Evenly Lit, Not Overlit: Rethinking Brightness in Subtropical Cities

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In South China, there is occasionally an urban myth—especially across Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou—about choosing a home that avoids western light. Over decades, the west-facing sun has proven to be a particularly difficult condition to live with: its low angle in the afternoon, its aggressive heat gain (especially in summer), and the way it penetrates deep into interiors. With global warming and longer, hotter seasons, that much-romanticized "afternoon glow" is increasingly experienced less as romance and more as glare, heat, and fatigue. Although this wisdom circulates as a community-driven rule of thumb, it carries an undeniable architectural clarity about building orientations: avoiding western light is not only about thermal comfort, but also about avoiding the sharpest, most intrusive form of direct illumination—light that strikes at the most unforgiving angle, washing surfaces, flattening depth, and turning rooms into high-contrast fields of discomfort.

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Cite: Jonathan Yeung. "Evenly Lit, Not Overlit: Rethinking Brightness in Subtropical Cities" 20 Mar 2026. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1039778/evenly-lit-not-overlit-rethinking-brightness-in-subtropical-cities> ISSN 0719-8884
Younch Hotel / MUDA-Architects. Image © HereSpace

均匀光照,而非过度照明:重新审视亚热带城市的亮度

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