PDF kostenlos , by Christopher Alexander Sara Ishikawa
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, by Christopher Alexander Sara Ishikawa

PDF kostenlos , by Christopher Alexander Sara Ishikawa
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Produktinformation
Format: Kindle Ausgabe
Dateigröße: 47379 KB
Seitenzahl der Print-Ausgabe: 1171 Seiten
Verlag: Oxford University Press; Auflage: 1 (20. September 2018)
Verkauf durch: Amazon Media EU S.Ã r.l.
Sprache: Englisch
ASIN: B07J1T8P1W
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Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:
3.9 von 5 Sternen
18 Kundenrezensionen
Amazon Bestseller-Rang:
#275.854 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop (Siehe Top 100 Bezahlt in Kindle-Shop)
All patterns in the book are based on a very intuitive human approach to building. Reading the book I somehow had the feeling that I had known the principle behind them all along, but hadn't been able to put them in words. The concept behind the book is far from any designing principles which mainly seek to fulfil an abstract art concept. By using them the architect, builder or home owner will have a great practical guide to make a place wanted to be lived in.The pattern language is intuitive but clear, simple and yet poetic.A must buy!
Very good and deep investigations and empirical facts explained and shown in a holarchic way.
Get the paper copy. The Kindle is clearly a product of automatic text recognition, which has never been proofread by a human and is absolutely chock-full of ridiculous mistakes! For instance, "parts" regularly becomes "farts." I was able to return it, luckily.
Do take the time to peruse all reader reviews. This is a valuable book.It is a bit enormous, though, and there is no index. This means that if the reader has to hunt for some little reference or fact, he or she is in for a long trek through these pages. Although it is designed with many short chapters, each devoted to a design element, the sheer amount of data is somewhat daunting. Alexander does write clearly, and in an informal, second or first-person manner. But there is little summarizing. Probably an excellent book to read cover-to-cover as part of a large study project. So read this book and know it well BEFORE you talk to your architect, contractor, designer... don't do as I did and start speed reading it when the architect hands over the blue prints.Note: Whereas feng shui is a little more mystical, Alexander's suggested design tactics make practical sense. (I gently encourage any reader trying to choose between feng shui and this book to go with the latter). Very useful concepts for anyone who wants to make the most of their living space.
Nominally about architecture and urban planning, this book has more wisdom about psychology, anthropology, and sociology than any other that I've read. Nearly every one of this volume's 1170 pages will make you question an assumption that you probably didn't realize you were making. In a section entitled "Four-Story Limit", Alexander notes that "there is abundant evidence to show that high buildings make people crazy." Underneath is a photo of San Franisco's Transamerica tower, captioned with a quote from Orwell's 1984: "The Ministry of Truth--Minitrue, in Newspeak--was startlingly different from any other object in sight. It was an enormous pyramidal structure of glittering white concrete, soaring up terrace after terrace 300 metres in the air." Alexander backs up this polemic with convincing arguments that high-rise living removes people too far from the casual society of the street, from children playing in the yard, and that apartment-dwellers therefore become isolated. Alexander spends a lot of time in this book trying to figure out how to restore the damage to our communities that have been done by automobiles. He argues for better public spaces and for more integration of children, old people, and workers. He argues for more access to water by more people. Many of Alexander's arguments are against the scale of modern systems. Public schools spend a fortune on building and administration precisely because they are so physically large [I've seen statistics showing that our cities spend only about one-third of their budgets on classrooms and teachers]. If we had shopfront schools and fired all the school system personnel who don't teach, we might be able to get student-teacher ratios down to 8 or 10:1 without an increase in cost. Similarly, Alexander argues for smaller retail shops, smaller factories (or at least identifiable small workgroups within factories rather than hundreds of faceless cogs) and more master/apprentice instruction. What if you like the depredations of modernity and aren't interested in a utopian world where basic human needs are met? Can you learn anything about architecture from this guy? Absolutely. You'll learn that light is everything. Your bedroom has to have eastern light so that the sun wakes you up. Your best living quarters should have southern light. All the rooms should have light from at least two sides, otherwise there will be too much contrast and you'll just have to draw the shades. If you've got kids, make them sleep and play in their own wing of the house. Build a realm for yourself and your wife on a different floor. Meet the kids in the kitchen. To avoid cluttering my apartment, I give away virtually all the books that I buy these days. I'm keeping this one and plan to re-read it every year.
There are certain design principles that are self-evident truths, commonsense but uncommonly applied to modern towns and buildings, painfully evident in characterless and cheerless houses. Most of us have these evolved truths deep within us but we rarely think of them. Given here are 253 patterns, each consisting of a design challenge, discussion, illustration, and solution. Your knowledge of these patterns can help you to create a home that is a pleasure to live in, one that is imaginative, inspiring, healthful, and psychologically satisfying as well as fully functional. I cannot imagine designing any building without refreshing my memory of these wonderful patterns. First published in 1977, this book has already attained the status of classic.
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