Skip to main content
Article

ENHANCING MUSEUM ACCESSIBILITY: LIGHTING STRATEGIES

Nevine Rafa KusumaDepartment of Architecture, Faculty of Built Environment, UNIVERSITI MALAYA, KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIAMastura AdamDepartment of Architecture, Faculty of Built Environment, UNIVERSITI MALAYA, KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIAZiad BaydounDepartment of Architecture, Faculty of Built Environment, UNIVERSITI MALAYA, KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIADalhar SusantoDepartment of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, UNIVERSITAS INDONESIAAzamat KhasanovFaculty of Architecture, UNIVERSITY OF ARCHITECTURE AND CIVIL ENGINEERING, TASHKENT, UZBEKISTAN
PLANNING MALAYSIAjournal2025
ABI

Abstract

Museums must balance preservation with accessibility, yet lighting strategies for low-vision visitors in Indonesia remain underexplored. This study investigates the Jakarta History Museum through literature review, observational analysis, and calibrated lux meter measurements. Findings reveal that suboptimal illuminance and glare hinder accessibility, underscoring the need for layered lighting approaches integrating ambient, task, and accent illumination. These strategies enhance legibility, spatial perception, and visitor inclusivity while safeguarding artefacts. The study contributes to inclusive design discourse in Southeast Asia and calls for future research on adaptive technologies to optimise perceptual experiences under varying lighting conditions.

Topics

Identifiers

Citations and references

Cited by 019 references
Metrics — AkademScholar · Coming soon