Designing with acceptance that buildings will change, be reused, or eventually disappear, releasing attachment to original vision as a form of devotional architecture.
Rabia taught that true love involves surrender—releasing attachment to outcomes and trusting in divine wisdom beyond human intention. Applied to architecture, this means designing with awareness that buildings will be adapted, repurposed, or eventually replaced. Rather than creating rigid, unchangeable structures, architects can design for adaptive reuse: flexible structural systems, removable partitions, reversible finishes, and open plans that allow future uses. This approach acknowledges that community needs change—a warehouse becomes housing, a church becomes a community center, a school becomes housing. Documentation practices (photographs, oral histories, drawings) ensure that original intent is honored even when physical form transforms. Releasing attachment to permanence paradoxically creates longer-lasting legacy: buildings designed for adaptation survive longer and serve more purposes. This framework teaches that architectural love means creating something beautiful for your generation while trusting it will be loved differently by the next, and eventually released to time itself.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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