Restoration, Renewal, Recovery
Ending is better than mending
Kanawa-tsugi
When our tools are broken, we feel broken
I could do better than that
No ordinary objects
Responsibility for the sidewalk
I'm sorry, I love engineers
Repair
Little by little
Crafting repair
Hyperart: Thomasson
Snipping the dead blooms
Builder Brain
Rethinking Repair
Maintenance and Care
A time to build and a time to repair
Can maintenance save civilisation?
Makers and Making
Chesterton’s Fence
The McDonald’s Theory of Creativity
Imperfectly locked doors quietly waiting
Feature parity
The way we usually do infrastructure
Broken world thinking
Semi-detached houses, 2019
How the light gets in
A Quote by Leonard CohenThere is a crack in everything.
That's how the light gets in.The Maintainers
A WebsiteThe Maintainers, a global research network interested in the concepts of maintenance, infrastructure, repair, and the myriad forms of labor and expertise that sustain our human-built world. Our members come from a variety of backgrounds, including engineers and business leaders, academic historians and social scientists, government and non-profit agencies, artists, activists, coders, and more.
Design Discourse is in a State of Arrested Development
[Designer News] is good, useful content, but most of it is written by designers themselves. Taken as a whole, it’s also a useful illustration of something vital that our industry lacks: balanced, insightful, independent writing that critically evaluates the profession.
Starved for good journalism and criticism
Imagine for a moment if Kimmelman–or any architecture critic–was also a practicing architect, building enormous commissions for corporations at the same time he writes his columns. If this were the case, you’d probably come to one of two conclusions: either the writer in question was not a serious critic, or that the art form itself is not very serious. You might also stop to think how much poorer we would be without the contributions of his independent voice to the discussion of the craft.
That is exactly the situation that the design profession finds itself in today. We are lucky to have designers actively sharing knowledge, but we’re starved for good journalism and criticism.
The allure of clicks
If more of us, as designers, approach what we encounter on design aggregators every day in this way, perhaps we can begin to effect some structural change. By and large these sites are just as susceptible to the allure of clicks as the craft of design. But if we are more selective about what we consume, we may be able to encourage design publications to follow that lead by applying editorial judgment to what gets shared every day.