There are many different ways to use architecture, but one of the most significant is as a service. As meeting spaces that architecture creates provide people a chance to hang around and connect, socializing through architecture may be conceivable. Cooperative living is another option that is here to stay and is fantastic for both the economics and socializing.
We must draw attention to this architecture that provides assistance to elderly people, sick people, orphans, orphans themselves. We describe them as being built to provide the residents with additional goods. Then, in order to consider what the inhabitants require or find comfortable, the architect must put himself in their shoes.
For example designing for the blind or visually impaired:
When we observe them walking alongside us, we can’t help but wonder how they traverse the outer world. They are able to transmit the directions thanks to the pavement’s textures, the crossroads’ fountains, the nearby garden’s aroma, and other acoustic and tactile differences. Have you ever assisted a blind person in crossing the street. If so, that is a sign that our streets need to be much better designed.