1. ArchDaily
  2. Architecture

Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces Participants and Opening Dates for Third Edition

The third edition of the Sharjah Architecture Triennial (SAT03) will take place from November 14, 2026, to April 14, 2027, under the title Architecture Otherwise: Building Civic Infrastructure for Collective Futures. Curated by anthropologist and curator Vyjayanthi Rao, with Tau Tavengwa serving as Associate Curator, the exhibition will bring together 32 participants working across architecture, anthropology, urbanism, art, design, education, and community-based practices. Opening to the public on November 14, the Triennial will unfold through installations, films, archives, workshops, performances, and public programs distributed across Sharjah, positioning the city itself as a site for dialogue and engagement.

Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces Participants and Opening Dates for Third Edition - Imagen 1 de 4Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces Participants and Opening Dates for Third Edition - Imagen 2 de 4Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces Participants and Opening Dates for Third Edition - Imagen 3 de 4Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces Participants and Opening Dates for Third Edition - Imagen 4 de 4Sharjah Architecture Triennial Announces Participants and Opening Dates for Third Edition - More Images+ 8

CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Park Associati Led Team Selected to Redesign Brescia's Spedali Civili Hospital Campus in Italy

The project developed by CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati, Park Associati, Politecnica Building for Humans, Openfabric, DOTDOTDOT, Studio Mattioli, and Eckersley O'Callaghan has been selected to design the new Main Hospital and Children's Hospital in Brescia, Italy. The international competition mandate was to redevelop an existing hospital, preserving and extending a radial plan conceived by engineer Angelo Bordoni in the early twentieth century. The existing healthcare complex, Spedali Civili di Brescia, follows a hexagonal masterplan and radial layout that informs the new design for the premises. The geometry is reinterpreted to update the campus for future models of care, drawing a new CareRing around it that connects people, nature, and healthcare through the principles of One Health, the idea that human health, environmental health, and social wellbeing are inseparable.

CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Park Associati Led Team Selected to Redesign Brescia's Spedali Civili Hospital Campus in Italy - Image 1 of 4CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Park Associati Led Team Selected to Redesign Brescia's Spedali Civili Hospital Campus in Italy - Image 2 of 4CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Park Associati Led Team Selected to Redesign Brescia's Spedali Civili Hospital Campus in Italy - Image 3 of 4CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Park Associati Led Team Selected to Redesign Brescia's Spedali Civili Hospital Campus in Italy - Image 4 of 4CRA-Carlo Ratti Associati and Park Associati Led Team Selected to Redesign Brescia's Spedali Civili Hospital Campus in Italy - More Images+ 9

Mexico City Architecture City Guide: 38 Projects From Tenochtitlan to the 21st Century

Subscriber Access | 

Mexico City is a sprawling metropolis of layered temporalities, where architecture operates as a continuous negotiation between deep-seated history and intense urban mutation. Built over the aquatic traces of Tenochtitlan, the city's fabric is an ongoing dialogue between eras: the monumental scale of the Pre-Hispanic Templo Mayor and the Viceroyalty architecture of the Catedral Metropolitana coexist with the modern and contemporary impulses that define its skyline. This dense juxtaposition creates a unique urban canvas where sacred geography, colonial imposition, and 20th-century ambition intersect.

The mid-century marked a definitive era of experimentation, forging a Mexican Modernism that masterfully synthesized international structural rationalism with local identity and materiality. This synthesis is epitomized by the sweeping, plastic integration of art and architecture at the Ciudad Universitaria, the structural poetry of Félix Candela's hyper-parabolic shells, and the raw, monumental brutalism of Teodoro González de León and Abraham Zabludovsky. Parallel to this, the intimate, introspective mastery of Luis Barragán and Juan O'Gorman redefined domestic space, experimenting with light, vernacular color, and tectonic honesty to create spaces of profound spatial stillness.

Mexico City Architecture City Guide: 38 Projects From Tenochtitlan to the 21st Century - Imagen 1 de 4Mexico City Architecture City Guide: 38 Projects From Tenochtitlan to the 21st Century - Imagen 2 de 4Mexico City Architecture City Guide: 38 Projects From Tenochtitlan to the 21st Century - Imagen 3 de 4Mexico City Architecture City Guide: 38 Projects From Tenochtitlan to the 21st Century - Imagen 4 de 4Mexico City Architecture City Guide: 38 Projects From Tenochtitlan to the 21st Century - More Images+ 53

Dreaming in the Ruins: How a Sleeping Ritual in Logroño Proposes a New Civic Architecture

Subscriber Access | 

Cities are increasingly designed to mitigate risk, and by doing so, need to collect data on climate, infrastructure, biodiversity, and social fragmentation so that the language of resilience becomes a fixture of planning. Yet the underlying conditions that produce polarization, civic disengagement, and ecological breakdown often remain unquestioned. The tools that dominate urban practice tend to address only one register of human experience, while the emotional and imaginative dimensions of transformation are not treated as reliable solutions.

Philosopher Felix Guattari proposed that sustained ecological transformation depends on simultaneous attention to three distinct ecologies: the ecology of the mind, the ecology of society, and the ecology of the environment. Mainstream environmental politics tends to concentrate on one or two of the three, flattening a complex condition into a defined problem with a clear answer. Ancient rituals remind us that transformation depends on practices that simultaneously engage the body, the community, and the environment.

Dreaming in the Ruins: How a Sleeping Ritual in Logroño Proposes a New Civic Architecture - Image 1 of 4Dreaming in the Ruins: How a Sleeping Ritual in Logroño Proposes a New Civic Architecture - Image 2 of 4Dreaming in the Ruins: How a Sleeping Ritual in Logroño Proposes a New Civic Architecture - Image 3 of 4Dreaming in the Ruins: How a Sleeping Ritual in Logroño Proposes a New Civic Architecture - Image 4 of 4Dreaming in the Ruins: How a Sleeping Ritual in Logroño Proposes a New Civic Architecture - More Images+ 27

UIA World Congress 2026 and Henning Larsen's New Environmental Analysis Platform: This Week's Review

Recent events highlighted the many ways architecture responds to changing environmental, social, and cultural conditions. Major earthquakes in Venezuela, Japan, and Northern California renewed attention to the role of planning, infrastructure, and building practices in shaping resilience to natural hazards. As these questions continue to inform the built environment, the opening of the 2026 UIA World Congress of Architects in Barcelona brought together practitioners and researchers to discuss climate, housing, public space, and the future of the profession. Recent project announcements, preservation initiatives, completed works, and new design tools further reflected the range of approaches shaping architectural practice today, from heritage conservation and adaptive reuse to environmental performance and long-term planning.

UIA World Congress 2026 and Henning Larsen's New Environmental Analysis Platform: This Week's Review - Image 1 of 4UIA World Congress 2026 and Henning Larsen's New Environmental Analysis Platform: This Week's Review - Image 2 of 4UIA World Congress 2026 and Henning Larsen's New Environmental Analysis Platform: This Week's Review - Image 3 of 4UIA World Congress 2026 and Henning Larsen's New Environmental Analysis Platform: This Week's Review - Image 4 of 4UIA World Congress 2026 and Henning Larsen's New Environmental Analysis Platform: This Week's Review - More Images+ 4

15th São Paulo Architecture Biennial Names Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as Chief Curators for 2027

The 15th São Paulo International Architecture Biennial (BIAsp), scheduled to take place in September and October 2027, announced architects Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as the event's chief curators. Following the previous edition on the theme Extremes: Architectures for a Hot World, the duo is expected to bring critical perspectives on architecture, culture, and the city to bear on the theme Architecture, Culture, and Sovereignty. Their role is to direct the conceptual development of the Biennial, assemble a curatorial team, and run a public call for co-curators.

15th São Paulo Architecture Biennial Names Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as Chief Curators for 2027 - Image 1 of 415th São Paulo Architecture Biennial Names Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as Chief Curators for 2027 - Image 2 of 415th São Paulo Architecture Biennial Names Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as Chief Curators for 2027 - Image 3 of 415th São Paulo Architecture Biennial Names Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as Chief Curators for 2027 - Image 4 of 415th São Paulo Architecture Biennial Names Gabriela de Matos and Pedro Rossi as Chief Curators for 2027 - More Images

Architectures of Movement: ArchDaily's July Editorial Focus

Every twelve years, the banks of the Ganges at Prayagraj become one of the largest cities on Earth — and then disappear. The Maha Kumbh Mela draws over 400 million pilgrims across six weeks, requiring the construction of a full urban infrastructure: pontoon bridges, field hospitals, kilometers of temporary roads, a grid of tent cities visible from space. When the festival ends, it is dismantled entirely. No gathering in human history produces a more complete architecture of movement; built for arrival, engineered for transience, and designed to leave no permanent trace. The Kumbh Mela is exceptional in scale, but not in condition: movement has become a defining spatial problem of the century.

This month, ArchDaily explores Architectures of Movement: Land, Borders, and the Politics of Belonging, a theme that examines how mobility reshapes architecture's relationship to territory, ownership, and identity. The topic does not treat movement as a crisis to be managed, but as a fundamental lens through which to reconsider what buildings, cities, and borders actually do: who they accommodate, who they exclude, and what they make permanent.

Architectures of Movement: ArchDaily's July Editorial Focus - Image 1 of 4Architectures of Movement: ArchDaily's July Editorial Focus - Image 2 of 4Architectures of Movement: ArchDaily's July Editorial Focus - Image 3 of 4Architectures of Movement: ArchDaily's July Editorial Focus - Image 4 of 4Architectures of Movement: ArchDaily's July Editorial Focus - More Images+ 4

Eduardo Souto de Moura Receives UIA Gold Medal at Ceremony Held in Sagrada Família, Barcelona

On June 30, 2026, Portuguese architect Eduardo Souto de Moura received the 2026 UIA Gold Medal, the highest distinction awarded by the International Union of Architects, during a ceremony held at the Basílica de la Sagrada Família in Barcelona. Presented as part of the 2026 UIA World Congress of Architects, taking place from June 28 to July 2, the award recognizes Souto de Moura's sustained contribution to architecture through a body of work defined by contextual sensitivity, material precision, and a lasting influence on contemporary architectural culture.

Eduardo Souto de Moura Receives UIA Gold Medal at Ceremony Held in Sagrada Família, Barcelona - Image 1 of 4Eduardo Souto de Moura Receives UIA Gold Medal at Ceremony Held in Sagrada Família, Barcelona - Image 2 of 4Eduardo Souto de Moura Receives UIA Gold Medal at Ceremony Held in Sagrada Família, Barcelona - Image 3 of 4Eduardo Souto de Moura Receives UIA Gold Medal at Ceremony Held in Sagrada Família, Barcelona - Image 4 of 4Eduardo Souto de Moura Receives UIA Gold Medal at Ceremony Held in Sagrada Família, Barcelona - More Images+ 3

World Monuments Fund Names 10 "Irreplaceable America" Sites for the 250th Anniversary of the United States Independence

On the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the United States' Declaration of Independence, the World Monuments Fund has announced a new list of ten heritage places representing the country's history. The special initiative, titled "Irreplaceable America," recognizes historic places across the country whose preservation is considered "essential to the richness and complexity of American history," spotlighting urgent preservation needs. From the oldest botanical garden in the country to I.M. Pei's modernist Dallas City Hall, the selected sites bear witness to Indigenous heritage, artistic experimentation, and public health, colonial, and Black history.

World Monuments Fund Names 10 "Irreplaceable America" Sites for the 250th Anniversary of the United States Independence - Image 1 of 4World Monuments Fund Names 10 "Irreplaceable America" Sites for the 250th Anniversary of the United States Independence - Image 2 of 4World Monuments Fund Names 10 "Irreplaceable America" Sites for the 250th Anniversary of the United States Independence - Image 3 of 4World Monuments Fund Names 10 "Irreplaceable America" Sites for the 250th Anniversary of the United States Independence - Image 4 of 4World Monuments Fund Names 10 Irreplaceable America Sites for the 250th Anniversary of the United States Independence - More Images+ 9

What Can Architectural Practice Learn From Botany?

While human life depends heavily on plants for the medicines, building materials, and fuel they provide, they also play a vital role in many ecological processes. From climate regulation through carbon dioxide absorption to soil fertility and the purification of air and water, plant diversity offers opportunities to address some of the most pressing challenges of this century, including food security, energy availability, climate change, and habitat degradation. In this context, botanical gardens act as living refuges that foster innovation, adaptation, and human resilience. But what can architectural practice learn from botany and its methods?

What Can Architectural Practice Learn From Botany? - Image 1 of 4What Can Architectural Practice Learn From Botany? - Image 2 of 4What Can Architectural Practice Learn From Botany? - Image 3 of 4What Can Architectural Practice Learn From Botany? - Image 4 of 4What Can Architectural Practice Learn From Botany? - More Images+ 12

“What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals?” Explores the Fundació Mies van der Rohe Archive in Barcelona

The exhibition What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals? is on view at the Palau Victòria Eugènia in Barcelona from May 11 to July 5, 2026. Organized by the Fundació Mies van der Rohe and curated by Anna Sala and Ivan Blasi, the exhibition presents the institution's archive through a new curatorial framework, bringing together architectural models, drawings, documents, films, and records of artistic interventions that have taken place at the Barcelona Pavilion since 1986. Open daily with free admission, the exhibition invites visitors to engage with the archive as both a historical collection and an evolving record of architectural discourse.

“What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals?” Explores the Fundació Mies van der Rohe Archive in Barcelona - Imagen 1 de 4“What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals?” Explores the Fundació Mies van der Rohe Archive in Barcelona - Imagen 2 de 4“What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals?” Explores the Fundació Mies van der Rohe Archive in Barcelona - Imagen 3 de 4“What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals?” Explores the Fundació Mies van der Rohe Archive in Barcelona - Imagen 4 de 4“What is This? A Spa, a Gym, a Zoo for Tiny Animals?” Explores the Fundació Mies van der Rohe Archive in Barcelona - More Images

BIG Reveals New Images of the National Juneteenth Museum Ahead of Construction in Fort Worth, Texas

Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) has unveiled new images of the National Juneteenth Museum, offering a closer look at the design of the 72,000-square-foot institution planned for Fort Worth, Texas. Designed in collaboration with Alligood Song Architecture and architect of record KAI Enterprises, the project is scheduled to begin construction in fall 2026 and will serve as a national center dedicated to preserving the history and legacy of Juneteenth. Led by activist Dr. Opal Lee, widely recognized as the "Grandmother of Juneteenth," the museum combines exhibition spaces with community-oriented programs intended to support both cultural preservation and neighborhood revitalization.

BIG Reveals New Images of the National Juneteenth Museum Ahead of Construction in Fort Worth, Texas - 1 的图像 4BIG Reveals New Images of the National Juneteenth Museum Ahead of Construction in Fort Worth, Texas - 2 的图像 4BIG Reveals New Images of the National Juneteenth Museum Ahead of Construction in Fort Worth, Texas - 3 的图像 4BIG Reveals New Images of the National Juneteenth Museum Ahead of Construction in Fort Worth, Texas - 4 的图像 4BIG Reveals New Images of the National Juneteenth Museum Ahead of Construction in Fort Worth, Texas - More Images+ 26

UIA World Congress of Architecture 2026 Opens in Barcelona Under the Theme "Architectures for a Planet in Transition"

The UIA 2026, the 29th edition of the triennial international event for architectural dialogue organised by the International Union of Architects, has opened its doors on Sunday, June 28th, with an inaugural event held at Three Chimneys, a former power plant in Sant Adrià de Besòs. Each Congress focuses on a pressing topic relevant to the profession, articulated through a central theme. The topic for 2026 is "Becoming. Architectures for a Planet in Transition," calling for a broad and critical overview of the possible futures of architecture. The event runs through July 2, 2026, as a distributed event across multiple venues and urban contexts. With a multidisciplinary approach, Barcelona, the UNESCO World Capital of Architecture 2026, is set to become a global laboratory and hub for debating forthcoming ecological, social, material, and cultural transitions.

Three decades after it first hosted the event, Barcelona once again becomes the host of the global disciplinary debate. The UIA World Congress of Architects 2026 Barcelona aims to bring together 10,000 professionals, students, and institutional representatives from more than 130 countries. Discussions address topics such as the climate emergency, the housing crisis, the circularity and sustainability of materials, and the evolution of public space at large and small scales, as well as more specific topics such as the future role and responsibility of architectural awards or conferences dedicated to the DANA floods in Valencia. The daily program will be marked by two plenary sessions each day, at the start (09:00) and at the end (16:45).

UIA World Congress of Architecture 2026 Opens in Barcelona Under the Theme "Architectures for a Planet in Transition" - Imagen 1 de 4UIA World Congress of Architecture 2026 Opens in Barcelona Under the Theme "Architectures for a Planet in Transition" - Imagen 2 de 4UIA World Congress of Architecture 2026 Opens in Barcelona Under the Theme "Architectures for a Planet in Transition" - Imagen 3 de 4UIA World Congress of Architecture 2026 Opens in Barcelona Under the Theme "Architectures for a Planet in Transition" - Imagen 4 de 4UIA World Congress of Architecture 2026 Opens in Barcelona Under the Theme Architectures for a Planet in Transition - More Images+ 32

Pedagogy in Space: Architecture Schools' Hidden Curriculum

Subscriber Access | 

This article is part of our new Opinion section, a format for argument-driven essays on critical questions shaping our field.

Before architecture students become authors of space, they are subjected to one. For years, they work inside a building that teaches without announcing itself as a teacher. It organizes their exhaustion, their ambition, their visibility, their solitude, their friendships, their sense of scale, and their relationship to judgment. Long before a student can articulate a position on architecture, the school has already offered one in its implicit built environment.

This is not to suggest that buildings determine architects. The influence is slower and less complete than that. A school building operates more like a hidden curriculum: a spatial discipline that works alongside faculty, syllabi, institutional culture, and student life. It teaches through access and obstruction, program adjacencies, daylight exposures, and scale. It produces habits of attention before it produces explicit beliefs.

Pedagogy in Space: Architecture Schools' Hidden Curriculum - Image 1 of 4Pedagogy in Space: Architecture Schools' Hidden Curriculum - Image 2 of 4Pedagogy in Space: Architecture Schools' Hidden Curriculum - Image 3 of 4Pedagogy in Space: Architecture Schools' Hidden Curriculum - Image 4 of 4Pedagogy in Space: Architecture Schools' Hidden Curriculum - More Images+ 36

Building Public Life: How Bogotá and Mexico City Addressed Urban Inequality

Subscriber Access | 

In many Latin American cities, peripheral neighborhoods have historically had less access to the resources that make urban life more than just livable. Housing, transportation, and public services are the usual markers of that gap. But there is another gap that is harder to quantify: the absence of places where people can gather, learn, rest, and participate in collective life. When those spaces do not exist, the city not only fails to provide a service. It fails to acknowledge a presence.

In recent decades, a growing number of projects have tried to address that absence directly. Rather than focusing only on physical infrastructure, they invest in spaces designed to support education, culture, recreation, and community, often merging several of those functions within a single building in neighborhoods where those spaces are otherwise limited.

Building Public Life: How Bogotá and Mexico City Addressed Urban Inequality - Imagen 1 de 4Building Public Life: How Bogotá and Mexico City Addressed Urban Inequality - Imagen 2 de 4Building Public Life: How Bogotá and Mexico City Addressed Urban Inequality - Imagen 3 de 4Building Public Life: How Bogotá and Mexico City Addressed Urban Inequality - Featured ImageBuilding Public Life: How Bogotá and Mexico City Addressed Urban Inequality - More Images+ 19

Rewilding the City: 6 Unbuilt Projects from the ArchDaily Community

In the current context of rapid urban environmental changes, such as heatwaves and droughts, new priorities are emerging in the design of public spaces. "Rewilding" refers to the practice of restoring self-sustaining ecosystems through the reintroduction of biodiversity, implementing strategies to reverse the effects of habitat loss, species decline, and ecosystem degradation. These strategies can be identified in this selection of conceptual projects submitted by ArchDaily readers, where architecture is used as a tool to restore ecological balance among species, inverting its modern role as an agent of ecological disruption.

Faced with the reality that climate change is making cities increasingly unlivable, citizens are confronted with the choice of either leaving or transforming their environments. The unbuilt projects compiled in this article offer transformative alternatives for more livable cities, combining construction, architectural, and landscape design strategies across urban parks and suburban interstitial spaces. As ecological laboratories, they incorporate a multispecies perspective into the design process, adopting a concept of time better suited to the development of ecosystems.

Rewilding the City: 6 Unbuilt Projects from the ArchDaily Community - Image 1 of 4Rewilding the City: 6 Unbuilt Projects from the ArchDaily Community - Image 2 of 4Rewilding the City: 6 Unbuilt Projects from the ArchDaily Community - Image 3 of 4Rewilding the City: 6 Unbuilt Projects from the ArchDaily Community - Image 4 of 4Rewilding the City: 6 Unbuilt Projects from the ArchDaily Community - More Images+ 89

One Day, Four Earthquakes: What Seismic Resilience Reveals About the Built Environment

Within a 36-hour window between June 24 and June 25, four significant earthquakes struck three different regions of the world. A magnitude 7.2 earthquake shook Japan's northeastern coast, a magnitude 5.6 event was recorded in Northern California, and two major earthquakes measuring magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5 occurred just 39 seconds apart along Venezuela's northern coast. Although their close timing prompted speculation online, seismologists confirmed that the events were unrelated, occurring independently along different tectonic plate boundaries.

One Day, Four Earthquakes: What Seismic Resilience Reveals About the Built Environment - Image 1 of 4One Day, Four Earthquakes: What Seismic Resilience Reveals About the Built Environment - Image 2 of 4One Day, Four Earthquakes: What Seismic Resilience Reveals About the Built Environment - Image 3 of 4One Day, Four Earthquakes: What Seismic Resilience Reveals About the Built Environment - Image 4 of 4One Day, Four Earthquakes: What Seismic Resilience Reveals About the Built Environment - More Images

Representation as Argument: Lyndon Neri on What Juries Look for in Architecture Competitions

Subscriber Access | 

In an industry defined by building codes, climate urgency, and the pressures of the real estate market, the architectural competition has quietly become one of the discipline's most generative spaces. Unburdened by budgets, clients, or city regulations, competition entries allow architects to think at the edge of what the built environment could be, and increasingly, that speculative work is being taken seriously as a cultural and intellectual contribution in its own right. Buildner's Unbuilt Award, now in its second edition, is one of those efforts, by treating the unbuilt project as a platform for architects and designers to share concepts that challenge boundaries and inspire future possibilities. In this way, competitions like this allow architecture professionals and students to showcase ideas and visions that, even without being constructed, reflect the spirit of exploration and ingenuity in architecture.

Representation as Argument: Lyndon Neri on What Juries Look for in Architecture Competitions - 1 的图像 4Representation as Argument: Lyndon Neri on What Juries Look for in Architecture Competitions - 3 的图像 4Representation as Argument: Lyndon Neri on What Juries Look for in Architecture Competitions - 2 的图像 4Representation as Argument: Lyndon Neri on What Juries Look for in Architecture Competitions - 4 的图像 4Representation as Argument: Lyndon Neri on What Juries Look for in Architecture Competitions - More Images+ 7