Build spaces that practice Rabia's unconditional welcome, creating architecture that makes strangers feel at home without requiring them to prove their worth.
Rabia's love extended to all beings without discrimination or condition. Radical Hospitality in architecture means designing spaces that welcome the unknown person, the marginal person, the person who doesn't belong to the intended community. This requires genuine thoughtfulness: entrances that don't intimidate, wayfinding that assumes no prior knowledge, spaces designed with humility about whose perspective shaped them. It means corridors that allow people to move through without feeling surveilled, restrooms that meet basic dignity needs, water fountains that function reliably. It means asking whose comfort was designed for and whose was assumed or neglected. Radical hospitality also means aesthetic hospitality—designing beauty that is accessible, not elite. A building with radical hospitality teaches inhabitants that generosity toward strangers is fundamental to community survival. This becomes legacy when people remember a place not for its exclusivity but for how it made them feel seen and welcomed despite their difference.
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