[RRE]The Access Guides and the Contradictions of Design

From: Phil Agre (pagreat_private)
Date: Wed Dec 12 2001 - 22:49:04 PST

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      The Access Guides and the Contradictions of Design
    
      Phil Agre
      http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/pagre/
    
      Version of 12 December 2001.
      2600 words.
    
    
    The other day I picked up the 2001 edition of San Francisco Access
    and was shocked to discover that Richard Saul Wurman's original vision
    of the once-excellent Access Guides had been dramatically watered down.
    I find this symptomatic as well as tragic, so I want to explain the
    problem in depth.  First I'll explain the Access Guides for those who
    haven't seen them, then I'll explain the new edition and what's wrong
    with it, and then I'll explain what I see as the big picture.
    
    The Access Guides are guides to shops, hotels, tourist attractions,
    and architectural sites in a city (and a few small regions, such as
    the California Wine Country).  Their great innovation in contrast to
    traditional tourist guides is that they are organized geographically.
    Each guide is divided into chapters, the chapters are marked along the
    right edge of the page for easy opening, and each chapter begins with
    a map of a neighborhood.  Each map includes numbers which are indexed
    to one-paragraph descriptions of the various places.  The descriptions
    are laid out in a standardized way and color-coded.  The book itself
    has a vertical aspect ratio to make it easy to hold in one hand, and
    the binding is sewn to open flat.  In these ways and more, the Access
    Guides were an important innovation in tourist guides, and while they
    do not substitute for traditional tourist guides, they are certainly
    the first guide that I recommend for someone who is going to live in
    a city or visit it often.
    
    The Access Guides also announced the new discipline of information
    design, which Wurman tried to codify (if not entirely successfully)
    in a series of publications.  Information design starts from the user:
    the inherent structure of a given body of information, the concrete
    process of using it, the questions a user is likely to have at each
    step along the way, the detailed properties of human perception and
    cognition, and the mappings between the structure of information and
    the structure of its physical embodiment that can make the answers
    to a user's questions perceptually and cognitively available at the
    moment when they are needed.  For example, if you are standing on the
    corner of Market and Grant in San Francisco and you want to decide
    how to kill the next hour before dinner, you can pull out your Access
    Guide and take a series of steps: open the front cover of the book
    to the schematic map across from the table of contents, figure out
    what chapter this approximate place is likely to fall in (in this
    case, Union Square), go over to the table of contents, look up "Union
    Square", move to the right edge of the page, pull open the chapter
    whose pages are marked at that point, flip to the map that starts
    the chapter, find your intersection on the map, look at the numbers
    nearby, flip forward to the paragraphs for those numbers, read
    the paragraphs whose colors match the categories of places you are
    interested in, choose one, pick out the diamond icon that separates
    the descriptive text from the address and phone etc so you can call
    ahead, flip back to the map, find the number for the place you've
    decided to go, and use the map to guide yourself to that destination.
    At every step in this procedure, the Access Guide provides you with
    a readily perceptible graphical convention that answers just exactly
    the question you have in mind.
    
    The new edition of San Francisco Access, however, wrecks this system.
    Although the descriptive text has not been radically changed, and the
    new book still uses the basic system of chapters, maps, numbers, and
    paragraphs, the original Access Guide's clean and methodical support
    for the user's cognition has been fouled up.  Here are some of the
    problems:
    
    (1) The inside front cover still has a schematic map in which the
    various regions of the city are marked with numbers.  The map still
    carries an indication that "San Francisco's 14 primary districts (as
    marked above) correspond to the chapters in the table of contents on
    the opposite page)".  But the table of contents on the opposite page
    no longer includes chapter numbers!  You can't connect the district
    numbers to the chapter numbers without counting.  And counting doesn't
    even help you, because the table of contents includes a "chapter 0"
    called "Orientation".
    
    (2) Having identified the correct chapter number, you can no longer
    open the book automatically to the correct range of pages, because the
    pages are no longer marked along their right edges.  Instead, you have
    to match the page numbers in the table of contents against the small
    page-number markings in the lower-right-hand corners of the pages, or
    else match the chapter titles against the titles in the upper-right-
    hand corners of the pages, all of which have been made less legible
    by a green line that passes through the text.  (The old version had
    the chapter titles in white against a half-inch red bar.)
    
    (3) Once you find the map and locate yourself on it, you will reach
    the next problem.  You will look for numbers around your location, but
    the new edition employs a much lighter typeface that makes the numbers
    harder to spot amidst the typographic clutter of the map.  In fact the
    whole book is typeset in spindly new fonts.  The paragraphs of black
    type against white are a little more legible than the colored type
    in the earlier editions, but the effect on the maps is very annoying.
    
    (4) Now that you've finally picked out some numbers on the map that
    are close to your current location, you go looking for the associated
    paragraphs in the body of the chapter.  Another obstacle: whereas the
    old paragraphs were color-coded so that you could rapidly scan the
    page for only the restaurants or only the architectural and cultural
    sights, now only the numbers and place-names atop each paragraph
    are color-coded.  So the distinctions among categories do not jump
    out nearly as easily as before.  And whereas formerly the numbers
    accompanying each paragraph were all in black to ease the operation
    of scanning for a particular number, now the numbers are all in color
    so that they no longer stand out as a visual unit.
    
    (5) What is worse, instead of four distinct colors -- red, green,
    blue, and black -- now there are five colors -- red, purple, orange,
    green, and blue (black is no longer a color code because all of the
    paragraphs are set in black).  The new colors are harder to tell apart
    just because there are more of them.  Worse yet, the colors are all
    significantly darker than in the older version, so that they are even
    harder to discriminate without close inspection, especially in the
    random lighting conditions encountered by a tourist standing on a
    street-corner.  The red (restaurants/clubs) and orange (shops) are
    hard to tell apart under any conditions.
    
    (6) The binding on the new edition is sewn, but it is also heavily
    glued so that it does not open flat.  This is exceptionally annoying
    because the book has such narrow margins.  You have to force the new
    edition open and twist it back and forth to read many of the entries,
    and the maps that are spread across two pages are essentially useless
    in the middle near the binding.
    
    The new edition of San Francisco Access, in short, is a disaster
    that explodes Wurman's original vision.  (Wurman sold Access Press
    to HarperCollins some years ago, but I have no idea if he was involved
    in the new edition.  The new edition credits a completely different
    set of designers than the old.)  What is the problem?  The first
    clue, I would suggest, can be found in the cover design.  The cover of
    the 1994 edition had a bold "SF" above a pillar from the Golden Gate
    Bridge, along with a paragraph of descriptive text for the bridge much
    like the paragraphs inside the book.  Wurman's name was along the top
    edge with the phrase "San Franciso" in small type underneath, and the
    word "ACCESS" in yellow was superimposed on the bottom of the bridge
    image.  The design emphasized the vertical format of the book, the
    name of the city was highlighted, and the choice of a symbolic image
    followed the convention of most tourist guides.
    
    The new cover is dramatically different.  It divides the vertical
    space into four rectangular elements.  The vertical format is no
    longer emphasized, and you have to set the old and new editions
    on top of one another to realize that they have the same dimensions.
    The word "ACCESS" is now at the top and more prominent than the name
    of the city.  The city is illustrated with a motion-blurred antique
    photograph of a cable-car (again, horizontal rather than vertical).
    And the descriptive paragraph is gone; instead, the bottommost panel
    carries the text "The Only Guide That Leads You Street by Street
    into the Heart of the City".  Wurman's name still appears in a small
    black square in the upper-left, and a small black-and-white picture
    of the Golden Gate Bridge appears in a corresponding small square in
    the lower-right.  Whereas the 1994 cover fit with the somewhat garish
    conventions of other tourist guides, the 2001 cover is understated
    modernist design.
    
    This is the clue: the new edition is designed in accordance with the
    current fashion for "clean" modernist minimalism.  And while nothing
    is wrong with modernism as such, the new edition's destruction of
    Wurman's original vision reflects a tension that runs throughout the
    history of design.  It is common among design people to distinguish
    between two aspects of design: styling and problem-solving.  These
    phrases are probably self-explanatory: styling refers to the more
    or less immediate perceptual impact of the design, whereas problem-
    solving refers to the way the design fits into the activities of
    the people who use it.  Styling and problem-solving need not conflict,
    but design has been distorted throughout its history by an emphasis
    on styling at the expense of problem-solving.  The reasons for this
    distortion are clear enough: (1) designers must care about their
    professional standing, and accordingly they design largely for other
    designers, whose training equip them to judge styling but who are
    generally far from the situations where a design is used, and (2) the
    users themselves are generally ill-educated about the problem-solving
    aspects of design and make their purchasing decisions in situations
    where the styling aspects of a design are more apparent anyway.
    Information design is a resolutely problem-oriented design discipline,
    and the original Access Guides reflected this.  I don't know if they
    lacked any particular style as a conscious anti-fashion statement, or
    because they were so concerned to telegraph their functional features,
    or simply because Wurman was unconcerned with style.  And I am sure
    that the Access Guides could be designed in a way that unites styling
    and problem-solving rather than setting them against one another.
    The fact is, however, that the new edition promotes style over problem-
    solving, and in so doing it trashes many of the features that made the
    original guides useful.
    
    This tragedy points to a fissure in the tradition of modernist design.
    Modernist design overlaid a number of themes which were thought to
    correlate in the early decades of the 20th century.  One such theme
    was anti-historicism.  Designers sought to blow away the clutter of
    19th-century design, and along with it the clutter of history itself.
    Some were revolutionaries of the left or right, and others were simply
    disdainful of social and design traditions that seemed exhausted.
    They sought to replace clutter with simplicity on two levels.  On a
    symbolic level, geometric abstraction signified a kind of radicalism
    -- a return to foundations.  Every design problem was to be treated
    as a tabula rasa and worked through from first principles.  On a
    functional level, a rigorous analysis of the designed artefact was
    supposed to lead to a design that clarified its workings and expressed
    those workings directly in its structure.  Another modernist theme was
    industrial production.  Simplicity of design was supposed to make the
    designed artifacts easy to manufacture, and geometric abstraction was
    supposed to lend itself to mass production at the same time that it
    symbolized the rationality of mass society.
    
    So conceived, the ironies of modernist design were numerous.  One
    was that the earliest modernist designs that glorified mass production
    were hard to make in the factories of the time; those designs were
    produced only by artisans in small batches.  Another was that the
    imperative to treat every design problem as a tabula rasa, analyzing
    the particulars from scratch, soon devolved into geometric abstraction
    as a traditional design style in its own right.  A final irony, which
    has become clear only in recent years, is that from a manufacturing
    perspective, geometric abstraction serves largely to economize on
    information.  But new information-driven manufacturing techniques
    make it straightforward to manufacture objects in exceedingly complex
    shapes, thus making geometric abstraction simply into one stylistic
    choice among many.
    
    In retrospect, then, far from being a departure from tradition, the
    design practices of modernism were themselves tradition of a high
    order.  Geometric abstraction did not solve many problems; its true
    purpose was to symbolize a kind of transcendence -- the same kind of
    transcendence that it symbolized for the ancient Greeks.  Modernism
    married Western mathematics-religion with the 20th-century religion
    of progress through rationalization.
    
    What do these considerations on manufacturing have to do with the
    graphic design of the Access Guide?  The new edition of the Access
    Guide illustrates perfectly the decadence of the modernist design
    vision.  Information design as envisioned by Wurman embodies the
    higher principles of modernism: it is rigorously analytical, it
    considers each design problem afresh in an empirical manner that is
    driven by the rational relationship between materials and situations
    of use, and the resulting designs systematically relate structural
    elements to elements of function.  But Wurman's designs are also
    indifferent to style.  Simplicity is a symbolic value for Wurman
    as well as a practical value, but he symbolizes simplicity not by
    translating his procedures into an autonomous vocabulary of forms
    but simply by making those procedures transparent.
    
    In reworking Wurman's vision, the new edition is a missed opportunity
    on many levels.  It could have done so much.  It could have rethought
    the relation between problem-solving and style in light of Wurman's
    analysis of the practical aspects of cognitive work on the street
    corner.  It could have repeated that analysis and drawn different
    conclusions.  It could even have deepened the analytical framework
    by reconceptualizing the relationship between information and tourism.
    It could at least have stood up for the most basic values of quality
    in the binding.  But instead, it applied the modernist canons of
    clean design in a superficial way, replacing Wurman's loud symbols
    of information with symbols of understatement that are hard to make
    out on the page.  It scrubbed away the chapter numbers in the table
    of contents and the thumb-tabs on the right margins of the pages,
    treating them as extraneous ornament like a janitor who mistakenly
    carts off a pile of work-documents on a meeting-room floor.  It
    exchanged Wurman's heavy font and bright colors for more subdued
    models that feel cleaner in the bookstore but that mean nothing once
    you get out on the dirty street and need to read them.  Modernism
    here has become a rote exercise ten times removed from its origins,
    reduced from an analytical procedure that stood for a new world to
    a cliche that stands for the old.
    
    end
    



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