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StarCitizen:Asharianism

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Revision as of 04:02, 29 January 2026 by imported>TheBookfinder (cat)
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Asharianism is an architectural sub movement of Ultra Modern Internationalism/Globalism, it is actually a new approach on geoplanning, it was proposed by StarCitizen:CJ Ashari in the 24th century and chosen by Terra's colonial government after the colonization of the planet as the guiding principle for future development. It is based on meticulous planning on a planetary scale with centuries in mind.

History

Terraforming in Croshaw was underway when another system named Rhetor was discovered. While the puplic's eye was turned towards a yet another brand new star system to inhabit, aesthetic development of structure was experiencing a period of 'writer's block' or what architectural journalist Peter Borne called "The Dark Age of the Eye". Buildings fell back into a very familiar form of International Modernism. Built for volume with clean lines and an almost sterile lack of ornamentation, to many it felt like a retread of a forgotten age, the return of bland government buildings. Little did they know how right they would be. In 2380, in response to a flurry of new jump point discoveries, the governments of Earth came together to form the StarCitizen:United Nations of Earth. The public's attention was firmly captured by the thought of expansion, not architecture.

Despite this perceived artistic stagnation, one unique and interesting movement started on Mars. Architectural engineer StarCitizen:CJ Ashari wrote a treatise for the StarCitizen:Martian Urban Planning Committee entitled "Space and the need for GeoDesign". Less a design approach and more of an overall approach to urban planning of at a planetary scale, she described the unique opportunity Humanity is in and the decision to […] of Earth. She outlined a system to access construction on newly terraformed planets not for tomorrow, but with centuries, even millennia in mind. She stressed that only through strict calculation and assessment of planets, could they create harmonic environments, rather than the "always be buiding" approach used by Earth. Rejected by many due to its very rigid approach to geoplanning Asharianism (as it came to be known) found a resurgence when it was cited as one of the guiding principles on Terra.

References