CONCEPT
The Fifteen Properties
Alexander's catalogue of the structural features — from
levels of scale to
not-separateness — whose joint presence distinguishes living structure from dead form.
The fifteen properties are Alexander's most concrete theoretical contribution — a catalogue of structural features that, when present together, produce
living structure. They are: levels of scale,
strong centers, boundaries, alternating repetition, positive space, good shape, local symmetries, deep interlock and ambiguity, contrast, gradients, roughness, echoes, the void, simplicity and inner calm, and not-separateness. Each property names a specific structural relationship that living systems tend to exhibit and dead systems tend to lack. The list emerged from decades of empirical observation across architecture, biology, art, and craft traditions. Applied as a diagnostic tool for AI-generated artifacts, the properties reveal systematic failures that the artifacts' fluent surfaces would otherwise conceal.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Alexander presented the fifteen properties in The Nature of Order, Book One: The Phenomenon of Life, backing each with visual examples drawn from buildings, paintings, plants, molecular structures, and natural landscapes. The empirical claim is that these same properties recur across domains — that a Persian carpet, a gothic cathedral,