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brise-soleil
[ breez-soh-ley ]
noun
- a screen, usually louvered, placed on the outside of a building to shield the windows from direct sunlight.
brise-soleil
/ ˌbriːzsəʊˈleɪ /
noun
- a structure used in hot climates to protect a window from the sun, usually consisting of horizontal or vertical strips of wood, concrete, etc
Word History and Origins
Origin of brise-soleil1
Word History and Origins
Origin of brise-soleil1
Example Sentences
It was built during a period when patterned sunscreens had risen in popularity, drawing inspiration from Franco-Swiss architect Le Corbusier's use of "brise-soleil" - an architectural feature of a building that reduces heat within a building by deflecting sunlight.
At Galerie Quynh, which opened in 2003, I gushed over one of Trong’s works, a laser-cut facsimile of a brise-soleil, the sun-shielding patterned screens that you see everywhere in Vietnam, cut to the size of a window or an entire building’s facade.
Horizontal ledges of concrete known as brise-soleil wrap around the Copan’s front face and keep apartments shaded despite floor-to-ceiling windows, and also give the huge building a graceful look.
Horizontal ledges of concrete known as brise-soleil wrap around the Copan’s front face and keep apartments shaded despite floor-to-ceiling windows, and also give the huge building a graceful look.
A second photographer, the South African Alexia Webster, shot buildings in Ghana, like two university dormitories in Kumasi designed by the Ghanaian architect John Owusu Addo, their walkways shaded by geometric brise-soleil.
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