Overview Process
The section “Using this Book” and the first ten chapters of the section “Towns” (pages 16–103 of the book in PDF, 12,4 MB)
First published in 1977, the book presents a radically new approach to architecture and construction. At the core is the idea that people should design for themselves their own houses, streets and communities. This idea comes simply from the observation that most of the wonderful places of the world were not made by architects but by the people. The book in dust jacket
The book describes a new language for environmental design whose entities called patterns provide answers to architectural questions: how tall should the windows be, how many floors should a building have, what area should trees and lawns take up in a neighborhood, etc. The edition contains more than 250 patterns, each including a description of the issue, its discussion supported by an illustration, and a solution. Using the book, one can design their own house, develop a design of an office, a workshop or a public building, together with their neighbors improve their community or even the whole city. A Pattern Language is one of the most influential books of the 20th century which has never before been published in Russian despite its strong influence on the development of design, engineering, architecture and computer science, including object-oriented programming.
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Release date: September 02 2014 Cast: translator
art director
chief typesetter
typesetter
illustrators
chief editor
editor
proofreader
production manager
authors
with the participation of
Christopher Alexander is a practicing architect and constructor, the first recipient of the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architecture, professor of architecture at the University of California at Berkeley and director of the Center for Environmental Structure.
1096 pages |
“Decor” and the conception of “interior design” have spread so widely, that very often people forget their instinct for the things they really want to keep around them.
There are two ways of looking at this simple fact. We may look at it from the point of view of the person who owns the space, and form the point of view of the people who come to it.
From the owner’s point of view, it is obvious that the things around you should the things which mean most to you, which have the power to play a part in the continuous process of self-transformation, which is your life. That much is clear.
But this function has been eroded, gradually, in modern times because peple have begun to look outward, to others, and over their shoulders, at the people who are coming to visit them, and have replaced their natural instinctive decorations with the things which they believe will please and impress their visitors. This is the motive behind all the interior design and decor in the women’s magazines. And designers play on these anxieties by making total designs, telling people they have no right to move anything, paint the walls, or add a plant, because they are not party to the mysteries of Good Design.
But the irony is, that the visitors who come into a room don’t want this nonsense any more than the people who live there. It is far more fascinating to come into a room which is the living expression of a person, or a group of people, so that you can see their lives, their histories, their inclinations, displayed in manifest form around the walls, in the furniture, on the shelves. Beside such experience—and it is as ordinary as the grass—the artificial scene-making of “modern decor” is totally bankrupt.
From the pattern “Things From Your Life”