### Problem >When a person arrives in a complex of offices or services or workshops, or in a group of related houses, there is a good chance they will experience confusion unless the whole collection is laid out before them, so that they can see the entrance of the place where they are going. ### Solution >Lay out the entrances to form a family. This means: >1. They form a group, are visible together, and each visible from all the others. >2. They are all broadly similar, for instances all porches, or all gates in a wall, or all marked by a similar kind of doorway. ### Related Patterns ... this pattern is an embellishment of [[Circulation Realms (98)]] which portrayed a series of realms, in a large building or a building complex, with a major entrance or gateway into each realm and a collection of minor doorways, gates, and openings off each realm. This pattern applies to the relationship between these "minor" entrances. In detail, make the entrances bold and easy to see - [[Main Entrance (110)]] ; when they lead into private domains, houses and the like, make a transition in between the, public street and the inside - [[Entrance Transition (112)]]; and shape the entrance itself as a room, which straddles the wall, and is thus both inside and outside as a projecting volume, covered and protected from the rain and sun - [[Entrance Room (130)]]. If it is an entrance from an indoor street into a public office, make reception part of the entrance - [[Reception Welcomes You (149)]] ... --- > [!cite]- Alexander, Christopher. _A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction_. Oxford University Press, 1977, p. 499. > #APL/confidence/medium > > #APL/Building-Patterns/Group-of-Buildings