Visão geral

🏛️ RTT Facilities — Design Governance Charter

Authority, Stewardship, and Semantic Integrity

This charter defines the governance structure for the RTT Facilities design system.

Its purpose is to ensure that design decisions:

  • Preserve semantic clarity
  • Support infrastructure governance
  • Scale across domains and audiences
  • Remain coherent over time

Design is treated as a governance surface, not a styling layer.


1. Scope of Governance#

This charter governs all design artifacts within the RTT Facilities ecosystem, including:

  • Dashboards and indices
  • City‑facing materials
  • Internal tools and reports
  • Domain extensions (e.g., RTT‑AGERI)
  • Shared component libraries

Any artifact that communicates Facilities meaning is in scope.


2. Design System Authority#

The RTT Facilities design system is canonical.

  • It defines approved components, patterns, and semantics
  • Local variations must inherit from canonical definitions
  • Ad‑hoc or undocumented components are prohibited

Design authority exists to preserve clarity, trust, and continuity.


3. Stewardship Model#

Design System Steward#

A designated Design System Steward is responsible for:

  • Reviewing component proposals
  • Enforcing naming conventions
  • Preventing duplication and drift
  • Approving canonical changes
  • Maintaining documentation integrity

Stewardship is a curation role, not a gatekeeping function.


4. Decision Principles#

All design decisions must satisfy the following principles:

  • Semantic First — meaning precedes appearance
  • Governance Aligned — supports decision‑making
  • Audience Aware — complexity is gated appropriately
  • Explainable — visuals clarify, not obscure
  • Durable — survives redesigns and tooling changes

If a design choice violates these principles, it must be revised.


5. Component Governance#

All components must:

  • Be proposed via the Component Proposal Form
  • Pass the Component Creation Checklist
  • Follow the Component Naming Convention
  • Map to the Global Index Schema
  • Be reviewed before inclusion

Unreviewed components must not ship.


6. Change Management#

Canonical Changes#

Changes to canonical components or patterns require:

  • Documented rationale
  • Steward review
  • Version annotation

Breaking changes are treated as governance events, not refactors.


7. Domain Extensions#

Domain‑specific design extensions (e.g., AGERI):

  • Must inherit core Facilities semantics
  • May add fields or components without redefining meaning
  • Are reviewed for alignment and clarity

Extensions expand the system without fragmenting it.


8. Accessibility & Inclusion#

Accessibility is a non‑negotiable governance requirement.

All design artifacts must:

  • Meet contrast and legibility standards
  • Avoid color‑only signaling
  • Support assistive technologies
  • Minimize non‑essential motion

Accessibility failures are governance failures.


9. Review & Audit#

Design governance includes periodic review:

  • Component library audits
  • Naming consistency checks
  • Schema alignment verification
  • Drift detection

Design audits preserve institutional memory.


10. Enforcement & Exceptions#

Exceptions to this charter:

  • Must be explicitly documented
  • Are time‑bound
  • Require steward approval

Silent exceptions are prohibited.


11. Canonical Status#

This Design Governance Charter is canonical.

All RTT Facilities design work must align with its principles.

This is exactly how serious systems remain legible, trustworthy, and intact over decades.

Updated