šŖ Spaces Designed for Anti-Socialites, Lamborghini Homes, & Treasure Rooms
Mind your step as you enter the worlds of candy stores, branded homes, and anti-social architecture.
Welcome back fellow space travellers! Mind Your Step as you enter the Solar System of Issue 12!
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Ā Enter the World of Anti-Social Architecture
How environment design can pull people apart
You walk into a bus. Thereās just one person sitting in a double seater.
Where would you sit?
You walk into a public washroom. Thereās a dude using the urinal at the far end.
Where would you go?
You walk into an elevator. Thereās one other person in there and they shift to the far corner to give you space to enter.
Where do you stand?
Some spaces have a seemingly scripted ability to pull us apart. And the way we think about personal space seems to depend a lot on the environment weāre in. More specifically, it seems to be dependent on:
The size of the environment. The smaller the space, the less personal space we need. The larger the space, the more personal space we need
Where people are in the environment. If we walk into a lecture hall and there are 10 students in the first 3 rows, weād probably be more likely to gravitate to the front of the class. Our desire for personal space seems to want to imitate how other people are using their personal space.
Third things in the environment. Our need for personal space can be diminished if thereās something in the environment that pulls our attention toward it. Things like art, seating, light, food, drinks, entertainment, windows, and media displays make it easier to reduce the amount of personal space people feel they need.
It seems to me that:
the bigger the space,
the blander the space,
and the more space around the people already within a space,
all increase the amount of personal space we desire.
How environment design can pull people together
Social architecture is the intentional design of a space to encourage any range of social behaviours. It focuses on the connection between people, activity, and place and it forces us to question how we can design inclusive spaces that make people feel comfortable and motivated to interact with each other.
If I was going to design a space for an event where I wanted people to socialize, Iād look to the study of social architecture for inspiration and here are some questions Iād think about:
What are the most magnetic third things? Iād be really interested to see a study that compared the magnetism of different objects. Like, in an analysis of 10 completely different rooms and 10 different social events in each room, where do people tend to gravitate? Potentially more interestingly, where do the first arrivals tend to gravitate? I believe those magnets are the keys to pulling people together.
How do maximalist vs minimalist environments foster conversation? If I had to guess, Iād imagine that maximalist spaces are more likely to facilitate conversation. The easiest conversation starter is often commentary about the environment. The weather tends to be a fan favourite. So, I wonder if the presence of weird objects and eclectic designs give people an easy topic to spark conversation.
Where do different personalities naturally gravitate to in a room? Some of us feel safer on the sidelines. Our level of comfort can be easily deduced by how far into the room we get. Putting magnetic elements along the edges of a room could keep the sidelines interesting for people who donāt tend to gravitate to the centre floor.
š Enter the World of Branded Homes
The Productized Home
You can name the brand behind most of the consumer products you own, like your sneakers, wrist watch, or smartphone. But what about your house? Could there be benefits to conceptualizing your home as a product, similar to how you view your smartphone?
Veev thinks so. The California-based building technology company believes that traditional construction methods leave little room for the innovation weāve come to expect from other consumer products. Thatās why they build all the components for their homes off-site.
This allows Veev to efficiently integrate modern technology into those components, including in-wall touch panels, custom lighting and blinds systems, and walls that come with electricity, plumbing, and sensors pre-installed.
Veev is neither the first, nor the only company attempting to productize pre-fabricated homes. And the concept has a lot of practical benefits like:
manufacturing in a controlled environment,
optimized material and labor costs,
decreased construction time,
and significant less wastage.
However, there are some thought-provoking concerns that have been raised, like:
āMy concern with treating homes as a product is that with the positives of product design there come negatives. Planned obsolescence, restricting maintenance to only Veev approved people, having to buy only Veev approved materials. I don't want to have to call Veev to replace a lightbulb or fix my furnace. Gives them way too much power.ā
āRetrofitting homes with better tech is important too. Eg; Electric heating, better insulation, better windows, electric boiler, electric oven/stove.ā
When I think of āhome brandsā, I think about the names of architects, designers, decorators, embedded technologies, and property management companies. Iām sure most of them would think about their work as being a part of their brand too. But Iām actually pretty surprised that we donāt already have major home brands, like we have major car brands, for example.
When it comes to brands taking over markets, I think about how so many phones, and cars, and buildings, and homes look nearly identical. So, I wonder if the rise of the āhome brandā will lead to an even more obvious decline in bespoke novelty in home design.
It looks like some companies are addressing that exact concern by standardizing housing building blocks while leaving enough opportunity for aesthetic customization.
š¤ Enter the World of AI Architecture
AI Architecture ā¢ šĀ / Dezeen / How AI software will change architecture and design /
What does the future of architectural photography look like in a world with AI?
I've been thinking that I might enjoy playing with architectural photography (AP). My plan for this weekend was to deep dive into every YouTube video on the topic. I wanted answers to questions like:
What makes AP good vs bad?
What styles do I gravitate toward?
How can good AP compensate for a lacklustre environment?
Who are respected photographers in this domain and what makes their work so special?
How has AP evolved through history?
What will the future of AP look like?
Once I hit that last question my mind felt a jolt.
What will the future of photography look like in general? Should I bother studying this if it's potentially destined to be an antiquated skill in the near future?
I wonder if this is what it feels like to be a high school student nowadays?
I remember the stress I felt in those days trying to plan out my future. Heck, I'm still experiencing that pressure. Iām constantly wondering if I'm cursed with an inability to cope with ambiguity. And my inner dialogue usually sounds something like:
How do other people live in the now?
Isnāt stressing about our future a universal consequence of having ambition and dreams?
Hmm I donāt know, maybe more adaptive people than you have adopted some sort of helpful mindset, like:
No path you choose is irreversible. The first step is to take a first step.
No matter what, I'll always be able to adapt and change course if I need to.
As long as I'm staying consistent and each little step is going to move me forward.
Even if I'm not stepping in the right direction, there's no experience I can't gain or learn from.
I'm confident it's all going to work out in the end, as long as I focus on x, y, & z.
I often find myself coming back to these mindsets, but the little ambiguity-averse voice inside my head seems to be a long-term companion.
Perhaps AI will take over AP. But at the same time, perhaps the only way to fully take advantage of AI as a tool is to understand the basics. Iāve been looking into AI tools for visuals and it seems that the people who get the best results are the ones who are able to prompt the AI with specific styles or artists to reference as inspiration. In other words, all the power seems to be in the quality of the prompt and the more basics we know, the more specific we can be in our request.
When it comes to learning a new skill thatās likely to be impacted by AI, maybe a good first question to ask nowadays is how exactly an understanding of the basics is going to help us use Al as a tool more effectively.
šŖ Enter the World of Liz Ogbu
Why I'm an architect that designs for social impact, not buildings | Liz Ogbu
One of my main goals in writing this newsletter is to better understand what it is about environment design that attracts my interest so strongly and to hopefully figure out a way to channel that interest into a productive and rewarding career for myself.
I love when people use their skills and expertise in non-traditional and unexpected ways. So I was quickly drawn into this Ted talk when Liz proclaimed:
āI'm an architect that doesn't design buildings.ā ā¦ āThe things that I design, the things that I build are actually opportunities for impact.ā
š¬ Enter the World of Kids in Candy Stores
Giddy Abundance
Where would you go to get that ākid in the candy storeā feeling?
Touted as one of our main aesthetics of joy by Ingrid Fetell Lee, the person who wrote the book on joy, she describes the abundance aesthetic as the joy we find in quantity and variety of sensory stimulation.
If you were to open the door to a room full of treasures designed just for you, whatās one thing youād want that room to be filled with?
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Great issue Lamar! And as soon as I read the title, I immediately thought: "aawww, he was surely inspired by me, as he was writing this issue that coincidentally came out on Mother's Day" šš