Window orientation in German homes
What south, east, west and north windows actually do across a German day, and how room function can be matched to each direction.
Read articleDaylight in interiors · Germany
How window placement, room depth and reflective surfaces shape natural light in German homes — written as plain, practical notes.
What this site covers
Daylight is rarely a question of more glass. It depends on which direction a window faces, how deep the room is, and what the interior surfaces do with the light once it arrives.
Orientation
South-facing rooms receive long, direct light; north-facing rooms receive steady, cooler light. The compass direction of a window changes how a room reads through the day.
Room depth
Daylight falls off quickly past the window wall. A common planning rule of thumb relates useful daylight depth to roughly twice the window head height.
Surfaces
Pale matte walls and ceilings spread incoming light deeper into a room. Glossy surfaces redirect it as glare instead of soft fill.
Articles
What south, east, west and north windows actually do across a German day, and how room function can be matched to each direction.
Read article
How wall colour, ceiling finish, floors and mirrors push daylight further into a room without adding any new glazing.
Read article
Day length and sun angle in Germany change sharply between summer and winter. What that means for how rooms feel month to month.
Read articleA working checklist
A short list worth walking through when light feels lacking, before assuming a window needs to be enlarged.
Contact
Questions, corrections or a daylight problem in a specific room — use the form and we will read it.
Location
Berlin, Germany