sunmak
Sunmak is a term used in speculative design and energy humanities to describe a holistic approach to solar energy deployment that emphasizes distributed, modular systems integrated with the built environment. The concept envisions turning sunlight into usable electricity and daylight through a combination of building-integrated photovoltaics, daylighting strategies, and thermal capture, deployed from the scale of a single building to entire neighborhoods. Proponents argue that sunmak supports resilience and local energy autonomy by reducing dependence on centralized plants and lengthy transmission, while enabling architectural form to participate actively in energy generation.
Origins and scope: The term emerges in contemporary design discourse as a coined blend of sun and
Key components and methods: Projects described as sunmak favor distributed solar façades, roof-integrated PV and thermal
Criticism and challenges: Critics point to the complexity of coordinating many distributed devices, possible higher upfront
See also: Solar energy, Building-integrated photovoltaics, Daylighting, Passive solar design.