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Skylight Information 1 - What to Know Before Buying and Installing

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Skylight Information 1 - What to Know Before Buying and Installing
Skylight Information - Selection - Shapes - Operation - Installation

Skylights

A skylight can provide your home with daylighting and warmth. When properly selected and installed, an energy-efficient skylight can help minimize your heating, cooling, and lighting costs.

Maximizing a skylight's performance in your home involves three steps:

Design: Consider your home's design and climate in relation to the energy performance of a skylight.

Selection: Find a skylight that meets your energy performance requirements.

Installation: Ensure proper installation of skylights to maximize their energy efficiency.

Skylight Design Considerations

Before selecting a skylight for your home, you need to determine what type of skylight will work best and where to improve your home's energy efficiency.

Energy Performance
First, it's a good idea to understand the energy performance ratings of skylights if you don't already. You can then determine what energy performance ratings you need for your skylight based on your climate and home's design.

For labeling energy-efficient skylights, ENERGY STAR has established minimum energy performance rating criteria by climate. However, this criteria doesn't account for a home's design. Therefore, if you're constructing a new home or doing some major remodeling, you should also take advantage of the opportunity to incorporate your skylight design and selection as an integral part of your whole-house design an approach for building an energy-efficient home.

Size and Position
The physical size of the skylight greatly affects the illumination level and temperature of the space below. As a rule of thumb, the skylight size should never be more than 5percent of the floor area in rooms with many windows and no more than 15 percent of the room's total floor area for spaces with few windows.

You should also consider a skylight's position if you want to maximize daylighting and/or passive solar heating potential. Skylights on roofs that face north provide fairly constant but cool illumination. Those on east-facing roofs provide maximum light and solar heat gain in the morning. West-facing skylights provide afternoon sunlight and heat gain. South-facing skylights provide the greatest potential for desirable winter passive solar heat gain than any other location, but often allow unwanted heat gain in the summer. You can prevent unwanted solar heat gain by installing the skylight in the shade of deciduous (leaf-shedding) trees or adding a movable window covering on the inside or outside of the skylight. Some units have special glazing that can help control solar heat gain.

Skylight Information - Selection - Shapes - Operation - Installation
Courtesy of the U.S. Department of Energy

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