Architectural prizes shouldn't be awarded till 10 years after buildings open - then ask folk who use, maintain & operate it how successful it is. I work in a shiny building that won prizes 10 yrs ago & it's a maintenance nightmare with no storage that costs fortune to run
@anon_opin @CiaraNi Indeed, I often used to say that the first aim of architects was to win prizes!!
@DrPKR @anon_opin I've worked in a few 'state-of-the-art' buildings that were designed as architectural flagships, but full of features that didn't take basic human behaviour and needs into account so (for example) big fancy 'collaborative' spaces were never used and became wastelands or overly technological solutions, like temperature settings, didn't work. One of the buildings won an award. :-)
@CiaraNi @DrPKR @anon_opin
I so wish this was the case. It runs all the way down into education, where we need to teach aspiring young architects how to engage properly with users
#ArchitectureOfCare
@kerstinsailer True, it is so important.
@DrPKR @anon_opin

@CiaraNi @DrPKR @anon_opin
This is what we're up against - architects considering users as a threat

Taken from the slides of my inaugural professorial lecture in March 2024, available to view here:

https://vimeo.com/925814729

#ArchitectureOfCare #SociologyOfArchitecture

Professor Kerstin Sailer Inaugural Lecture

Vimeo
@kerstinsailer @CiaraNi @anon_opin I always find it interesting to compare architecture and information systems. In many ways Information Systems have taken the role of the user more seriously in recent years and have tried to design systems to meet the user needs rather than to force them to use imperfect systems. Of course this is not always the case - just look at the Post Office Horizon disaster.
@DrPKR As an end user, there are definitely similarities in the experience of using both architectural spaces and technology where the designers didn't seem to have any notion of everyday human behaviour. Though in both cases, the standards have improved greatly in recent years, to be fair.
@kerstinsailer @anon_opin

@DrPKR @CiaraNi @anon_opin
That is very interesting indeed.

Have you by any chance read 'The year without pants' where Scott Berkun describes his time at WordPress and discusses the future of work (long before the Covid-19 pandemic, working from home as the temporary norm and hybrid work)?

He compares architecture and technology a lot.

I've written a blog post about this topic 10 years ago (almost exactly) but it's still very timely
https://spaceandorganisation.org/2014/07/11/is-designing-software-like-designing-a-building/

Is Designing Software Like Designing a Building?

I’ve recently read Scott Berkun’s excellent book ‘A Year Without Pants’, where he reports from his experiment of working for Automattic (the wonderful guys behind WordPress)…

spaceandorganisation
@kerstinsailer @CiaraNi @anon_opin Interesting presentation, thank you for sharing it. You outlined the interaction between architect, client and user with the user often being ignored. With information systems this triangle is system designer, manager and user. What unfortunately often happens is that the managers tell the designer what the users need, but the users are not asked what they really do and also how it could be improved.