Protected foyer

Private reading room Protected

A quieter threshold into the working side of the project. Choose the live desk if you want the active, quirky workbench, or the timeline if you want the cleaner archive spine and the evidence trail behind it.

How to use this room

This page is the orientation layer after access control. It slows the entry down just enough to explain what each door is for before the deeper archive machinery begins to hum.

The Command Centre stays intentionally odd and useful. The timeline stays more orderly, with daily cards, deeper entries, transcripts, memory notes, and special reports.

Working rule

Public pages are the exhibit. This side is the workshop. It is allowed to show process, half-finished structure, and the real gears behind the project, but only inside deliberate access control.

Door one

Command Centre

The live desk. Quirky, disjointed, and practical by nature. This is where the tools, notes, maps, journals, and active working pages sit together without being forced to behave like a polished public exhibit.

Live desk Quirky by design Working access
  • Use this when you want the active workspace rather than a polished story.
  • Good for jumping quickly between research, journals, maps, plans, and file handles.
  • Project file shortcuts live there, not on the timeline.

Door two

Working Timeline

The archive spine. Day cards first, deeper entries underneath, then transcripts, memory notes, and special reports for anyone who wants to inspect how the project was actually built.

Archive spine Daily cards Evidence trail
  • Best if you want the record of what happened, when, and why it mattered.
  • Special reports stay near the top for the larger diagnosis pieces.
  • Daily transcripts and memory notes sit behind each day rather than cluttering the front.

Shelf one

Special Reports

The larger turning-point pieces and diagnosis pages gathered in one place.

Open special reports →

Principle

The process is visible here, but it still needs a doorway.

This room is not about hiding the work. It is about giving the work a clear threshold, so visitors understand when they are entering the archive and the live desk rather than the public exhibit.