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Solar access

Solar access is the ability of one property to continue to receive sunlight across property lines without obstruction from another’s property (buildings, foliage or other impediment). Solar access is calculated using a sun path diagram. Sun is the source of our vision and energy. Its movements inform our perception of time and space. Access to sun is essential to energy conservation and to the quality of our lives.

Sun path polar chart; latitude based on Rotterdam

Solar access is differentiated from solar rights or solar easement, which is specifically meant for direct sunlight for solar energy systems, whereas solar access is a right to sunlight upon certain building façades regardless of the presence of active or passive solar energy systems.[1]

History

A historical example of Solar access is Ancient Lights, a doctrine based on English law that refers to a negative easement that prevents the owner or occupier of an adjoining structure from building or placing on his own land anything that has the effect of obstructing the light of the dominant tenement. In common law, a person's window on his property receiving flow of light that passed through it for so long a time as to constitute immemorial usage in law, the flow of light became an “ancient light” that the law protected from disturbance. The Prescription Act 1832 created a statutory prescription for light. It provided that:[2]

When the access and use of light to and for (any building) shall have been actually enjoyed therewith for the full period of 20 years without interruption, the right thereto shall be deemed absolute and indefeasible, any local usage or custom to the contrary notwithstanding, unless it shall appear that the same was enjoyed by some consent or agreement, expressly made or given for that purpose by deed or writing...

Solar access in urban planning

The goal of using solar access in urban planning is to create well-designed urban districts that assure exposure of buildings' elevations and public spaces to the sun during a desired period of the year. Urban areas that do not consider solar access may cause discomfort inside buildings and on the street, as well as increase energy consumption for lighting and heating, due to the lack of passive solar energy.[3] On the other hand, as a result, buildings without solar access may also have less solar heat gain and thus reduced cooling load.

Solar envelope

The solar envelope is a space-time construct. Its spatial limits are defined by the characteristics of land size, shape, orientation, topography, latitude, and its surroundings. Its time limits are defined by the hours of the day, season of the year, and the time interval.[4] In 1976, solar envelope was first proposed by Ralph L. Knowles as a zoning device.[5] It guarantees solar access to properties by regulating construction limits derived from the sun’s relative motion. Buildings within the solar envelope would not shadow adjacent properties during a predefined period of time, usually critical energy-receiving periods during the year. The solar envelope presents the maximum heights of buildings that do not violate the solar access of any existing buildings during a given period of the year. The solar envelope is a way to assure urban solar access for both energy and life quality.[4]

The concept of solar envelope was first developed in 1969. It was developed as a framework for architecture and urban design at the University of Southern California. The goal of that study was to improve the quality of the urban environment by designing buildings that pay attentions to orientations.[6] In 1976, a research was carried out by Ralph L. Knowles to further develop the concept of solar envelope as a public zoning policy. Assisted by planning department of the city of Los Angeles, the results of this research were first published in an article called Solar Energy, Building, and the Law.[5] In 1977, to test the solar envelope concept as a zoning mechanism, Richard D. Berry joined with Knowles to direct undergraduate architecture students in designing buildings within solar envelopes based on a presumption of solar zoning on real urban sites in Los Angeles.[4]

Precedents

The first implementation of the idea of solar access was in the United States around 10th century. In Acoma, 50 miles west of modern Albuquerque, New Mexico, its rows of house are stepped down to the south. Those houses were built for the high-desert climate. The low angle sun in the winter is welcomed and the high angle summer sun is not wanted. During the winter time, houses do not shadow one another. It is this critical relationship of building-height to shadow-area that gave rise to the solar-envelope concept.[6]

Legal background

The most commonly cited law outside the United States is the English Doctrine of Ancient Lights, but there were problems with its application in modern society.[7] Roughly, the doctrine states that if in 20 years no one has overshadowed your property, they cannot now do so. However, this doctrine has been repeatedly disavowed in U.S. courts.

Prior appropriation principle was used for the United States water law, which was developed during the west settlement. Similar to the Ancient Lights doctrine, prior appropriation water rights states that the first person to take water for "beneficial use," such as agricultural or household use, has the right to continue use the same amount of water for the same purpose. Simply put, “He who gets there first, gets the most”.[8]

Zoning regulations provide a foundation for regulating solar rights.[9] Since the type of construction is unlikely to change within a zoning district, local administrations do not have to deal with the complexity of different building types when assuring solar rights to each property.

Space-time construct

The solar envelope is a space-time construct. In terms of space, a solar envelope assures solar access to the surrounding properties. Solar envelope defines shadow fences that avoid unacceptable shadow beyond the property lines by limiting the size the building on-site.[10] Solar envelope also offers the greatest potential volume within time constraints, also known as cut-off times.[11] Within the time constraint, for example 9am to 5pm in the winter and 7am to 7pm in the summer, the solar envelope defines the biggest volume that a construction can have to avoid casting shadows off-site. As the periods of assured solar access increases, the solar envelope's size would decrease. During winter time, due to lower angle sun, the increase of the cut-off time has greater impact to the size of the solar envelope than in the summer time when the sun angle is high.

Solar envelope generation

A solar envelope can be generated for any land parcel during any time interval using the following methods: the heliodon (sun-simulating machine), descriptive geometry, or computers software (e.g Autodesk Revit and DIVA for Grasshopper in Rhino). Given a site, and its location and orientation, a heliodon can be used to determine the Solar azimuth angle and altitude angle for any given time. Four critical time points are typically used to determine the solar envelope: morning and afternoon cut-off time during the winter and summer solstice. If the information in regards to solar positions and site geometry are known, the solar envelope can be directly calculated using trigonometry. The current computer software can be the easiest and fastest way for calculating the solar envelope using the same principle that is being used in the heliodon method.[4]

Impact on building design

When required to design within the solar envelope, designers naturally prefer certain architectural features. Commercial buildings designed within the solar envelope tend to be short and flat than thin and tall. Terraces and courtyards are often favored to make the best use of the envelope’s volume.[4]

The practical approach to apply solar envelope to the zoning regulation was to require developers or property owners to provide the solar envelope description with the normal land survey prior to the preparation of construction drawings and the filing for building permits. Compliance would be checked by city building departments.[4]

The influence of street orientation

 
The importance of street orientation for solar access

Ildefons Cerdà's Eixample of Barcelona is credited as being a good example of an orthogonal town-plan street orientation for increased solar access. By rotating the grid to a 45 degree angle from southernly orientation, the morning and afternoon sunlight is able to penetrate into the urban fabric more than in a north-south oriented grid. The so-called "Spanish grid" was also applied in Los Angeles, though in newer parts of the city a north-south grid was used. The Spanish grid is advantageous regarding street qualities of light and heat. During the winter, every street on the Spanish grid receives direct light and heat sometime between 9AM and 3PM, the six hours of greatest insolation. It is true that at midday, all streets have shadows; but because of their diagonal orientation, more sunlight enters than if they ran due east-west. In summer, the advantage of the Spanish grid is that shadows are cast into every street all day long, creating a more comfortable environment in hot climates, with the exception of a short period during mid- morning and mid-afternoon when the sun passes quickly over first one diagonal street and then the other.

Solar access laws

The Netherlands

In the Dutch building codes, the principal façade of houses must receive 3 hours of direct sunlight between the dates of 21 March and 21 September, the vernal point and autumnal points of the equinox. when the solar elevation is about 38°. For East and West oriented houses, the solar elevation is lowered to 32°, which reflects the sun’s path across the sky.[12]

United States

Legal experts have suggested that American water law, especially the doctrine of prior appropriation, may offer a more useful precedent for sun rights.[8] They point out that both sunlight and water are used rather than captured and sold; both may be consumed, but both are renewable. In addition, there is an equivalence between upstream and downstream in water law and the geometry of solar shadowing. But, like the Doctrine of Ancient Lights, there are problems with the application of water law. At the moment, Solar access laws are usually “voluntary,” meaning that a solar owner cannot require that their neighbor agree to a solar easement.[13]

State of Massachusetts

State law provides a solar access permit, and also provides for solar access in zoning ordinances, including the regulation of planting and trimming of vegetation on public property to protect solar access.[9]

State of California

State law limits vegetation growth on neighboring properties under some circumstances.[14]

Washington, DC

Zoning regulations in Washington DC require that "Any addition, including a roof structure or penthouse, shall not significantly interfere with the operation of an existing or permitted solar energy system of at least 2kW on an adjacent property..."[15] The regulation goes on to define "significant interference" as no more than 5%, and includes the ability of neighbor/developer & solar owner to come to an agreement that allows infringement. While most solar access provisions limit vegetation growth, the DC provisions limit permitted construction of neighbors (and don't address vegetation).

City of Boulder, Colorado

Zoning regulations in the City of Boulder contain a Solar Access section..[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kettles, Colleen McCann (2008). A Comprehensive Review of Solar Access Law in the United States (Report). Solar America Board for Codes and Standards.
  2. ^ "Prescription Act 1832". Article 71.3, Directive No. 71 of 1832. Retrieved 2015-11-23.
  3. ^ Capeluto, I.G.; Shaviv, E. (2001). "On the use of 'solar volume' for determining the urban fabric". Solar Energy. 70 (3): 275. Bibcode:2001SoEn...70..275C. doi:10.1016/S0038-092X(00)00088-8.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Knowles, R.L.; Berry, R.D. (1980). "Solar envelope concepts: Moderate density building applications. Final report". doi:10.2172/6736314. OSTI 6736314. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ a b Knowles, Ralph (1977). "Solar Energy, Building and the Law". Journal of Architectural Education. 30 (3): 68–72. doi:10.1080/10464883.1977.10758114. S2CID 110209585.
  6. ^ a b Knowles, Ralph (1974). Energy and form: an ecological approach to urban growth. Cambridge, Massachusetts., United States: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-11050-4.
  7. ^ Thomas, William (1976). Access to Sunlight. Solar Radiation Considerations in Building Planning and Design: Proceedings of a Working Conference. National Academy of Science, Washington, D.C. pp. 14–18.
  8. ^ a b White, Mary (1976). "The Allocation of Sunlight: Solar Rights and the Prior Appropriation Doctrine". Colorado Law Review (47): 421–427.
  9. ^ a b Hayes, Gail (1979). Solar Access Law. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ballinger Press.
  10. ^ Kensek, Karen; Knowles, Ralph (1995). Work in Progress: Solar Zoning and Solar Envelopes. ACADIA Quarterly. Vol. 14. pp. 11–17.
  11. ^ Knowles, Ralph; Marguerite, Villecco (February 1980). "Solar Access and Urban Form". AIA Journal: 42–49 and 70.
  12. ^ MVRDV. FARMAX: Excursions on Density. 010 Publishers. Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 2006. ISBN 90-6450-587-X. page 206.
  13. ^ Kettles, Colleen McCann. A Comprehensive Review of Solar Access Law in the United States. Solar America Board for Codes and Standards. 2008.
  14. ^ "California Solar Access Rights".
  15. ^ DC Municipal Regulations DCMR 11-E 206.1 (c)
  16. ^ "City of Boulder Solar Access Regulation".

External links

  • Solar Envelope by Ralph Knowles

solar, access, ability, property, continue, receive, sunlight, across, property, lines, without, obstruction, from, another, property, buildings, foliage, other, impediment, calculated, using, path, diagram, source, vision, energy, movements, inform, perceptio. Solar access is the ability of one property to continue to receive sunlight across property lines without obstruction from another s property buildings foliage or other impediment Solar access is calculated using a sun path diagram Sun is the source of our vision and energy Its movements inform our perception of time and space Access to sun is essential to energy conservation and to the quality of our lives Sun path polar chart latitude based on Rotterdam Solar access is differentiated from solar rights or solar easement which is specifically meant for direct sunlight for solar energy systems whereas solar access is a right to sunlight upon certain building facades regardless of the presence of active or passive solar energy systems 1 Contents 1 History 2 Solar access in urban planning 2 1 Solar envelope 2 1 1 Precedents 2 1 2 Legal background 2 1 3 Space time construct 2 1 4 Solar envelope generation 2 1 5 Impact on building design 2 2 The influence of street orientation 3 Solar access laws 3 1 The Netherlands 3 2 United States 3 2 1 State of Massachusetts 3 2 2 State of California 3 2 3 Washington DC 3 2 4 City of Boulder Colorado 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditA historical example of Solar access is Ancient Lights a doctrine based on English law that refers to a negative easement that prevents the owner or occupier of an adjoining structure from building or placing on his own land anything that has the effect of obstructing the light of the dominant tenement In common law a person s window on his property receiving flow of light that passed through it for so long a time as to constitute immemorial usage in law the flow of light became an ancient light that the law protected from disturbance The Prescription Act 1832 created a statutory prescription for light It provided that 2 When the access and use of light to and for any building shall have been actually enjoyed therewith for the full period of 20 years without interruption the right thereto shall be deemed absolute and indefeasible any local usage or custom to the contrary notwithstanding unless it shall appear that the same was enjoyed by some consent or agreement expressly made or given for that purpose by deed or writing Solar access in urban planning EditThe goal of using solar access in urban planning is to create well designed urban districts that assure exposure of buildings elevations and public spaces to the sun during a desired period of the year Urban areas that do not consider solar access may cause discomfort inside buildings and on the street as well as increase energy consumption for lighting and heating due to the lack of passive solar energy 3 On the other hand as a result buildings without solar access may also have less solar heat gain and thus reduced cooling load Solar envelope Edit The solar envelope is a space time construct Its spatial limits are defined by the characteristics of land size shape orientation topography latitude and its surroundings Its time limits are defined by the hours of the day season of the year and the time interval 4 In 1976 solar envelope was first proposed by Ralph L Knowles as a zoning device 5 It guarantees solar access to properties by regulating construction limits derived from the sun s relative motion Buildings within the solar envelope would not shadow adjacent properties during a predefined period of time usually critical energy receiving periods during the year The solar envelope presents the maximum heights of buildings that do not violate the solar access of any existing buildings during a given period of the year The solar envelope is a way to assure urban solar access for both energy and life quality 4 The concept of solar envelope was first developed in 1969 It was developed as a framework for architecture and urban design at the University of Southern California The goal of that study was to improve the quality of the urban environment by designing buildings that pay attentions to orientations 6 In 1976 a research was carried out by Ralph L Knowles to further develop the concept of solar envelope as a public zoning policy Assisted by planning department of the city of Los Angeles the results of this research were first published in an article called Solar Energy Building and the Law 5 In 1977 to test the solar envelope concept as a zoning mechanism Richard D Berry joined with Knowles to direct undergraduate architecture students in designing buildings within solar envelopes based on a presumption of solar zoning on real urban sites in Los Angeles 4 Precedents Edit The first implementation of the idea of solar access was in the United States around 10th century In Acoma 50 miles west of modern Albuquerque New Mexico its rows of house are stepped down to the south Those houses were built for the high desert climate The low angle sun in the winter is welcomed and the high angle summer sun is not wanted During the winter time houses do not shadow one another It is this critical relationship of building height to shadow area that gave rise to the solar envelope concept 6 Legal background Edit The most commonly cited law outside the United States is the English Doctrine of Ancient Lights but there were problems with its application in modern society 7 Roughly the doctrine states that if in 20 years no one has overshadowed your property they cannot now do so However this doctrine has been repeatedly disavowed in U S courts Prior appropriation principle was used for the United States water law which was developed during the west settlement Similar to the Ancient Lights doctrine prior appropriation water rights states that the first person to take water for beneficial use such as agricultural or household use has the right to continue use the same amount of water for the same purpose Simply put He who gets there first gets the most 8 Zoning regulations provide a foundation for regulating solar rights 9 Since the type of construction is unlikely to change within a zoning district local administrations do not have to deal with the complexity of different building types when assuring solar rights to each property Space time construct Edit The solar envelope is a space time construct In terms of space a solar envelope assures solar access to the surrounding properties Solar envelope defines shadow fences that avoid unacceptable shadow beyond the property lines by limiting the size the building on site 10 Solar envelope also offers the greatest potential volume within time constraints also known as cut off times 11 Within the time constraint for example 9am to 5pm in the winter and 7am to 7pm in the summer the solar envelope defines the biggest volume that a construction can have to avoid casting shadows off site As the periods of assured solar access increases the solar envelope s size would decrease During winter time due to lower angle sun the increase of the cut off time has greater impact to the size of the solar envelope than in the summer time when the sun angle is high Solar envelope generation Edit A solar envelope can be generated for any land parcel during any time interval using the following methods the heliodon sun simulating machine descriptive geometry or computers software e g Autodesk Revit and DIVA for Grasshopper in Rhino Given a site and its location and orientation a heliodon can be used to determine the Solar azimuth angle and altitude angle for any given time Four critical time points are typically used to determine the solar envelope morning and afternoon cut off time during the winter and summer solstice If the information in regards to solar positions and site geometry are known the solar envelope can be directly calculated using trigonometry The current computer software can be the easiest and fastest way for calculating the solar envelope using the same principle that is being used in the heliodon method 4 Impact on building design Edit When required to design within the solar envelope designers naturally prefer certain architectural features Commercial buildings designed within the solar envelope tend to be short and flat than thin and tall Terraces and courtyards are often favored to make the best use of the envelope s volume 4 The practical approach to apply solar envelope to the zoning regulation was to require developers or property owners to provide the solar envelope description with the normal land survey prior to the preparation of construction drawings and the filing for building permits Compliance would be checked by city building departments 4 The influence of street orientation Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The importance of street orientation for solar access Ildefons Cerda s Eixample of Barcelona is credited as being a good example of an orthogonal town plan street orientation for increased solar access By rotating the grid to a 45 degree angle from southernly orientation the morning and afternoon sunlight is able to penetrate into the urban fabric more than in a north south oriented grid The so called Spanish grid was also applied in Los Angeles though in newer parts of the city a north south grid was used The Spanish grid is advantageous regarding street qualities of light and heat During the winter every street on the Spanish grid receives direct light and heat sometime between 9AM and 3PM the six hours of greatest insolation It is true that at midday all streets have shadows but because of their diagonal orientation more sunlight enters than if they ran due east west In summer the advantage of the Spanish grid is that shadows are cast into every street all day long creating a more comfortable environment in hot climates with the exception of a short period during mid morning and mid afternoon when the sun passes quickly over first one diagonal street and then the other Solar access laws EditThe Netherlands Edit In the Dutch building codes the principal facade of houses must receive 3 hours of direct sunlight between the dates of 21 March and 21 September the vernal point and autumnal points of the equinox when the solar elevation is about 38 For East and West oriented houses the solar elevation is lowered to 32 which reflects the sun s path across the sky 12 United States Edit Legal experts have suggested that American water law especially the doctrine of prior appropriation may offer a more useful precedent for sun rights 8 They point out that both sunlight and water are used rather than captured and sold both may be consumed but both are renewable In addition there is an equivalence between upstream and downstream in water law and the geometry of solar shadowing But like the Doctrine of Ancient Lights there are problems with the application of water law At the moment Solar access laws are usually voluntary meaning that a solar owner cannot require that their neighbor agree to a solar easement 13 State of Massachusetts Edit State law provides a solar access permit and also provides for solar access in zoning ordinances including the regulation of planting and trimming of vegetation on public property to protect solar access 9 State of California Edit State law limits vegetation growth on neighboring properties under some circumstances 14 Washington DC Edit Zoning regulations in Washington DC require that Any addition including a roof structure or penthouse shall not significantly interfere with the operation of an existing or permitted solar energy system of at least 2kW on an adjacent property 15 The regulation goes on to define significant interference as no more than 5 and includes the ability of neighbor developer amp solar owner to come to an agreement that allows infringement While most solar access provisions limit vegetation growth the DC provisions limit permitted construction of neighbors and don t address vegetation City of Boulder Colorado Edit Zoning regulations in the City of Boulder contain a Solar Access section 16 See also EditDaylighting Effect of sun angle on climate Theories of urban planning History of urban planning Sun path Passive solar building designReferences Edit Kettles Colleen McCann 2008 A Comprehensive Review of Solar Access Law in the United States Report Solar America Board for Codes and Standards Prescription Act 1832 Article 71 3 Directive No 71 of 1832 Retrieved 2015 11 23 Capeluto I G Shaviv E 2001 On the use of solar volume for determining the urban fabric Solar Energy 70 3 275 Bibcode 2001SoEn 70 275C doi 10 1016 S0038 092X 00 00088 8 a b c d e f Knowles R L Berry R D 1980 Solar envelope concepts Moderate density building applications Final report doi 10 2172 6736314 OSTI 6736314 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Knowles Ralph 1977 Solar Energy Building and the Law Journal of Architectural Education 30 3 68 72 doi 10 1080 10464883 1977 10758114 S2CID 110209585 a b Knowles Ralph 1974 Energy and form an ecological approach to urban growth Cambridge Massachusetts United States MIT Press ISBN 0 262 11050 4 Thomas William 1976 Access to Sunlight Solar Radiation Considerations in Building Planning and Design Proceedings of a Working Conference National Academy of Science Washington D C pp 14 18 a b White Mary 1976 The Allocation of Sunlight Solar Rights and the Prior Appropriation Doctrine Colorado Law Review 47 421 427 a b Hayes Gail 1979 Solar Access Law Cambridge Massachusetts Ballinger Press Kensek Karen Knowles Ralph 1995 Work in Progress Solar Zoning and Solar Envelopes ACADIA Quarterly Vol 14 pp 11 17 Knowles Ralph Marguerite Villecco February 1980 Solar Access and Urban Form AIA Journal 42 49 and 70 MVRDV FARMAX Excursions on Density 010 Publishers Rotterdam the Netherlands 2006 ISBN 90 6450 587 X page 206 Kettles Colleen McCann A Comprehensive Review of Solar Access Law in the United States Solar America Board for Codes and Standards 2008 California Solar Access Rights DC Municipal Regulations DCMR 11 E 206 1 c City of Boulder Solar Access Regulation External links EditSolar Envelope by Ralph Knowles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solar access amp oldid 1096169842, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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