### Problem >Once a household for one person is part of some larger group, the most critical problem which arises is the need for simplicity. ### Solution >Conceive a house for one person as a place of the utmost simplicity: essentially a one-room cottage or studio, with large and small alcoves around it. When it is most intense, the entire house may be no more than 300 to 400 square feet. ### Related Patterns ... the households with one person in them, more than any other, need to be a part of some kind of larger household - [[The Family (75)]]. Either build them to fit into some larger group household, or even attach them, as ancillary cottages to other, ordinary family households like [[House for a Small Family (76)]] or [[House for a Couple (77)]]. And again, make the house an individual piece of territory, with its own garden, no matter how small - [[Your Own Home (79)]]; make the main room essentially a kind of farmhouse kitchen - [[Farmhouse Kitchen (139)]], with alcoves opening off it for sitting, working, bathing, sleeping, dressing - [[Bathing Room (144)]], [[Window Place (180)]], [[Workspace Enclosure (183)]], [[Bed Alcove (188)]], [[Dressing Rooms (189)|Dressing Room (189)]]; if the house is meant for an old person, or for someone very young, shape it also according to the pattern for [[Old Age Cottage (155)]] or [[Teenager's Cottage (154)]] ... --- > [!cite]- Alexander, Christopher. _A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction_. Oxford University Press, 1977, p. 389. > #APL/confidence/medium > > #APL/Town-Patterns/Social-Institutions---Families