Intentional design of doorways, courtyards, and passages that mark psychological and spiritual transitions, helping inhabitants consciously shift between states of being.
Rabia's devotional practice involved deep transitions between worldly engagement and spiritual absorption. Architecture can facilitate these transitions through deliberate thresholds. Rather than uninterrupted flow, spaces are separated by doors, courtyards, gardens, and passageways that signal a change in consciousness. Entering a sanctuary, crossing a bridge, ascending steps, or moving from noise to silence—these moments prepare the spirit. This concept applies beyond religious buildings: transitions between work and rest, between public and private, between chaos and contemplation. A legacy rooted in threshold design acknowledges that human beings need ceremonial passages, moments to shed one identity and assume another. Material choices matter: a change in flooring, a shift in ceiling height, a moment in shadow before entering light. These small intentional breaks become your building's teaching about transformation and renewal.
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