An Honor District
The Founders District
Cities remember their earliest builders. The first businesses on Main Street, the first homes in a neighborhood, the first churches in a community — they matter. Blkworth preserves that history digitally, forever.
Three Permanent Classes
Founding 100 · 500 · 1,000
Founder status is earned automatically by when ownership occurs — never selected, never bought later. Once a class is filled, it is permanently closed.
Founding 100
100 of 100
Registry opens with the city · soon
Founding 500
500 of 500
Registry opens with the city · soon
Founding 1000
1000 of 1000
Registry opens with the city · soon
Founder counters go live the moment the city opens — these classes are the prepared foundation, and the registry records every claim in the order it happens.
The Overlay Model
Founder status sits on top of your property
Founder status does not replace your property — it sits on top of it, and stays part of your owner profile, ownership certificate, digital deed, property history, and Beacon records.
What Founders Receive
Permanent recognition
The Founder Certificate
A seal you keep forever
Founder Ownership Certificate
Founder #17 of 100
Ownership Date · 2026
Property · Brownstone
District · Greenwood
Class · Founding 100
Illustrative — issued at claim once the registry is live.
The Founder Wall
The earliest owners, preserved forever
The Founder Wall lists the first owners by number, business, address, district, date, and property type — browsable across Founding 100, 500, and 1,000.
The first inscription is still unwritten.
The wall fills from the registry as the city's first owners claim their places — recorded forever, in the order it happened.
Live from the city registry — first owners by publish order, privacy honored, ordinals never renumbered.
Why Founders Matter
Twenty years from now, this is where it started
The Founders District ensures the earliest contributions are never forgotten. Decades from now, the first owners should be recognized as the original builders of the city. This is about legacy and participation — not speculation.
