Territorial Order §

Definition

Territorial Order establishes the structured organization of land within institutional jurisdiction.

It governs the spatial hierarchy, boundary discipline, and relational coherence of built and unbuilt ground under chartered conditions.

Spatial Structure

Land held under jurisdiction is ordered as coherent domain.

Territorial Order defines:

• boundary and extent
• hierarchy of access and movement
• relation of built form to open ground
• spatial sequence and enclosure

These conditions secure continuity of structure across occupation and adaptation.

Expansion and Integration

Where development or extension occurs, it proceeds within established territorial hierarchy.

Growth may reinforce order but may not fragment it.

No alteration of boundary, access, or structural relation may occur in contravention of chartered territorial conditions.

Continuity

Territorial Order maintains coherence of domain irrespective of subdivision, change in stewardship, or modification of use.

Spatial hierarchy persists as fixed condition of jurisdiction.

Condition

Where Territorial Order is upheld, land remains structured, legible, and continuous as institutional domain.

Territory sustains vitality without loss of order.