Governance & Succession

Constitutional Governance

Governance within the Institution is established under Charter.

The Charter defines the conditions under which land, architecture, and authority operate as ordered domain.

It precedes development, occupation, and capital participation.

Governance is not improvised.
It is fixed in advance.

Charter Structure

The Charter establishes:

• Constitution of the Institutional Seat
• Delineation of the Territorial Domain
• Mandate of Principal Offices
• Architectural discipline
• Succession procedure
• Amendment conditions


Foundational provisions governing territorial integrity and architectural order are protected from ordinary alteration.

Authority is distributed across defined Offices to preserve structural balance.

Structural Authority

Authority under Charter is exercised through defined Principal Offices:

• Institutional Authority
• Architectural Order
• Territorial Governance

Each Office holds distinct constitutional mandate.

No single Office may unilaterally alter the foundational provisions governing:

• Constitution of the Institutional Seat
• Territorial integrity
• Architectural discipline

Authority resides in the Office, not in the individual who holds it.

Protection of the Institutional Seat

The Institutional Seat is designated under Charter as the permanent territorial anchor of the Domain.

Its role is not subject to subdivision, speculative disposition, or unilateral alteration.

The Charter fixes its status prior to expansion and preserves it across succession.

Amendment and Stability

The Charter establishes defined procedures for amendment.

  • Foundational provisions governing territorial constitution and architectural order are protected from ordinary change.
  • Stability precedes adaptation.

    Change, where permitted, occurs within the Charter.

    Succession

    Succession is established under Charter from inception.

    Principal Offices are structured to persist beyond individual tenure.

    Transition in officeholder does not alter:

    • Jurisdiction of the Domain
    • Classification of land
    • Architectural discipline
    • The status of the Institutional Seat

    Authority resides in the Office, not in the individual.

    The territorial order remains intact across generational transition.