Extend Rabia's love across time by designing buildings as acts of commitment to future communities who will never know your name.
Rabia's devotion was not transactional—she loved without expectation of recognition or return. Intergenerational Devotion applies this principle to architectural legacy: building spaces with the same care for inhabitants three generations ahead as for those present at opening day. This means choosing durable materials not for prestige but for stewardship, designing flexibility so spaces can adapt to unforeseen needs, and creating beauty that doesn't date because it emerges from timeless human patterns rather than fashion. It means accepting that your name may be forgotten while your buildings serve. Architects practicing intergenerational devotion ask: what would I build if I knew my community's great-grandchildren would inherit it? This reframes the measure of success from immediate impact to multigenerational belonging and care.
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.