🥐 ➡️ ⛩ From street cafes to sacred sites: using A Pattern Language via New_Public [Shared]

More than likely, I discovered A Pattern Language during my time at Walt Disney Imagineering. I can’t really say for sure, but I do have my own copy, and while I am not an architect I often use it for generating ideas about any project I might be a part of. The patterns in the book can be used as a jumping-off point for just about any idea. – Douglas

🥐 ➡️ ⛩ From street cafes to sacred sites: using A Pattern Language

🥐 ➡️ ⛩ From street cafes to sacred sites: using A Pattern Language via New_Public [Shared]

🥐 ➡️ ⛩ From street cafes to sacred sites: using A Pattern Language via New_Public [Shared]

For architects, designers, and in recent decades, coders and digital entrepreneurs, there is one reference book that is invoked probably more than any other: A Pattern Language. This 45-years-old encyclopedic tome is comprised of 253 “patterns,” each of which examines a specific dynamic between people and the environments where they work, play and live. Some patterns, as you’ll see below, are as simple as the classic “street cafe,” and others require a bit more unpacking.

Read 🥐 ➡️ ⛩ From street cafes to sacred sites: using A Pattern Language

Back to Top