Pass 01
Approach
Look from the corridor or street before touching anything. Notice whether the entry explains direction, privacy, and level change.

Field Method
Beotu’s method is deliberately simple: approach, contact, closure, aftermark. The same door can succeed in one step and fail in another. A pull may feel clear from a distance but awkward under load. A threshold may photograph well and still punish wheels. A latch may promise security yet need a second shove. The method keeps those observations separate so the repair language stays precise.
Pass 01
Look from the corridor or street before touching anything. Notice whether the entry explains direction, privacy, and level change.
Pass 02
Use the handle, plate, rail, or push surface with an ordinary grip. Record the effort and the message the object gives back.
Pass 03
Listen for the latch, closer, seal, and final rest position. A good door does not require a ritual to finish its job.
Pass 04
Read polish, scratches, dust, tape, added signs, and chipped paint as evidence of recurring uncertainty.
The field method avoids grand claims. It asks what a person can see, feel, hear, and repeat. That makes a note useful to a designer who needs to revise a detail, a building manager who needs to describe a complaint, or a reader who wants better words for why an entrance feels strained.
Beotu does not assume the most expensive fitting is the most humane one. A modest handle placed at the right height may serve better than a sculptural pull that hides its intent. A plain threshold with a visible edge may be kinder than a seamless transition that surprises the body. The test is not novelty. The test is whether arrival becomes calmer, clearer, and easier to maintain.