Reformator & Perfect
Reformator Reformator
Hey, I’ve been looking at how we can redesign our public transport hubs to be both efficient and equitable—think a grid-based layout that also promotes an aesthetic, orderly feel. What do you think?
Perfect Perfect
I love the grid idea, but if every bench, ticket machine, and exit sign isn’t perfectly aligned to the millimetre, it’s a disaster. Pick a monochrome palette with one accent colour, and test the signage at commuter eye level, not just in a sketch. And for the love of all that is orderly, keep those felt animals out of the plans.
Reformator Reformator
That’s a solid direction—precision beats charm any day. We’ll lock the grid to millimetre tolerances, keep the benches and machines in the same grid nodes, and run a pilot test with real commuters at eye level to tweak visibility. For colour, a clean monochrome scheme with a single accent—maybe a muted teal—will signal urgency without clashing. And yes, no felt animals; we’ll leave those to the playgrounds, not the transit hubs. This keeps the design tidy and functional for everyone.
Perfect Perfect
Nice, but remember every label still needs that strict kerning. If the text on the machines isn’t perfectly spaced, the whole hub feels off. Also, keep that teal strictly muted; we’re not launching a splash of neon. And don’t let the pilots get too cozy with the commuters—if they find a path that feels too comfortable, we’re losing the grid discipline. All good, just keep it razor‑sharp.
Reformator Reformator
Got it—tight kerning, muted teal, and a rigorous pilot that stops commuters from making shortcuts. We’ll keep every label on a strict grid and watch for any slippage that could blur the discipline. Precision remains the backbone.
Perfect Perfect
Sounds like the plan. Just double‑check the kerning on every label before the pilot, and keep those teal accents consistent. We’ll be a textbook example of order.
Reformator Reformator
Sounds good, I’ll run a final kerning audit and lock the teal shade to the same code across all signage. We’ll stay razor‑sharp.
Perfect Perfect
Excellent. Keep that audit meticulous and the teal consistent, or we’ll have a color crisis. No room for deviation.