AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


The Ten Suns Project

Author

Term

1. semester

Publication year

2026

Submitted on

Pages

14

Abstract

Superkilen i Nørrebro er skabt til at fejre kulturel mangfoldighed og fremme socialt liv, men vores feltarbejde peger på, at belysningen har stor betydning for stedets atmosfære, tryghed og komfort. Projektet undersøger, hvordan en lysintervention kan understøtte Superkilens multikulturelle og visuelt ekspressive identitet uden at svække stedets poetiske og symbolske karakter. Arbejdet er forankret i Buhl’s Process Model for Visual Design og en pragmatisk videnskabsteoretisk tilgang, hvor viden udvikles gennem handling og iterative tilpasninger. Metodisk kombineres gående og kropsligt situerede observationer, skitsering, fotografiske feltnoter (til at opbygge “tykke beskrivelser”) samt semistrukturerede interviews med formålsudvalgte brugere. De første besøg tydeliggjorde både styrken ved parkens design og mangler i belysningen visse steder, hvilket blev brugt til at forme og kvalificere en designidé. Designprocessen munder ud i konceptet The Ten Suns Project, der afprøves gennem en intervention og faglig sparring for at indsamle brugernes reaktioner og forfine løsningen. Specialet diskuterer styrker og begrænsninger ved det foreslåede greb og overvejer dets overførbarhed til lignende byrum. Resultater og effekter uddybes gennem refleksioner over den iterative proces, men konkrete, endelige effekter fremgår ikke af det tilgængelige udsnit.

Located in Copenhagen’s Nørrebro, Superkilen was designed to celebrate cultural diversity and foster social life, yet our fieldwork indicates that lighting significantly shapes users’ sense of atmosphere, safety, and comfort. This project examines how a targeted lighting intervention can enhance Superkilen’s multicultural and visually expressive identity while preserving its poetic and symbolic qualities. The study is guided by Buhl’s Process Model for Visual Design and a pragmatic stance, linking theory to action through iterative cycles. Methods combine embodied, site-specific exploration (including walking as method), sketching, photographic field notes to build rich descriptions, and semi-structured interviews with purposively selected users. Early visits highlighted both the strength of the park’s design and areas with limited lighting, which informed and refined the emerging concept. The process culminates in The Ten Suns Project, a lighting design proposal tested through an intervention and peer feedback to gather user responses and iterate the solution. The thesis discusses the strengths and limitations of the approach and considers its transferability to similar public spaces. Reflections on the iterative process are presented, while definitive outcome measures are not detailed in the provided portion.

[This abstract was generated with the help of AI]