A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction

Towns, Buildings, Construction Center for Environment Structure

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A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction (english language, Oxford University Press)

1171 pages

english language

Published by Oxford University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-19-501919-3
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4 stars (3 reviews)

You can use this book to design a house for yourself with your family; you can use it to work with your neighbors to improve your town and neighborhood; you can use it to design an office, or a workshop, or a public building. And you can use it to guide you in the actual process of construction.

After a ten-year silence, Christopher Alexander and his colleagues at the Center for Environmental Structure are now publishing a major statement in the form of three books which will, in their words, "lay the basis for an entirely new approach to architecture, building and planning, which will we hope replace existing ideas and practices entirely." The three books are The Timeless Way of Building, The Oregon Experiment, and this book, A Pattern Language.

At the core of these books is the idea that people should design for themselves their own houses, streets, …

3 editions

reviewed A pattern language by Christopher Alexander (Center for Environmental Structure)

Review

4 stars

This is a wonderful book to stimulate thinking. I don’t think it makes for good front-to-back reading material, but the pattern-based style works great for flipping through, and every once in a while I struck on one that immediately made sense to me and appealed. Some of the patterns feel dated (I really hope we will not need so many patterns around how to defend ourselves against cars in thirty years!), but more interesting were those bits were things felt missing – there’s no pattern for a community house except for large families, nothing to think about more temporary living situations, and no help in how to set up a space for a party. But the way of describing a pattern is so straightforward that each lacuna made me want to design my own, and even if the book had only produced that feeling, it would have been enough.

The …

reviewed A pattern language by Christopher Alexander (Center for Environmental Structure)

Review of 'A pattern language' on 'Storygraph'

3 stars

It’s really interesting, but you get the sense that some of California’s economic quandaries around housing comes from too strong an influence of this kind of theorizing. There’s much that just feels correct, which is where the NIMBY and the YIMBLY fly in different directions like an Aristophanean tangent