I have walked it many times and I usually dedicate some time to thinking about it because of a book I own. It's called “A Pattern language.”
I found it on a list of popular and recommended architecture and design books, and I recommend it as well. It approaches the design of towns, buildings and construction in terms of universally desirable patterns that it strives to define. That's universally desirable to people everywhere. These range from larger patterns, like city layout, to smaller patterns. So, for an example of a small pattern, it identified that people universally like sunlight to cross their kitchen counter. Interesting.
A review on the back cover.
I believe this to be perhaps the most important book on architegctural design published this century. Every library, every school, every environmental action group, every architect, and every first-year student should have a copy.
Tony Ward, Architectural Design
Back to our path... What jogs my memory, as you might expect, is the section on paths and goals.
The layout of paths will seem right and comfortable only when it is compatible with the process of walking. And the process of walking is far more subtle than one might imagine.
Now, if our goal is some distance away, there will be other intermediate goals we choose roughly every 90 m (100 yards). As we reach each goal, we choose the next. Setting these goals and mindlessly walking towards them, allows us to occupy our mind with other things.
A Pattern Language - Wikipedia
A Pattern Language - Goodreads
Photos from the iPad of in Kanata, Ontario, Canada.