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Patterns of Home: The Ten Essentials of Enduring Design

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The key to creating a house that is memorable, satisfying, and enduring is to apply a group of design concepts--or "patterns"--that focus on the experience of being in a home. In this groundbreaking work, internationally respected architects Max Jacobson, Murray Silverstein, and Barbara Winslow present the ten essential patterns that shape and define a well-crafted home. Patterns explore the presence of light, the relationship between indoors and out, the flow through rooms, and the feel of one space as you are sitting in another.
Clearly written and profusely illustrated with houses from all over the country, "Patterns of Home," brings the timeless lessons of residential design to anyone seeking inspiration and direction in the design or remodel of a home. The patterns described in the book can make the difference between a home that satisfies only the material needs of the owners and one that captures the essence of home.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published August 27, 2002

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Max Jacobson

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5 stars
93 (40%)
4 stars
80 (34%)
3 stars
43 (18%)
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9 (3%)
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4 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 27 of 27 reviews
Profile Image for Erika RS.
831 reviews254 followers
December 29, 2012
This book contains a distillation of the most important patterns from . As the authors put it,
While there may be many dozens, even hundreds, of patterns that go into the making of homes, there are only a handful that we would now say are essential.
This book takes a stab at defining those essential patterns.

Having read A Pattern Language I approached this book skeptically. I did not think the authors could capture the essence of a good home in 10 patterns. However, I was pleasantly surprised. This book does not contain 10 patterns, in Alexander's sense of the word. It discusses 10 themes. Each theme references several patterns (implicitly or explicitly). I did not keep a formal count, but I would estimate that over half of Alexander's patterns that can be applied to home design are referenced in this book. This new look at the patterns makes the book worth reading even if you have read A Pattern Language, but it also makes it worth reading if you care about what makes a good home but do not want to read the nearly 1200 pages that make up A Pattern Language. If you are buying or building a home, it should be recommended reading.

Without further detail the 10 themes are: Inhabiting the Site; Creating Rooms, Outside and In; Sheltering Roof; Capturing Light; Parts in Proportion; The Flow Through Rooms; Private Edges, Common Core; Refuge and Outlook; Places in Between; Composing with Materials.
24 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2016
The 10 design concepts described in this book were generally interesting, and I can say I learned a decent amount of information from this book which I had not seen in other home design books, so I will give this three stars.

But at times I found the book excessively wordy and a little repetitive. The same content was described in the main text and also in the picture captions and text blocks, and sometimes I found myself just reading those and skipping the main text. It was also somewhat frustrating that many of their design ideas seem to favor warm climates where there can be more outdoor-indoor interaction than in cold climates. In a cold climate you get much less use of any outdoor rooms, half-in-half-out spaces, and you definitely don't want to walk across an outdoor breezeway to get from your main living area to your bedroom! So many of their example houses seemed to use these ideas that it left me wondering if they dislike houses designed for cold climates, and how I'm supposed to apply these ideas to designs which must consider cold weather.
Profile Image for Pam.
1,633 reviews
January 5, 2014
Humility is an undervalued characteristic in America today and it shows in the lack of modest elegant homes being built. I absolutely love the book "Pattern Language" and consider it the bible for architecture. This book in comparison is extremely disappointing. The authors have apparently ignored the modest elegance promoted in the previous book and now embraced America's McMansion craze, houses without souls. It is a sad day... I recommend you skip this book and go to the bible "Pattern Language" or to one of Sarah Susanka's books.
Profile Image for June Ding.
177 reviews5 followers
November 12, 2016
I bought the book a few years later after I first read it in the local library. It was the only book that I felt worth owning. Some helpful concepts for someone like me who had little knowledge at the time about house, such as capturing light, flow of the house, indoor rooms and outdoor rooms and space in between. Now re reading it I realise that my taste has changed and some of the houses look too traditional to me. But those essential concepts still apply.
Profile Image for Heather.
84 reviews1 follower
January 15, 2011
I had hoped that this book would be more tangible, but it does make an attempt to bring the concepts found in the Pattern Language series of books into a realizable form. Might be used as a starting point for younger thinkers, to assist them in understanding the somewhat amorphous concepts found in the original series.

Some very pretty pictures :)
Profile Image for Sally Kilpatrick.
AuthorÌý19 books365 followers
Read
October 28, 2021
Research.

The idea of 10 principles intrigued me. Several really made sense to me, but others? Well, there's a reason why I'm an author instead of an architect, I suppose.

I will say that I've read and/or thumbed through several design books at this point. Almost all of the houses featured seem to be either on the West Coast or the East Coast. It would be helpful for me if folks could talk about the South.

Moreover, many of the homes described in these books are so far out of reach for even the upper middle class. Mercy. I cannot imagine having enough money to construct any of these houses. I suppose it's fun to look, though.
241 reviews1 follower
July 18, 2024
Some of the authors of A Pattern Language give an updated and truncated formulation of 10 patterns 'essential' for house design. Wonderful pictures and thorough explanations. Sometimes a bit repetitive, but this is done in pursuit of teaching and works. I wish they gave examples of how their patterns are broken and how they can be fixed rather than just showing the successes (I often find negative examples to be very elucidating), but this is a fairly minor quibble in what is otherwise a great presentation of their thesis. Highly recommend to anyone thinking about building or renovating a house. More digestible than The Pattern Language.
Profile Image for Jeff Greason.
289 reviews12 followers
October 11, 2019
I got this book due to enthusiastic recommendations from other people as a good summary of architectural considerations in home design. And it is that. But honestly, if you've read decent architectural design works before, you'll find most of this familiar. It is accessibly written, and well illustrated, and not wrong -- but not all that special compared to other texts.
53 reviews2 followers
May 12, 2018
Gorgeous photography, un-actionable for anyone in a VHCOL area where changing homes is not particularly viable. Outside of VHCOL areas, presents a lot of good ideas for thinking about your home's design.
9 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2021
Eloquent, didactic and practical.

A treaty about the central concepts that make architecture shine. Well illustrated and comprehensive. A pattern language for the XXI century.
Profile Image for Alyn.
173 reviews
November 19, 2009
I had this book for 12 weeks, 2 separate library checkouts including maximum renewals, before finally slogging through all the text. But the pictures are pretty, of course.

The concepts were very familiar to me, perhaps because these authors wrote one of the classic architecture books back in the day "a pattern language". I would've enjoyed a greater quantity of specific examples, but I understand that too many details might get confusing to the average armchair architect.

This book was less repetitive then some "pretty" architecture books. The text contained more substance than usual. But I'm still left wondering how to implement the concepts in a budget dream house!

It left me with the feeling that these authors were showing off many of their projects. And gave me a vague longing to renew my former dream of becoming an architect, for the opportunity to create so many amazing spaces.

I took notes, but I'm left wondering which concepts and ideas would be most important to incorporate into my hypothetical dream house.

I appreciate that some of the powerful concepts from "A Pattern Language" are here demonstrated in full color, living reality. Somehow it has a greater impact than black line drawings...
Profile Image for brian tanabe.
387 reviews27 followers
March 22, 2008
The foundation of this book is based on the 30+ year old seminal architecture design book, A Pattern Language. I own not an ounce of training in the field and yet somehow I know this about the architectural world's canon of great books.

Moving on ... Patterns of Home quite nicely filters the "10 essentials of enduring design" (from A Pattern Language) through the stylings of Susanka and all the other Taunton-esque coffee table books on contemporary architectural design principles. Or in other words, Patterns of Home tranforms the somewhat dry tome that is A Pattern Language into an intuitive and more palatable glossy photo-filled edition. To quote Barbara Jacobs from Booklist, this "is a book intended for the intellectual architect, the sophisticated (and affluent) homeowner, and the committed environmentalist."
Profile Image for Kathleen.
398 reviews86 followers
January 16, 2011
after reading 'the new american dream,' which was also organized around ten design principles, this book seemed really cluttered and over-worked. lots of text boxes, subheadings after subheadings. the fact that there was so much on every page (both in volume of text and in number of topics) made it really hard for me to get into this book. i would have much preferred an edited down version of this book.

that said, the houses that served as examples in this book were lovely. the recommendations for building also useful, esp. the parts about considering your neighbors and the best way to situate your house so that everyone gets private outdoor space.
Profile Image for Kim.
306 reviews
January 5, 2016
I love the way this book brought a Pattern Language to life in a pithier, more "friendly" way. It changed how I think and gave voice to things I've witnessed, but never knew how to put words on. Inspirational for anyone trying to make their house a home and/or with a remodel in the planning (or dreaming) stages. 4.5 stars
Profile Image for Del.
370 reviews5 followers
February 18, 2008
In my opinion, a total Susanka rip-off that I'm sad I spent money on. To add insult to injury, I sold this book once on Amazon, shipped it happily off to NYC and had it returned due to not being able to fit in the guy's stupid mailbox. It came back all beat up and I can't seem to get rid of it.
39 reviews2 followers
August 28, 2008
Fascinating introduction to architecture. Learned so much about why some places make you want to kick hour shoes off and stay forever, and others you can't wait to leave. Good look at principles of design for anyone considering building.
Profile Image for Zane.
26 reviews
July 24, 2009
Okay, so here is the cheat sheet for anyone wanting to be their own architect for their own home. This is simple clear and profound example design principles for the home. A must read for anyone considering a new home or remodeling.
Profile Image for Erica.
30 reviews
November 10, 2009
Wonderful approachable version of directions for making a comfortable lilving spaces in your home - stuff you know when you see but may not be able to articulate. (Based on the famous architecture book A Pattern Language, which is more for professionals).
Profile Image for Rachele.
194 reviews
October 30, 2015
excellent for residential home design. A constant reference book for me.
Profile Image for Scott.
31 reviews1 follower
March 16, 2013
Read this after A Pattern Language, as it's a practical distillation of some of those ideas.
53 reviews
August 8, 2015
Excellent if your are wondering why you like/dislike your home so much.
Profile Image for Debbie.
48 reviews
January 23, 2008
A super book with lots of great photos to illustrate the integral elements of design.
Displaying 1 - 27 of 27 reviews

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