 Well, architecture has a huge effect on how we see ourselves fitting into a city and how we relate to one another. Obviously, you go into some big corporate headquarters, it's meant to intimidate you. The architecture is meant to intimidate you, meant to make you feel anonymous, an anonymous small nobody. In consequential, little aunt, we will step on you. The architecture says that, on the outside and on the inside. I'm not saying that's entirely evil and should be wiped out. I'm just saying that that kind of architecture, that kind of business, that's what they do. But when that kind of attitude is transferred to a public space, then I would say, okay, now it's inappropriate. If you want to be intimidating on your own property, you can do that. But we shouldn't transfer that to public space because then it should be more welcoming and somehow a place like this is big, but it doesn't feel intimidating. People feel relaxed in there, as you said, as if they walk into an indoor park. Well, for me, architecture includes the places we live in, the places we work in, the urban and suburban spaces that we move around and the streets. Some of it is made by professionals and some of it is made by amateurs and some of it just seems to emerge by accident. And there's good and bad in all of those. Some of the professionals make eyesores and sometimes the amateurs make eyesores. But nobody has the rulebook. Today I think a lot of people, when they think of architecture, they think of what? Starchitects, they think of the handful of brand name architects that they might have heard of. Or they think, yeah, that's what I think most people think of, which to me is rather limiting. It means you're not really thinking about your own house, how people come into your house and how do they relate to it? How do you relate to your house once you get into it or the place that you work and all that kind of stuff? People tend to think architecture is done for and by other people. It's also done by you if you decide to put a new window in your house or change the traffic flow in your house or your office. Not surprisingly, I'm very much aware of how a space affects the sound in a space and affects how you relate to that. It's like this kind of space is very echoey. It's like a cathedral or some very large traditional public building with a huge atrium or huge open space. So people usually lower their voice when they come into that. They start talking in whispers, or at least I'm not talking in a whisper, but they don't yell out. Whereas let's say a crowded bar where often there's a different dynamic and people start yelling and shouting, which they don't really do in here.