Metadata
Title
Light matters
Category
general
UUID
a2b6c57061564cb4905f9309749abf6d
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/daylighting/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:03:32+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Light matters

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/daylighting/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

CBDM underpins the first major change to international daylighting standards since the 1950s

According to WHO, we spend about 90% of our time indoors. Without natural light, our long-term health and well-being can be compromised, and our productivity diminished.

Our climate-based daylight modelling (CBDM) research – spanning more than 20 years – is transforming building design and influencing the settlement of Rights to Light legal cases.

Crucially, it led to the formulation of the daylight performance basis of the European CEN Standard for Daylight in Buildings (EN17037) – the first significant upgrade to daylighting standards in over half a century – influencing policy and practice worldwide.

Image courtesy of John Mardaljevic\ The New York Times Building (Architect: Renzo Piano) \ John Mardaljevic's daylighting evaluation at the design stage was the first application of CBDM on a major iconic building.

Our impact

European CEN Standard for Daylight in Buildings (EN17037)

Adopted by the International WELL Building Standard

Market transformation

Settling rights to light (RTL) disputes

Open Country – Windows (BBC Radio 4)\ Professor Mardaljevic discusses the significance of his work with Helen Mark.

Listen to the discussion

Climate based daylight modelling

Daylighting heritage spaces

The research

For 50 years, daylight provision was determined at the building design stage, using a relative measure called the daylight factor (DF). This method does not always deliver indoor spaces that are comfortable year-round.

Professor Mardaljevic first published his pioneering work on CBDM in 2000. It has subsequently transformed the way daylight in buildings is determined and has underpins fundamental changes in international daylighting standards.

Uniquely, CBDM creates annual profiles of absolute levels of indoor daylight illumination, supporting building design and internal space layout that ensures “good daylighting” throughout the year.

Now, an internationally recognised and adopted method, CBDM is a mandatory design requirement for the UK’s Priority Schools Building Programme, and has informed several major commercial building projects worldwide. It has also supported the National Trust’s work to protect and preserve historic artefacts.

Professor Mardaljevic's development of alternative methods of measuring and assessing light loss – such as CBDM – is ground breaking, and enormously important to support the establishment of an alternative to the Waldram Method.

Matthew Baker Partner – Pinsent Masons LLP

### 90% of our time is spent indoors in public and domestic settings

### EN17037 is the first major upgrade to daylight standards in >50 years

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor John Mardaljevic

Professor Emeritus of Building Daylight Modelling