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Massive PDF of A Pattern Language: https://arl.human.cornell.edu/linked%20docs/Alexander_A_Patt...

But I recommend owning and reading it in print. Great book to dip in and out of at whim.




I don't remember which volume it was from, but doing any general maintenance I always remember this suggestion of his:

Work on the most neglected area first -- e.g., work on the most neglected outdoor area of a property first.

I don't recall his specific reasoning, but in my mind the essence was: Otherwise you will be acting on displacement anxiety and When an eyesore is taken care of first, your perspective on potential other improvements will change.

RIP


Maybe pattern 104, "site repair"?

> If we always build on that part of the land which is most healthy, we can be virtually certain that a great deal of the land will always be less than healthy. If we want the land to be healthy all over - all of it - then we must do the opposite. We must treat every new act of building as an opportunity to mend some rent in the existing cloth; each act of building gives us the chance to make one of the ugliest and least healthy parts of the environment more healthy - as for those parts which are already healthy and beautiful - they of course need no attention. And in fact, we must discipline ourselves most strictly to leave them alone,so that our energy actually goes to the places which need it. This is the principle of site repair.


Yes, that is almost certainly the origin and what I was thinking of -- a site and land context originally.

As a heuristic (extending possibly to so-called technical debt?) I believe it generalizes.

I am lately learning the delight of another pattern: Outdoor Workshop.


This is the most efficient way (IMHO) to raise the average quality of an installation / system, not to strive for a 1% improvement in the top end (while expending 10x the effort in doing so for said 1%, rather than the inverse).

This is one of those rare delights; an approach which is as powerful as it is simple.


I treasure my copies of all of Alexander's books, but most especially A Pattern Language. It's beautifully printed and bound and it's a joy to come back to again and again. I'm not an architect or urban planner; it's just that the ideas are so compelling and beautiful.


Fascinating book, full of interesting ideas. I bought my copy in the 1980's. I had a roommate then who I reconnected with lately. He remembered the book and asked about it. I dropped in on him a couple weeks ago and left my copy on loan so he could spend some time with it.


Agreed - it is a great bathroom or subway book, because you can pop into it randomly for 4 minutes and read a section, and then go on with your day.


Thankfully, this PDF is nowhere near complete. Check it out from your local library.



Why thankfully? What if you cannot access your local library for a myriad of reasons?


Why a myriad of reasons? What if you can't access your library for one reason?


Then you still wouldn't be able to make it to your library.


He's dead. There's no longer justification for "thankfully."




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