Buildings that strengthen community bonds across generations become living expressions of collective belonging and shared memory.
Rabia's emphasis on community and belonging reveals that architecture's deepest legacy lies in its ability to gather people across time. When a building is designed with reverence for past inhabitants and future generations, it becomes a vessel for intergenerational connection. The courtyard that hosted prayer centuries ago still gathers families today; the threshold worn smooth by countless feet testifies to belonging. This concept asks architects to consider: Does this building welcome the child not yet born? Does it honor those who came before? Architecture as legacy means creating spaces that naturally invite humans to gather, remember, and continue their stories. Buildings that facilitate belonging across generations transcend their physical form to become anchors of identity and community continuity.
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