We Landed on the Moon, 
But Still Haven’t Figured 
Out Doors

By Nikola Stokanic

Intro

Design lives at the intersection of behavior and instinct. And sometimes, the smallest objects reveal the biggest gaps between the two. Doors are a perfect example. They're everywhere, yet we rarely question how we interact with them, until they confuse us.

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3 mins

CATEGORY

User experience

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Autor

Nikola Stokanic

To pull or to push, that is the question!

Nikola Stokanic
Architect and Interior Designer

After 20 years of designing interiors, one thing continues to fascinate me: the door.

Yes, the humble door. Something we use dozens of times a day without a second thought. But when you really stop and analyze it, doors are a surprisingly misunderstood piece of design. Specifically, how we open them. Or rather, how often we open them wrong.

Here’s the observation: Most doors have handles on both sides. And that’s the problem.

Handles, by their very nature, suggest that you should grab and pull. So, when you place a handle on both sides of a door, people instinctively try to pull—even when they should be pushing. You’ve probably done it yourself: walk up to a door, tug at the handle, and then awkwardly realize it was a push door all along.

 

It’s not your fault. It’s bad design.

 

From a user experience standpoint, doors should communicate their function clearly, without needing a sign, label, or moment of hesitation. If a door is meant to be pulled, it should have a handle—on that side only. If it’s meant to be pushed, there should be no handle at all. Just a flat plate or clean surface that your body naturally understands how to interact with.

 

It’s a small thing. But small things add up.

Door handles are some of the most commonly misunderstood design elements. There’s hardly another piece of furniture or hardware that creates as much confusion.

 Design is never just about how something looks. It’s about how it works. Great design doesn’t ask for instructions. It speaks clearly through form and logic. And in the case of doors, the solution is simple: one handle. One side. That’s it.

 

It might seem like a minor detail. But I believe these small design cues shape the way we move through space—literally and emotionally. The fewer moments of friction, the more ease and flow we experience.
So, the next time you approach a door and hesitate, know this: it’s not you. It’s the handle.

 

Let me know what you think. These are the quiet conversations that fuel better design.

READ TIME

3 mins

CATEGORY

User experience

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Autor

Nikola Stokanic

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