Affordance-based design evaluation

Bridging architectural intention and adaptive user behavior

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

M. Mohammadi (TU Delft - Design & Construction Management, Universiteit Leiden)

A. Koutamanis (TU Delft - Design & Construction Management)

Research Group
Design & Construction Management
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.destud.2025.101361
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Design & Construction Management
Volume number
101
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Abstract

Affordances—the action possibilities provided by the environment—are a central notion in ecological psychology, offering valuable insights into dynamic user-environment interactions. In recent years, affordance theory has gained traction in architecture and design for its potential to illuminate how users perceive and engage with built environments, informing both design thinking and performance evaluation. Despite this growing interest, its application within architectural design research remains limited. This article introduces an affordance-based evaluation framework developed to analyze how built environments enable or constrain adaptive user behaviors. Grounded in ecological psychology and architectural theory, the framework provides a structured approach for assessing usability, anticipating behavioral variability, and aligning design outcomes with diverse user needs. By explicitly linking architectural intention with situated user-environment interaction, the framework contributes a design-oriented methodology for improving responsiveness, inclusivity, and the adaptive capacity of the built environment throughout its lifecycle.