PublishedOro Editions, July 2019 |
ISBN9781943532209 |
FormatHardcover, 424 pages |
Dimensions27.9cm × 21.6cm |
This book examines how the context of the project provides a causative force for an appropriate architectural lighting design solutions. Why should the lighting world be flat, and at the cost of the amazing variety of local nuances that can be incorporated into the architectural design process and solutions?
Why are we looking to build an illuminated world at night that looks similar wherever you go? When did darkness become a bad thing? Should the dialog not be about embracing the differences in culture, design approach, and other conditions that each region of the world provides, while embracing light as a universal medium. These ideas and concepts are illustrated through real applications on projects completed in 23 countries over the past 16 years. Through this treatise, the author also shares ground-breaking research on a holistic approach for using light to create spaces for wellness and health, and explores relevance of several new lighting technologies on our evolving zeitgeist. AUTHOR: Abhay founded AWA Lighting Designers in 2002. Abhay has been intently and quietly focused on questioning the lighting zeitgeist since. Based in Brooklyn NY, he works extensively with the world's leading architecture and design firms in the fields of commercial and mixed-use developments, urban planning, transportation, infrastructure, hospitality, and healthcare. He is an internationally acclaimed keynote speaker, educator and author of numerous advanced light engineering and cultural lighting articles, and has worked with the United Nations Foundation on projects that address issues that marginalise many of the world's population. Most recently, he was asked to work with the Rural Haiti Project and Ethiopia's Mary Joy Aid Through Development to improve the infrastructure, and in turn the lives of its residents. He has also been referred as the "Poet of Light" by a Canadian journalist, and in lighter moments, he takes this title very seriously.