5 Energy-Efficient and Stylish Ways to Shade Your Windows

Louvers, jalousies, frits, awnings, and exterior shutters—learn about some of the best-looking and effective ways to achieve a passive solar design in your home.

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When it comes to designing a sustainably oriented building, one of the most important aspects is using design to selectively minimize solar heat gain (i.e. heat from direct sunlight) in the summer, while maximizing sunlight and heat gain in the winter. The most effective way to balance these needs is through a careful site analysis to understand the direction of prevailing winds, the best orientation for the building (which we previously discussed), and the type and orientation of various shading devices. 

These shading devices are critical to passive solar design, but they're not always the most aesthetically appealing. However, it's possible to create a design that's both beautiful and effective. Below, we highlight five of the sleekest ways to shield windows and openings.

Living so near the water the views, especially through these louvered windows, out to Maramaratotara Bay are spectacular.

Photo by Matthew Williams

1. Horizontal Louvers and Jalousies

Horizontal louvers and jalousies are some of the most common ways to shield a building and its openings from direct sunlight. Though they were originally developed hundreds of years ago in France, horizontal louvers are still used today across the globe in regions with mild winters. In terms of shading glass, they work best on south-facing facades (in the northern hemisphere) because of the high angle of the sun. They can also be used to direct sunlight into a building by putting a reflective material on the slats. 

Stephen Yablon Architect added on a striking modern pavilion to a traditional beach house in Sullivan's Island, South Carolina. The ipe-wood louvered addition is only 15 and a half feet wide. Photo: Michael Moran.

Michael Moran

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Haven’t heard of a jalousie before? You're not alone.

Most people refer to all horizontal slats as louvers, regardless of whether they're operable or not. In fact, a jalousie specifically is a group of horizontal slats that are always parallel to each other because they're set in a frame on a track together, which allows each slat to be tilted open and shut simultaneously with a crank or other device. Louvers, on the other hand, are fixed in their position, and can’t open or close.

One of the best ways to combat the grime in between window blinds, hinges, etc. is with a sponge or cloth that has been dampened in either mild soapy water or a mixture of vinegar, water, and baking soda.

Photo by Matthew Williams

Louvers, jalousies, frits, awnings, and exterior shutters—learn about some of the best-looking and effective ways to achieve a passive solar design in your home.

Photo: Michael Kai

2. Vertical Baffles

Vertical louvers, while not as common as horizontal louvers, are another effective way to mitigate and sometimes reflect sunlight in mild to hot climates. Like horizontal louvers and jalousies, vertically oriented louvers allow air to pass through while shading and diffusing direct sunlight. They can also maintain views to the exterior. 

The master bedroom is defined on the north side by a series of indoor louvers, which allow the couple to frame and manage their views.

Photo: Ian Allen

However, because of the trajectory and angle of the sun, vertical louvers work best on east and west facades of a building. In fact, some studies have shown that vertical louvers are better for reducing sun glare than horizontal louvers—but both are known to be extremely efficient. 

Full height louvers are used throughout the house, opening the interior spaces up to the outdoors.

Photo: Justin Alexander

Made from anodized aluminum, the mechanical louvers surrounding the master bedroom provide privacy while letting in light.

Photo: Simon Devitt

3. Awnings and Brise-Soleils

Awnings are simple: usually cloth-based solutions for providing shade on a window or entire facade. Often constructed of thick canvas, vinyl, or other weather-resistant materials, awnings can vary in shape, size, and location and can also be retractable, depending on the time of day and season, to allow for sun penetration. In fact, awnings are so flexible that they can be large enough to cover entire stadiums and small enough to shield individual windows and doors.  

You'd never designed for special needs children before the Bancroft residence, how did you interpret the clients' needs?

Jack Hawkins, architect: I would like to say I did tons of research, but I didn't. I went with the parents' lead. I took most of my design cues from them. They're the immediate caregivers, they know their children and about autism. They did all the research and told me what was important.

Photo: Matthew Williams

One common type of awning is a brise soleil, which most typically takes form as a horizontal projection extending from the sunniest side of a building. Unlike many awnings, it’s usually fixed in place rather than being retractable, and often consists of louvered slats so that it can prevent the strong, high-angled summer sun from falling on a glass facade, but still let the low-angle winter sun through.

Custom cut steel awning. The awning design uses the archetypal gable shape of the house and rotates it to create the perforated pattern

Photo: Jason Roehner

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Courtesy of De Leon & Primmer Architecture Workshop

4. Fritted and Frosted Glass

Unlike louvers and awnings, frits, frosting, and other similar glazing treatments are applied directly to glass itself, rather than added to the exterior of a building. A frit—a ceramic dot or line adhered to glass usually through silk screening—is one of many ways of reducing the transparency of glass. After the frit paint is applied to the glass, it's then fired so that it's tempered (to improve the safety of the glass), and the frit is made permanent.

Finch etched and baked fritted brushtrokes into the glass walls and windows which don't obstruct the views from the interior out. By night, the building resembles, according to the artist, either a glowing lantern or a snow globe.

Photo: Paul Warchol

Like fritted patterns, frosted glass undergoes a process in which the glass itself is modified. In acid etching—the most common way of achieving solid frosted glass or patterned etching—a pitted surface is created on one side of the glass pane and thus makes the glass translucent. Although frosted glass does help diffuse light, it's generally not as effective at reducing heat gain as fritted glass, but does provide the added benefit of privacy.

New glass skin for fitness facility Wädenswil

Patrik Walde

In the master bath, the architect managed to combine privacy and a view by adding a horizontal-line pattern to the glass wall.

Photo: Paco Perez / Alluro

5. Screens and Exterior Shutters

One final way of providing shade for window openings is through exterior screens and shutters. By placing these elements on the outside of a building, they prevent light from entering the interior, as opposed to interior screens and shutters that filter and deflect light after it's already filtered inside.

Composed of 220 aluminum "light shelves," the solar reflector screen is the focal point of the front façade. The home takes advantage of its Southern exposure, using the reflector screen to funnel sunlight and warmth deep into the interior space.

Photo: Ben Rahn

Screens can be made from a range of materials, from wood slats to perforated metal, but usually need to be lightweight enough to be supported by minimal framing. Because of their fixed nature, they also need to be translucent enough to allow for views and some light penetration. Shutters can also be made from wood and metal, among other materials, and operate through a swinging, sliding, or rolling mechanism. Although exterior shutters were traditionally operated manually, today, they're often mechanically controlled. 

The petite hotel was built on the foundation of what formerly was a three-bedroom house. The striking exterior features a number of perforated panels made of glass reinforced concrete.

Jaimee Navarro

Eco-conscious and energy-efficient, the structure’s heavily insulated walls and panels help the house approach passive energy standards. Exterior sliding shutters and deep overhangs contribute environmental benefits, as does the breeze wafting off the lake.

Photo: Casey Dunn

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