%0 Journal Article %T Climate Based Faade Design for Business Buildings with Examples from Central London %A John Napier %J Buildings %P 16-38 %D 2015 %I MDPI AG %R 10.3390/buildings5010016 %X There is a disconnection between commercial architecture and environmental thinking, where green features can be included as part of a strategy for gaining approvals and marketing projects, but those features are not reviewed after completion and occupation of the building and knowledge is not shared. High levels of air conditioning are still considered unavoidable. Elaborate double skin fa£żades and complex motorized shading systems are adopted; often masking an underlying lack of basic environmental thinking. This article returns (in principle) to the physics of comfort in buildings and the passive strategies which can help achieve this with a low energy and carbon footprint. Passive and active fa£żade design strategies are outlined as the basis of a critical tool and a design methodology for new projects. A new architectural sensibility can arise based on modeling the inputs of sunlight, daylight and air temperature in time and space at the early stages of design. Early but sound strategies can be tested and refined using advanced environmental modeling techniques. Architecture and environmental thinking can proceed hand in hand through the design process. %K climatic design %K day-lighting %K faade design %K shading %K solar heat gain %K cross disciplinary %K design workflow %K nearly zero carbon %K business buildings %U http://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/5/1/16