And, as a thought for good reasons to place a switch in remote residential locations, relative to the controlled lighting outlet, consider:
Duplexes, triplexes and 4 plexes built in the first 40 years of the 1900s (in my area) that had a single laundry area and separate storage areas in a common basement would be wired so a single pole switch, somewhere in each unit, would permit the unit's occupants to turn off all their basement lighting and laundry outlet.
Years back, I wired a luminaire intended to light the inside of a decorative cupola on top of a detached Victorian carriage house. The cupola was originally a means of ventilation, but now had frosted glass windows. The illumination was intended only to be seen by people looking at the outside of the carriage house. The light switch, a dimmer, was mounted inside the dwelling kitchen . . . another building entirely.
IMO, once the NEC language starts trying to ensure locations for switches, solutions such as I mention above may be in jeopardy.