VELUX award 2022 crowns the projects with the most creative use of daylight
VELUX award 2022 announces the winners
In early December, the global winners of the International VELUX Award 2022 were announced, a competition for architecture students that celebrates the innovative and creative use of daylight in a broad range of different projects.

(above) students of the University of Art in Tehran, Sajjad Navidi, Mahya Mousavi Sadr, Elham Bahadori were behind Flight, the winning entry in the Daylight Investigations category. Photo: ITCHY
all images courtesy of VELUX
It’s not something many of us spend much time contemplating, but ask an architect for an appraisal of daylight, and you start to realize just what a phenomenal resource it is. Not only an inexhaustible source of energy that feeds us light, it also props up our health and wellbeing, and plays an invaluable role culturally – in art and architecture. What’s more, it’s free.
Daylight as a source of problem-solving innovation
Why do I mention it? Well, there are a few students of architecture globally who have been thinking very deeply about daylight lately, investigating what it can give us, how it might evolve, and what role it can play in our future world. These are the entrants into VELUX’s biennial competition – The International VELUX Award – bearing the theme ‘Light of Tomorrow’ and they number over 500 in total. In July this year, a preeminent jury of architects, comprising John Ronan (US), Anupama Kundoo (India), Rainer Hofmann (Germany), Lotte Kragelund (Denmark) and Fuensanta Nieto (Spain), whittled out ten regional winners from eight different countries and on the 2 December, during the biannual World Architecture Festival, this time hosted in Lisbon, they heard their presentations and chose two overall winners.

Zuzanna Sazonow and Aleksandra Pytka, students at the Politechnika Poznańska, Poland, won the award in the Daylight in Buildings category, for their project TIP: Time Indicate Protection. Photo: ITCHY
velux Encourages original, future-proofing design solutions
VELUX, of course, is famously a purveyor of windows – typically the type that introduce light into reclaimed roof spaces, or structures that can only be lit from above. The resource in question is clearly essential to the brand’s existence, but few, if any, parameters are put on the ways in which daylight is explored and celebrated for the award. This is a truly unfettered academic exploration of a resource, with thought-provoking and varied results.
Not only an inexhaustible source of energy, light also props up our health and wellbeing. What’s more, it’s free
There are two categories: Daylight in Buildings and Daylight Investigations. Entries to the former category included an exploration by students from Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing, into the role of daylight in security and crime prevention in the growing number of urban villages in China. In South Africa, Elmarie van Staden of Greenside Design Center, College of Design, Johannesburg, developed Aqua Mart, a place where rest can be sought while water is purified: daylight is managed to provide sterilization, shade from searing heat and create relaxing patterns.

close-up of the Poznan students’ project – the modular shading system that addresses the growing issue of buildings over-heating in summer
In the Daylight Investigations category, one intriguing proposal from a group of students from Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, involved the creation of a festival to reconnect communities to the land they formerly inhabited – before the flooding of three gorges displaced them. For its duration, environmentally-friendly river lanterns are launched to light up the submerged world of buildings and monuments, and allow a dream-like reconnection to land which 1.2 million migrants are said to have lost.


