Territorial Domain §

Definition

The Territorial Domain defines the land and spatial systems constituted under Charter.

Upon constitution of an Institutional Seat, designated land is bound as Institutional Domain and ordered within a defined territorial framework.

The Domain is structured through two classifications: Institutional Seat and Structured Land.

Institutional Seat

The Institutional Seat comprises the designated land and built form that establish the permanent territorial anchor of the Domain.

It is fixed as the structural ground of continuity.

Land constituted as Institutional Seat is protected from fragmentation and is not subject to speculative disposition.

Structured Land

Structured Land may support infrastructure, programmatic development, and aligned capital activity within the framework established by the Institutional Seat.

Structured Land operates in alignment with the Seat and shall not alter the foundational conditions established therein.

Expansion of the Domain may occur only where territorial coherence and Charter conditions are preserved.

Integrity of Domain

The distinction between Institutional Seat and Structured Land remains stable across succession.

No act within the Domain may alter the structural continuity established in the Institutional Seat.