Repository | Series | Buch | Kapitel
Applying hci methods and concepts to architectural design (or why architects could use hci even if they don't know it)
pp. 17-35
Abstrakt
The act of designing a building is indirectly, but conceptually very closely, linked to the user experience of its final outcome. It is this experience which often constitutes a major criterion for assessing the quality of the architect's work. And yet, it would be a gross overstatement to suggest that architectural design is a user-centered process.On a more generic level, designing any physical object acting as a catalyst for the final experience can be viewed as an act of designing a human-artifact interaction where the "artifact" (be it a building or a computer device) serves as an interface for the ultimate behavior or emotional reaction. This chapter argues, that the field of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) can be viewed as a source of inspiration for architects wishing to incorporate, or enhance, user-centric planning routines in their creative workflows.Drawing from the methodological toolbox of HCI, we demonstrate how user-centric planning can be placed in a structured framework, with tested and easy-to-apply methods serving as the vehicle for holistic user-centered planning processes.The chapter proposes a formal model for understanding usability and user experience in the architectural context, demonstrates a number of methods suitable for its application, and concludes with a case study of an attempted use of one of such methods in an award-winning (yet, not necessarily user-friendly) public library project.
Publication details
Published in:
Dalton Nicholas S., Schnädelbach Holger, Wiberg Mikael, Varoudis Tasos (2016) Architecture and interaction: human computer interaction in space and place. Dordrecht, Springer.
Seiten: 17-35
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-30028-3_2
Referenz:
Krukar Jakub, Conroy Dalton Ruth, Hölscher Christoph (2016) „Applying hci methods and concepts to architectural design (or why architects could use hci even if they don't know it)“, In: N. S. Dalton, H. Schnädelbach, M. Wiberg & T. Varoudis (eds.), Architecture and interaction, Dordrecht, Springer, 17–35.