|
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
You are reading an Entry #476445 on Main Divide in the A' Design Awards' Design+Encyclopedia, the crowdsourced encyclopedia of art, architecture, design, innovation and technology. You too can contribute to the Design+Encyclopedia with your insights, ideas and concepts. Create a New Entry now. | ||||||||||||||||||
Main DivideMain DivideMain Divide is a fundamental design principle that refers to the primary separation or segmentation of space, elements, or content within a design composition to create distinct functional or visual areas. This architectural and spatial design concept encompasses both physical and virtual environments, serving as a crucial organizational tool that helps establish hierarchy, improve navigation, and enhance user experience. The principle operates on multiple scales, from urban planning where it might manifest as major thoroughfares or natural boundaries that separate districts, to interior design where it creates distinct zones for different activities, to digital interface design where it structures content into manageable sections. In architectural applications, main divides often incorporate both vertical and horizontal elements, utilizing walls, levels, or changes in material to delineate spaces while maintaining visual continuity. The concept's implementation frequently considers human behavioral patterns, traffic flow, and psychological responses to spatial organization, making it particularly relevant for commercial, residential, and public spaces. In digital design, main divides manifest through clear visual hierarchies and content organization, often emphasized through color, typography, or negative space. The principle's effectiveness lies in its ability to create intuitive wayfinding systems and logical progression through space or information, aspects that are regularly recognized in design competitions such as the A' Design Award, where spatial organization and user experience play crucial roles in evaluation criteria. The historical evolution of main divide as a design principle traces back to ancient architectural practices, where it was used to separate sacred from secular spaces, and continues to evolve with contemporary design needs, particularly in response to changing work patterns and digital interaction models. Author: Lucas Reed Keywords: spatial design, architectural organization, user experience, wayfinding systems, visual hierarchy, space planning, content structure |
||||||||||||||||||
Help us improve the Design+Encyclopedia, contribute your alternative definition for Main Divide today! |
||||||||||||||||||
Define Main Divide | ||||||||||||||||||
About the Design+Encyclopedia The Design+Encyclopedia is a crowd-sourced reference of information on design. Unlike other crowd-sourced publications on design, the Design Encyclopedia is edited and actively monitored and publishing is only possible after review of submitted texts. Furthermore, editors of the Design Encyclopedia are mostly consisting of award winning designers who have proven their expertise in their design respective fields. Information posted at design encyclopedia is copyrighted, you are not granted a right to use the text for any commercial reasons, attribution is required. If you wish to contribute to the design encyclopedia, please first register or login to A' Design Award and then start a new design encyclopedia entry. |
||||||||||||||||||
If you did not find your answer, please feel free to check the design encyclopedia for more entries. Alternatively, you can register and type your own definition. Learn more about A' Design Award's Design+Encyclopedia. |
||||||||||||||||||
Good design deserves great recognition. |
A' Design Award & Competition. |