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Sensing the Luminous Night: Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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Sensing the Luminous Night: Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites. / Griffiths, Rupert.
Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment: Select Proceeding of Architecture Across Boundaries 2024. Singapore: Springer Nature, 2024.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Griffiths, R 2024, Sensing the Luminous Night: Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites. in Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment: Select Proceeding of Architecture Across Boundaries 2024. Springer Nature, Singapore.

APA

Griffiths, R. (2024). Sensing the Luminous Night: Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites. In Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment: Select Proceeding of Architecture Across Boundaries 2024 Springer Nature. Advance online publication.

Vancouver

Griffiths R. Sensing the Luminous Night: Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites. In Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment: Select Proceeding of Architecture Across Boundaries 2024. Singapore: Springer Nature. 2024 Epub 2024 Aug 30.

Author

Griffiths, Rupert. / Sensing the Luminous Night : Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites. Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment: Select Proceeding of Architecture Across Boundaries 2024. Singapore : Springer Nature, 2024.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{9a1ffdb1332c4a0bb38b5a19b9dcce26,
title = "Sensing the Luminous Night: Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites",
abstract = "This paper attends to the boundary between the human and the non-human in urban space. It considers the role that light plays in choreographing human and non-human behaviours and how this can be used to situate individuals in spatio-temporal imaginaries that extend from the local to the planetary. The research designed and installed environmental light sensors and Internet of Things infrastructure in two sites—one rural and one urban—to capture the temporal patterns of natural and artificial light. The observations collected were used to create timepieces that reflect diurnal, circalunar, and seasonal cycles. This hybrid approach to timekeeping harmonizes human time standards with ecological and planetary rhythms and promotes an awareness of the environmental impact of artificial light at night and a broader environmental consciousness. Interdisciplinary methods were used, drawing from the geohumanities, time studies, night studies, design, electronic engineering, and creative practices to foster a connection between people and their surroundings and encourage stewardship toward urban and natural environments. Participatory workshops demonstrated how localized, sensor-driven art installations can influence public perceptions and behaviours regarding artificial light and its ecological consequences.Keywords: Urban nature, time studies, artificial light at night.",
author = "Rupert Griffiths",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "30",
language = "English",
booktitle = "Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment",
publisher = "Springer Nature",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Sensing the Luminous Night

T2 - Capturing and communicating time-based observations of environmental light across urban and rural sites

AU - Griffiths, Rupert

PY - 2024/8/30

Y1 - 2024/8/30

N2 - This paper attends to the boundary between the human and the non-human in urban space. It considers the role that light plays in choreographing human and non-human behaviours and how this can be used to situate individuals in spatio-temporal imaginaries that extend from the local to the planetary. The research designed and installed environmental light sensors and Internet of Things infrastructure in two sites—one rural and one urban—to capture the temporal patterns of natural and artificial light. The observations collected were used to create timepieces that reflect diurnal, circalunar, and seasonal cycles. This hybrid approach to timekeeping harmonizes human time standards with ecological and planetary rhythms and promotes an awareness of the environmental impact of artificial light at night and a broader environmental consciousness. Interdisciplinary methods were used, drawing from the geohumanities, time studies, night studies, design, electronic engineering, and creative practices to foster a connection between people and their surroundings and encourage stewardship toward urban and natural environments. Participatory workshops demonstrated how localized, sensor-driven art installations can influence public perceptions and behaviours regarding artificial light and its ecological consequences.Keywords: Urban nature, time studies, artificial light at night.

AB - This paper attends to the boundary between the human and the non-human in urban space. It considers the role that light plays in choreographing human and non-human behaviours and how this can be used to situate individuals in spatio-temporal imaginaries that extend from the local to the planetary. The research designed and installed environmental light sensors and Internet of Things infrastructure in two sites—one rural and one urban—to capture the temporal patterns of natural and artificial light. The observations collected were used to create timepieces that reflect diurnal, circalunar, and seasonal cycles. This hybrid approach to timekeeping harmonizes human time standards with ecological and planetary rhythms and promotes an awareness of the environmental impact of artificial light at night and a broader environmental consciousness. Interdisciplinary methods were used, drawing from the geohumanities, time studies, night studies, design, electronic engineering, and creative practices to foster a connection between people and their surroundings and encourage stewardship toward urban and natural environments. Participatory workshops demonstrated how localized, sensor-driven art installations can influence public perceptions and behaviours regarding artificial light and its ecological consequences.Keywords: Urban nature, time studies, artificial light at night.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - Advances in the Integration of Technology and the Built Environment

PB - Springer Nature

CY - Singapore

ER -