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Why does one doorway feel like an invitation to step carefully, while another is just an opening in a wall? Why do some rooms carry a hush even when they are full? This book explores how sacred architecture quietly shapes spiritual experience long before a single word of prayer is spoken.
Moving from towering cathedrals to intimate courtyards and neighbourhood shrines, it shows how religious buildings design uses light, shadow and movement to express belief. You will see how spiritual space design works through thresholds, routes and focal points; how light in worship spaces can teach as much as texts; and how sacred geometry in temples and other sites encodes ideas of harmony and order. Along the way, stories of church mosque temple complexes, interfaith centres and repurposed warehouses reveal how old patterns adapt to new cities.
This is not a technical manual but a guide for anyone who has ever felt a sudden stillness in stone or wood and wondered why. It offers practical insight for those designing contemplative spaces, curating architecture of pilgrimage, or creating interfaith sacred spaces and everyday sanctuaries at home. Whether you are a designer, a person of faith, or simply someone who loves walking cities, this book will help you read the theology written in walls, windows and streets, and to notice how built forms can gently deepen attention, reverence and care.

Faith by Design

SKU: 9789375368694
$26.99 Regular Price
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  • Noor Halven writes at the meeting point of architecture, memory and spiritual life. Growing up between dense historic quarters and rapidly expanding suburbs, Noor learned early how a single dome or steeple could orient an entire neighbourhood. Years of walking cathedrals, mosques, temples and shrines have shaped a patient, observant eye for how space teaches without speech. Rather than offering technical manuals, Noor tells human-scale stories of how people inhabit sacred buildings: the caretaker sweeping before dawn, the child tracing patterns in stone, the visitor who crosses a threshold almost by accident. A thread running through this work is the conviction that heritage is not only preserved in archives but also in materials under hand and sky overhead. Noor invites readers to look again at familiar streets and distant pilgrimage sites, noticing how faith by design quietly reshapes hearts and cities.

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