đ§± RTT Facilities â Domain Specification
Canonical Substrate Definition
This document defines the RTT Facilities domain as a shared substrate for all facilitiesârelated initiatives, including domainâspecific extensions such as RTTâAGERI.
It is grounded in the original RTT Facilities Playbook capture and serves as the authoritative reference for scope, lifecycle, governance, and crossâsystem integration.
1. Domain Definition#
Facilities are the physical, operational, and communicative systems that enable cities and regions to function safely, reliably, and continuously.
RTT Facilities treats infrastructure as living systems, governed across:
- Asset classes
- Lifecycle phases
- Risk and failure modes
- Capital timing
- Governance and accountability
- Multiâaudience communication
Facilities work is inherently crossâsystem and longâhorizon.
2. Asset Classes#
The Facilities domain encompasses, but is not limited to:
- Electrical infrastructure (aboveâground and underground)
- Water systems
- Wastewater systems
- Transportation corridors
- Communications infrastructure
- Public buildings
- Emergency and resilience systems
Each asset class may have one or more domainâspecific initiatives (e.g., RTTâAGERI for aboveâground electrical systems).
3. Lifecycle Framework#
Facilities are governed across the full lifecycle:
- Design
- Construction
- Operation
- Maintenance
- Modernization
- Decommissioning
Scoring, audits, and interventions may occur at any lifecycle phase, but modernization decisions are explicitly aligned with capital timing cycles.
4. Risk, Failure, and Propagation#
Facilities governance explicitly accounts for:
- Asset degradation and drift
- Environmental and climate stressors
- Human and operational factors
- Failure modes and cascading failures
- Crossâsystem propagation (e.g., electrical â water â emergency response)
Domainâspecific initiatives may model propagation internally, but crossâsystem propagation is governed at the Facilities level.
5. Governance Model#
Facilities governance operates across multiple layers:
- GHQ â global standards, scoring systems, audits, indices
- Cities â implementation, operations, capital planning
- Operators & Contractors â maintenance and modernization execution
- Residents â safety, awareness, and public trust
Governance artifacts include:
- Constitutions and charters
- Audit protocols
- Escalation pathways
- Capital and accountability integration
Facilities governance prioritizes early detection, transparent decisionâmaking, and public accountability.
6. Capital Timing & Modernization#
Facilities modernization is aligned with:
- 10âyear tactical cycles
- 20âyear strategic cycles
- 50âyear generational cycles
Scoring systems and audits inform when and where capital is deployed, replacing reactive maintenance with governed modernization.
7. Audience Segmentation#
Facilities documentation is intentionally segmented by audience:
- GHQ
- City leadership and operators
- Contractors and maintenance teams
- Residents and the public
Each audience receives purposeâbuilt artifacts to prevent scope bleed and maintain clarity.
8. Domain Extensions#
Domainâspecific initiatives live within the Facilities framework and inherit its lifecycle, governance, and capital logic.
Examples include:
- RTTâAGERI â AboveâGround Electrical Resilience Initiative
Domain extensions must:
- Reference this Facilities spec
- Avoid redefining shared concepts
- Provide domainâspecific scoring, standards, and guidance
9. Canonical Status#
This document is canonical.
Changes should be rare, deliberate, and coordinated with GHQ governance.
Domainâspecific documents should reference this spec rather than duplicating it.