Reducing Light Pollution – Toward Green and Sustainable Urban Spaces

12:00 | 08/12/2025

The rapid development of glass-clad buildings has brought a modern appearance to urban areas, but it has also led to glare phenomena, affecting vision and the city’s aesthetics. The application of advanced materials such as anti-reflective glass combined with energy-saving glass is opening up new approaches for more sustainable and friendly urban spaces.

The issue of glare in today’s high-rise buildings

The number and quality of urban areas in Vietnam are increasing rapidly. In 1990, the country had around 500 urban areas, with an urbanization rate of 18%. By 2022, this number had risen to 888 urban areas, with an urbanization rate of 42%. Along with this, the trend of “living at height” is not only popular in Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City but has also spread to localities with strong economic development.

Many buildings use mirrored glass to reduce heat gain, but during periods of intense sunlight, these surfaces act like “giant mirrors,” reflecting light directly onto the streets. The intensity of reflection can reach thousands of lux, enough to cause glare, visual fatigue, and even affect public health.

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Light reflection from glass surfaces of high-rise buildings causes glare and dizziness for road users (Photo source: Dan Viet)

Not only uncomfortable, this phenomenon also poses potential traffic safety risks, as drivers may be dazzled and lose visibility. In central areas such as Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City, the sight of pedestrians shielding their eyes while crossing streets lined with glass buildings reflecting harsh sunlight is no longer unfamiliar.

According to Dr. Architect Dao Ngoc Nghiem – former Director of the Hanoi Department of Planning and Architecture, Vice Chairman of the Vietnam Urban Planning and Development Association, as shared in Kinh te Moi truong newspaper – most high-rise buildings today use anti-reflective glass coatings to reduce about 15% of heat absorption. However, on very sunny days, this can inadvertently increase light reflection levels – a secondary impact that needs to be seriously considered in the context of sustainable urban development.

Solutions to reduce glare, balancing aesthetics and urban vision

The challenge for architects and real estate developers is not only how to make buildings beautiful and modern, but also how to make them friendly to community vision and suitable for climatic conditions. Globally, the use of anti-reflective glass has become a common trend in modern buildings.

The Quadrangle (Dallas, Texas) – a 12-story office building, part of a mixed-use complex covering 663,000 square meters. This building was designed to optimize views and energy performance.

The Quadrangle building uses an advanced anti-reflective glass. This combination delivers superior solar energy control while ensuring high visible light transmission and low exterior reflectance. This helps the building façade appear transparent, modern, and harmonious with the urban landscape, while meeting stringent energy performance requirements.

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The Quadrangle building in Dallas, Texas (USA) uses anti-reflective glass (Photo source: D Magazine)

Milliken Nature Center (Mackinac Island, Michigan): This is a 2,000-square-meter nature center designed to blend into the surrounding natural environment, offering visitors a close-to-nature experience.

This building uses an anti-reflective glass. This type of glass not only provides exceptional clarity and transparency but also effectively controls solar energy. High visible light transmission and minimal exterior reflectance help create a bright space.

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Milliken Nature Center (Photo source: Mackinac Island)
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The Louvre Museum in Paris (France) also uses anti-reflective glass to enhance visitors’ visual experience (Photo source: Tripadvisor)

These examples show that the use of advanced glass materials not only serves aesthetic purposes but also plays an important role in regulating light, saving energy, and enhancing the human visual experience.

In Vietnam, Viglacera is one of the pioneering units in researching and producing anti-reflective glass that meets EN 1096 (European) standards.

This type of glass is ideally manufactured on an ultra-clear glass substrate. Although anti-reflective coatings can be applied to ordinary glass substrates, to achieve optimal clarity and light transmission, this glass is usually produced on an ultra-clear glass base.

Thanks to ultra-thin multi-layer metal oxide coating technology, anti-reflective glass can increase light transmission up to 98%, helping to minimize light reflection. This allows modern buildings to still achieve aesthetic effectiveness – gentle, subtle reflectivity – without causing glare for road users, while ensuring a harmonious visual environment for urban areas.

This is a particularly useful solution for tropical climates, where strong light intensity places great pressure on both buildings and surrounding spaces.

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The difference between ordinary glass and anti-reflective glass. Photo: Viglacera

When combined with laminated glass or energy-saving glass, anti-reflective glass does not create shadows like other types and also delivers significant value:

  • On façades, the anti-reflective layer helps glass surfaces avoid shadowing, reduces mirror-like effects, and enhances overall aesthetics.

  • When combined with energy-saving glass, buildings achieve both energy efficiency and effective light control, reducing urban light pollution – an issue increasingly emphasized in sustainable design.

  • Long-term project value increases thanks to reduced operating costs, improved visual experience, and enhanced façade quality.

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Anti-reflective glass on building façades prevents light reflection into the surrounding environment. No shadowing when combined with energy-saving glass helps increase aesthetics and investment value for the project. Photo: Viglacera

At the same time, this type of glass is widely applied in high-end architecture. Some typical applications include:

  • Façades of high-rise buildings and green buildings, used in combination with energy-saving glass.

  • Areas requiring clear visibility such as airport control towers…

  • Façades of high-end showrooms: automobiles, fashion, jewelry…

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Glass used for showroom façades during the daytime delivers a modern look, reduces indoor temperature, and creates a comfortable space. Photo: Viglacera
  • - Interior applications: product display cabinets, museum showcases, partitions…
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Anti-reflective glass is commonly used in museums to limit glare and provide the best experience for visitors. Photo: Viglacera
  • Greenhouses in areas with limited natural light…

The commercialization of this product not only demonstrates domestic technological capability but also opens opportunities for local architects to access advanced materials directly in the Vietnamese market. This helps reduce costs, shorten timelines, and ensure green building standards.

Design experience: Reducing glare is not only about materials

However, to achieve comprehensive effectiveness, the selection of glass materials is only part of the overall solution. Architects can combine multiple parallel solutions such as:

  • Material solutions: Prioritize low-reflectance glass, neutral colors, combined with bricks, wood, and matte-painted metals to balance light.

  • Architectural solutions: Design façades with overhangs, green trellises, sun-shading devices, or appropriate setbacks to regulate sunlight direction and reduce reflection.

  • Urban solutions: Select coordinated material systems and unify aesthetic language among buildings within the same area to ensure overall landscape harmony.

  • These factors not only help reduce glare but also create a friendly, humane architectural language, moving toward a more “comfortable” urban environment for users and observers.

Reducing glare is not merely a technical issue of materials but a design philosophy that puts people at the center – where light is controlled to serve comfort, safety, and aesthetic emotion. With the advent of anti-reflective glass, especially when combined with energy-saving glass, architects will have more material options suitable for tropical climates, contributing to the creation of modern, sustainable, and more friendly urban spaces.

According to Kien Viet

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