1 minute read
SO-N/L-AR RADIATION
ARCH 5500 | FALL 2020
Prof Matthew Jull
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As one begins to understand these micro-environments created by elements of the built environment interacting with the natural world, clear delineations between the seen and invisible and the constant and ephemeral begin to dissolve and blur, sometimes turning our worlds upside down. Yet how does one begin to communicate and represent what we can’t directly see, hear, feel, taste and/or smell, and more importantly how it then begins to interact with what is within the human sensory range. With the use of environmental sensing apparatus and digital visualization tools, these are early attempts at understanding how the Sun’s radiation interacts with a simple structure just by the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountain.