Skylighting types include
roof windows, unit skylights, tubular daylighting devices (TDDs), sloped glazing, and custom skylights. Uses include: •
daylighting elements used to allow direct and/or indirect sunlight, via toplighting. • providing a visual connection to the outdoor environment to interior occupants. •
sustainable building—passive solar heating, and with operable units; ventilation for
passive cooling and fresh air exchange.
Types Open skylight An unglazed hole in a roof.
Fixed unit skylight File:Venting Solar Powered Glass Skylight.jpg|alt=A venting skylight powered by an onboard solar panel operated by a remote control to vent warm air from inside.|upright|Solar-powered venting skylight in Southern California File:Skylight Münster Arkaden.JPG|The skylight of
Münster's shopping mall File:Skylight w cuppola.jpg|Fixed unit skylight, roof view File:Velux GGL-7 Center-Pivot Roof Window, 1986 Model.jpg|Fixed unit skylights, interior view A fixed skylight consists of a structural perimeter frame supporting glazing infill (the light-transmitting portion, which is made primarily of glass or plastic). A fixed skylight is non-operable, meaning there is no ventilation.
Operable skylight An operable (venting) unit skylight uses a hinged sash attached to and supported by the frame. When within reach of the occupants, this type is also called a roof window.
Retractable skylight A retractable skylight rolls (on a set of tracks) off the frame, so that the interior of the facility is entirely open to the outdoors, i.e., not impeded by a hinged skylight. The terms
retractable skylight and
retractable roof are often used interchangeably, though
skylight implies a degree of transparency. Image:20-foot-by-20-foot-bi-parking retractable-skylight.jpg|A large (20' × 20') steel and glass retractable skylight, seen from the roof. Note the steel tracks that the skylight rolls on, to retract. Image:20-foot-by-20-foot-bi-parking retractable-skylight-from-interior.jpg|The same retractable skylight, seen from the interior. This is a bi-parting skylight, meaning that it parts in the middle to open. Image:Bi-parting-over-stationary-ridge-skylight.jpg|This ridge skylight wraps over the highest point of the roof the ridgeline. Image:Steel-and-glass-skylight-with-architectural-detail.jpg|This is that same skylight, from the inside. Steel allows large spans, without a grid of supporting tubes and cables.
Tubular daylight device Active daylighting uses a
tubular daylighting device (TDD). Solar tubes, sun tunnels, or tubular skylights consist of a roof-mounted fixed unit skylight element, condensing sunlight, distributed by a light conveying optic conduit to a light diffusing element. Being small in diameter, they can be used for daylighting smaller spaces such as
hallways, and bounce light in darker corners of spaces. TDDs harvest daylight through a roof-mounted dome with diameters ranging from about 10 inches for residential applications to 22 inches for commercial buildings. Made from acrylic or polycarbonate formulated to block ultraviolet rays, the dome captures and redirects light rays into an aluminum tubing system that resembles ductwork. File:750Dome.png|
Active daylighting uses a tubular daylight device (TDD) Image:Liverpool Central Library New 08.jpg|TDD skylight on the roof terrace of
Liverpool Central Library Sloped glazing Sloped glazing differs from other "skylights" in that one assembly contains multiple infill panels in a framing system, usually designed for a specific project and installed in sections on site.
Pavement lights Pavement lights are walk-on skylights. They are set into sidewalks, open areas, and well-lit interior floors as
laylights.
Prism lights Prism lights are sometimes used as skylights; they redirect the light passing through. ==Solar architecture==