Urban and domestic design organizing space in concentric relationships of responsibility, from intimate family to neighborhood to bioregion.
Rabia taught that love expands through proximity and direct relationship—first intimate devotion, then expanding circles of care and community. Applied to architecture and urban design, circles of care organize spatial hierarchies around nested relationships of responsibility. At the center lies intimate domestic space for immediate family; moving outward, shared courtyards serve extended family and neighbors; further still, neighborhood gathering places and gardens support broader community; finally, the building's relationship to watershed, climate, and regional ecology frames the outermost circle. This nested model resists both isolation and abstraction into the faceless collective. Each circle maintains specific scale and intentionality. Design decisions at each level affect the next: a family's water use impacts neighborhood systems; neighborhood choices affect bioregional health. This framework creates buildings that strengthen belonging at every scale while making inhabitant responsibility visible and manageable. Rather than designing for atomized individuals or abstract populations, circles-of-care architecture cultivates awareness of how local choices ripple outward. Such legacy buildings teach that love, architecture, and ecological responsibility are inseparable.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.