http://www.treehugger.com/interior-desi ... anger.html
This article at Tree Hugger is titled, “Look Ma, no handrails, a house designed for danger.” It describes a house built in Japan that incorporates danger, especially the danger of falling into its design. The architect, Tomohiro Hata said, "the client follows a belief that if every possibility of danger is eliminated from your surroundings, this eventually sets people back on knowing how to overcome the smallest risk.” The house was designed to “explore an adventurous and playful spirit.”
The house is like wilderness. Even more, it is like architectural base jumping. It is like living on The Devil’s Backbone. This kind of living is not tolerated in the United States. It is illegal under our building codes.
A house without handrails is something like wilderness without cell phones and helicopter rescues.
If Hata's client is right, we are losing our ability to overcome even the smallest risk. I think we are. People in wilderness today don’t know how to overcome risk. They just call for help. They have even lost the ability to assess risk.
I removed a paved walkway that lead to my house, in a prim and proper suburban city, and replaced it with a dirt path that I keep open by raking the leaves to the side. A neighbor and a relative have independently commented on the high risk associated with the lack of paving. The bare dirt seems to terrify them. No trekking poles.