical instruments -- Laboratory procedures for testing surveying and construction instruments -- Part 1: Performance of handheld laser distance meters. 2 UNI EN 12464-1:2011 Illuminazione dei posti di lavoro. Parte 1. 3 UNI 11630:2016. Luce e illuminazione - Criteri per la stesura del progetto illuminotecnico 4 CIE S023/E:2013 Characterization of the 10.00 am Reading room 2.00 pm Apse Reading room 6.00 pm Apse Reading room Apse Emin 6.43 1.41 6.59 1.4 6.05 1.38 Emax 245 138 248 141 245 127 141 79.2 143 80.8 135 72.1 Emin/Emedium Emedium 0.046 0.018 0.046 0.017 0.045 0.019 Emin/Emax 0.026 0.01 0.027 0.01 0.025 0.011 Tab. 1 Illuminance values (lx) and correspondent ratios, measured in the different areas qualitative use of light, or for a new design approach that leads to shift our attention focusing on quality, starting from the evaluation of a correct quantity (of light, vision, and perception), on the use value rather than on the exchange one, thus operationally introducing the second law of thermodynamics as read by means of neg-entropy, or the informative content of the light signals. This has led us to develop an environmental experimentation and monitoring method in constant reference to the information content that light can deliver (communicate). The analysis of the measured experimental data was carried out considering not only the compliance with the limit values (the amount of light) suggested by the current standards, also regarding the protection and preventive conservation, but also the respect to the finiteness of the usable negentropy flow (the quality of light), coming from the Sun and the Sky and from other sources of artificial light, both necessary for the philological reconstruction and the architectural reconfiguration of the internal space of a church, which is today a university library. The study of the present state of the natural light and of the lighting was extensive, demanding and complex, but it allowed us to identify the information contents, or the signals, and the critical points, as well as the historical and philological characters and elements. Designing light, and with light, means transmitting information, communicating, enhancing, making the space usable, recovering the historical memory, re-reading, re-interpreting, re-configuring and re-transmitting this same space with the “Eyes” of the knowledge and scientific thought that we can afford today. condition about the quality of light and therefore a completely missing quality of vision and perception. Natural light actually carries information and has a high negentropy content (informational and relational, 8 ): it communicates the unmistakable presence of a historical, liturgical, and ecclesiastical function, as the semiosis of signs, ritual, liturgical and philological symbols, which translate into spaces made of light and shadows that are typical of the architecture of the ecclesia and the seminario. Conclusions With this research we propose a methodological approach that allows us to trace the fundamental bases for a lighting design project that is energy-sustainable, but above all of quality, in terms of content (information) and communication. Negentropy is information; it is the set of signals with transmitted information content of which light constitutes the transmission channel. Through the method we propose, light and lighting are used, interpreted, and read to process the information signal (set of messages). In order to reach with his lighting design project the quality and informative communication of the “common sense” – or what is perceived, experienced, and felt by everyone and that everybody likes –, it is sufficient for the lighting designer to share the same code (transmission of information), adding to the relational communication a philological and content-rich hermeneutic intervention, that is interpretative, to give and rediscover the physical, cultural, historical, and social sense, as well as in the code (the transmission of information by light) as in the contextual and extra-contextual network. Therefore, the methodological approach we propose allows us to obtain alighting project that is “informational”, by possessing quality in quantity, and also “relational”, being it characterized by communication, or the intersubjective transmission of information (neg-entropy) that constitutes the “common sense”. The proposed method can be a useful support for a lighting design project based on the Performance of Illuminance Meters and Luminance Meters 5 UNI/CEN TS 16163:2014. Conservazione dei beni culturali - Linee guida e procedure per scegliere l’illuminazione adatta a esposizioni in ambienti interni 6 Corvi A., Frosali G., Paris E., Pelosi G., Viviani A.. Ingegneri & Ingegneria a Firenze. A quarant’anni dall’istituzione della Facoltà di Ingegneria. Firenze Acknowledgments The authors thank Dr. Simonetta Pagnini, Director of the Santa Marta Library, Dr. Paolo Baldi, and all their staff for collaboration and availability; Dr. Luca Fibbi of the LAMMA CNR IBIMET Centre in Florence for having provided all the climatic data necessary for this study; Eng. Massimo D’Alessandro of Elettrotecnica Nocentini srl for providing technical information on the existing lighting fixtures. University Press 2013. Sura Al-Maiya, Hisham Elkadi. 2007. The role of daylight in preserving identities in heritage context. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 11, pp.1544–1557. 8 Brillouin L. Science and Information Theory. Second Edition. Dover Books on Physics 2013. 9 UNI EN 15193-1:2017. Prestazione energetica degli edifici - Requisiti energetici per illuminazione. 7 RESEARCH AND INNOVATION / LUCE 328 29