I 12 ENTRANCE TRANSITION
So far we have spoken mainly about houses. But we believe this pattern applies to a wide variety of entrances. It certainly applies to all dwellings including apartments—even though it is usually missing from apartments today. It also applies to those public buildings which thrive on a sense of seclusion from the world: a clinic, a jewelry store, a church, a public library. It does not apply to public buildings or any buildings which thrive on the fact of being continuous with the public world.
Here are four examples of successful entrance transitions.
| Each creates the transition with a different combination of elements. |
As you see from these examples, it is possible to make the transition itself in many different physical ways. In some cases, for example, it may be just inside the front door—a kind of entry court, leading to another door or opening that is more definitely inside. In another case, the transition may be formed by a bend in the path that takes you through a gate and brushes past the fuchsia on the way to the door. Or again, you'might create a tran-
sition by changing the texture of the path, so that you step off the sidewalk onto a gravel path and then up a step or two and under a trellis.
In all these cases, what matters most is that the transition exists, as an actual physical place, between the outside and the inside, and that the view, and sounds, and light, and surface which you walk on change as you pass through this place. It is the physical changes—and above all the change of view—which creates the psychological transition in your mind.
Therefore:
Make a transition space between the street and the front door. Bring the path which connects street and entrance through this transition space, and mark it with a change of light, a change of sound, a change of direction, a change of surface, a change of level, perhaps by gateways which make a change of enclosure, and above all with a change of view.
Emphasize the momentary view which marks the transition by a glimpse of a distant place—zen view (134); perhaps make a gateway or a simple garden gate to mark the entrance—garden wall (173); and emphasize the change of light—tapestry of LIGHT AND DARK ( I 3 5) , TRELLISED WALK (174). The transition runs right up to the front door, up to the entrance room (130), and marks the beginning of the intimacy gradient (127). . . .
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| I I 3 CAR CONNECTION |
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. . . once you have the entrance of the building fixed and its transition clear—main entrance (ho), entrance transition (112)—it is necessary to work out how a person can approach the building by car. Of course, in a pedestrian precinct this will not apply; but generally the car itself must have a housing somewhere near the building; and when this is so, its place and character are critical.
The process of arriving in a house, and leaving it, is fundamental to our daily lives; and very often it involves a car. But the place where cars connect to houses, far from being important and beautiful, is often off to one side and neglected.
This neglect can wreck havoc with the circulation in the house, especially in those houses with the traditional “front door and back door” relationship. Both family and visitors tend, more and more, to come and go by car. Since people always try to use the door nearest the car (see Vere Hole, et al., “Studies of 800 Houses in Conventional and Radburn Layouts,” Building Research Station, Garston, Herts, England, 1966), the entrance nearest the parking spot always becomes the “main” entrance, even if it was not planned that way.
| The car entrance becomes the main entrance —regardless of the flan. |
If this entrance is a “back” door, then the back of the house becomes less a sanctuary for the family and perhaps the housewife feels uncomfortable about guests traipsing through. On the other hand, if this entrance is a formal “front” door, it is not really appropriate for family and good friends. In Radburn, the back doors face the parking lot, and the front doors face a pedestrian green. For families with cars, the back door, being on the car side, dominates exit and entry, yet visitors are “supposed” to come to the front door.
In order to ensure that both the kitchen and formal living room are conveniently located with respect to cars and that each space maintains its integrity in terms of use and privacy, there must be one and only one primary entrance into the house, and the kitchen and living room must be both directly accessible from this entrance. We do not mean that a house needs to have only one entrance. There is no reason why a house cannot have several entrances—indeed there are good reasons why it probably should have more than one. Secondary entrances, like patio and garden doors and teenager’s private entrances, are very important. But they should never be placed so that they are in between the main entrance and the natural place to arrive by car—otherwise, they will compete with the main entrance and, again, confuse the way the house plan works.
Finally, it is essential to make something of the space which connects the house and the car, to make it a positive space—a space which supports the experience of coming and going. Es-sentially this means making a room out of the place for the car, the path from the car door to the house, and the front door. It may be achieved with columns, low walls, the edge of the house, plants, a trellised walk, a place to sit. This is the place we call the car connection (i I 3). A proper car connection is a place where people can walk together, lean, say goodbye; perhaps it is integrated with the structure and form of the house.
An ancient inn, built in the days of coach and horses, has a layout which treats the coach as a fundamental part of the environment and makes the connection between the two a significant part of the inn—so much so that it gives the inn its character. Airports, boathouses, stables, railway stations, all do the same. But for some reason, even though the car is so important to the
2 THE DISTRIBUTION OF TOWNS
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way of life in a modern house, the place where car and house meet is almost never treated seriously as a beautiful and significant place in its own right.
Therefore:
Place the parking place for the car and the main entrance, in such a relation to each other, that the shortest route from the parked car into the house, both to the kitchen and to the living rooms, is always through the main entrance. Make the parking place for the car into an actual room which makes a positive and graceful place where the car stands, not just a gap in the terrain.
Place both kitchen and main common living room just inside the main entrance—intimacy gradient (127), common areas at the heart (129) ; treat the place for the car as if it were an actual outdoor room—outdoor room (163). If it is enclosed, build the enclosure according to structure follows social spaces (205); and make the path between this room and the front door a beautiful path, preferably the same as the one used by people who come on foot—entrance transition (112), arcades (il 9) , PATHS AND GOALS (l20), RAISED FLOWERS (245). If you can, put the car connection on the north face of the building—north face (162). . . .