A New Pattern Language for Growing Regions: Places, Networks, Processes

Cover
Sustasis Foundation, 2020 - 362 Seiten
0 Rezensionen
Rezensionen werden nicht überprüft, Google sucht jedoch gezielt nach gefälschten Inhalten und entfernt diese
The 1977 book "A Pattern Language" was a landmark in the design world, introducing a methodology that has since become remarkably widespread and effective across many fields. Among them is software, where "design patterns" have since become an industry standard. Important spinoffs include peer-to-peer collaboration technologies like wiki - the basis of Wikipedia and related innovations - as well as Agile Methodology. Yet curiously, the one field where pattern methodology has lagged most conspicuously is the one where it began, the built environment. In part, the popular appeal of the 1977 book served to "freeze" the initial set of patterns, greatly slowing further peer-to-peer development in environmental design - contrary to the original authors' stated aims. As one remedy, we present here - in one of many more hoped-for future companion volumes to the original classic book - a new collection of 80 patterns for a new era of urban challenges, including rapid urbanization, slum upgrading, sustainable urbanism, [CUT: "new"] urban technologies, and new tools and strategies to meet these and other challenges. This new collection comes as a contribution to a five-year collaboration with UN-Habitat on implementation of the "New Urban Agenda," a framework document adopted by consensus by all 193 countries of the United Nations. However, there remains an urgent need to implement its humane aspirations, using tools and strategies grounded in research evidence, but also subject to revision, addition and refinement with new findings from new collaborators. This volume aims to meet that need - together with the launch of an online companion pattern "repository", available at npl.wiki. Both initiatives were developed in collaboration with Ward Cunningham, wiki inventor, and pioneer of pattern languages of programming as well as Agile Methodology. Both are meant to expand the capacity of pattern languages in support of a hopeful new era of open-source, human-centered, life-enriching technology.

Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben

Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.

Autoren-Profil (2020)

Michael W. Mehaffy, Ph.D., is author or co-author of over twenty books, as well as research and professional articles on urban morphology, urban self-organization, architecture, computer science, and philosophy. He has held teaching and/or research appointments in architecture, urban planning and philosophy at seven graduate institutions in six countries, and he is on the editorial boards of two international journals of urban design. He is also Senior Researcher with the Ax:son Johnson Foundation and the Centre for the Future of Places at KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm. He is also a practicing urban designer, planner, and strategic development consultant with an international practice. He was a consultant to UN-Habitat for the Habitat III conference and its outcome document, The New Urban Agenda,, and he has consulted for governments, businesses and NGOs on its implementation and related topics. He is also on the boards of two NGOs in sustainable development, heritage and livability, including the Sustasis Foundation, an urban sustainability think tank in Portland, Oregon, where he is Executive Director. After graduate study in architecture with pioneering architect Christopher Alexander at U.C. Berkeley, he received his Ph.D. in architecture at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.

Bibliografische Informationen