A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction

A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction

1977 • 1,171 pages

Ratings13

Average rating4.7

15

This is a weird book, separated into three parts. The first is on building utopian societies, by rethinking how to thoughtfully organize our macro world into things that work for humans. This section is aspirational without much in the way of how to bring it about—it's fun to think about, but probably not very relevant unless you're directly responsible for building a city.

The second part is what makes for good neighborhoods. Things like how far away parks should be in order to actually use them, what sorts of public squares people will hang out at, and how to bring about a sense of belonging and ownership in your local environment. This stuff reads like a guide to live in the city, much like my takeaways from “The Life and Death of Great American Cities.” While it might not be directly actionable, it's helpful for naming why things do or do not work, and is probably helpful when you're in a position to choose where you want to live.

The third part is on how to put together a building for humans to live in. It discusses things like the optimal size for a patio to encourage conversation, which rooms in your house should be in the sun, intimacy gradients of the rooms in which you will host people, and just generally how to make your place feel homey. This part is extremely actionable, especially if you're currently thinking about these things as I am.

I haven't finished this book, but intend to come back to it. The first two sections, not being particularly actionable, are fine to read front-to-back, but the third is much more random access. I'll certainly pick it back up (as reference material) when I buy a house.

April 21, 2024