Public sector organizations face growing pressure to
modernize service delivery through digitalization while ensuring
transparency, interoperability, and citizen trust. Although blockchain
technology offers promising capabilities for addressing
these challenges, the absence of clear architectural guidelines
for public sector contexts limits effective adoption. This study
proposes BRA-PS, a Blockchain Reference Architecture for Public
Sector Citizen-Centric Applications, developed from a realworld
digitalization project in Quebec, Canada. The architecture
organizes components into six layers (presentation, business,
communication, smart contract, blockchain, and data) with
cross-cutting concerns addressing governance, access control,
security, and monitoring. A key design principle is the publicprivate
workflow separation, which enables inter-organizational
collaboration while preserving each organization’s operational
autonomy and data confidentiality. We validated the architecture
through a case study involving a vehicle registration process
between two public agencies, supported by a proof-of-concept implementation
using Hyperledger Fabric. An Architecture Tradeoff
Analysis Method (ATAM) evaluation, conducted with a panel
of five domain experts, identified six architectural risks, including
IPFS confidentiality exposure and smart contract inflexibility, six
non-risks, six sensitivity points, and six trade-offs across three
key quality attributes: autonomy, collaboration, and functional
suitability. The results confirm that BRA-PS effectively guides
implementation decisions and stakeholder alignment. Practical
recommendations derived from the evaluation provide actionable
guidance for blockchain adoption in public sector services.