A framework for designing spaces as acts of hospitality where every threshold, room, and corner welcomes the other with unconditional belonging.
In Rabia's mystical tradition, the soul's journey is one of approaching the Beloved. Architecturally, this translates to creating environments where inhabitants feel unconditionally welcomed and held. Every architectural decision—from threshold design to spatial proportion to material warmth—becomes an expression of radical hospitality. The beloved's house is not a showcase but a sanctuary, where vulnerability is safe and belonging is guaranteed. This legacy-making practice asks architects to design spaces that mirror the experience of being loved without condition or transaction. Doorways become invitations, thresholds become moments of acceptance, and rooms become embraces. Buildings designed with this sensibility become ancestral gifts, spaces where generations experience the feeling of being truly, unconditionally received.
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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