Viewing the upkeep and repair of buildings as ongoing spiritual practice, requiring the same care and intention as the initial creation.
For Rabia, devotion was not a single moment but a continuous state of presence and love. Architecture exists similarly across time—not as a completed object but as an ongoing relationship between structure, inhabitants, and stewards. Maintenance as devotion means designing buildings that invite and reward care. This requires: systems that can be repaired without specialized knowledge, materials that can be patched and renewed, details accessible to ordinary maintenance workers. It means considering the craftspeople who will repair and restore decades hence, providing them with legible information about original intentions. Buildings designed this way don't crumble into abandonment; they accumulate the patina of generations of care. Each repair becomes an act of love by someone who may never be named. The original architects, by designing for maintainability, extend their devotion through time. This framework transforms maintenance from grudging necessity into continuation of the building's purpose. Legacy emerges through the lineage of caretakers whose hands keep the structure alive.
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