
Bangkok: The Latest Architecture and News
Resmile Dental Wellnss / space+craft

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Architects: space+craft
- Area: 37 m²
- Year: 2025
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Manufacturers: EDL laminates
TN House / IDIN Architects

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Architects: IDIN Architects
- Area: 640 m²
- Year: 2025
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Manufacturers: Aluzat, Lamptitude, Ligman, Luxteel
Bangsue Residence / Patara Architects

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Architects: Patara Architects
- Area: 1333 m²
- Year: 2024
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Manufacturers: APK Brick, Bangkok Inter Stone, Lamptitude, Studio Mueja, Sunflex, +1
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Professionals: Patara Architects, Chanitat, Alps, Acco
H168 House / Only Human

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Architects: Only Human
- Area: 870 m²
- Year: 2026
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Manufacturers: Louis Poulsen, Audo Copenhagen, HAY, Herman Miller
Heritage in Motion: Bangkok’s Buildings That Continue to Become

Architectural heritage is not only what a building was, but what it continues to become: a long process of building, rebuilding, and re-occupying over time. Where opportunities allow, this continuity produces a layered condition—one in which visitors can witness, experience, and feel the gradual shifting of a building's fabric, materiality, spatial order, and patterns of use, and occasionally even participate in that transformation.
Yet many projects—particularly those driven primarily by commercial imperatives—do not choose to value, or even to recognize, this slower work of adaptive reuse and heritage continuation. Developments governed by a numbers-only logic often opt for the easier path of demolition and rebuild: maximizing plot ratio, GFA, and rentable area with the efficiency of a clean slate. And still, every now and then, an opportunity surfaces that allows us to see—and to enjoy—the city's process of architectural "heritaging" in real time.
Heritage Transformations, New Capital Cities, and Residential Innovations: This Week’s Review

This week's news landscape brought together diverse approaches to built and cultural heritage, ranging from the design of a Museum of Jesus' Baptism at a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Jordan to major transformations of modern industrial sites and the development of major cultural districts. The World Monuments Fund's support for 21 locally led heritage projects foregrounds conservation strategies that reinforce the role of architecture in safeguarding both material and intangible heritage. Across this week's highlighted projects, adaptive reuse, landscape integration, and the reconfiguration of civic space emerge as recurrent strategies for extending the life and relevance of existing built environments. The projects also reflect broader contemporary concerns, including material research in timber construction, zero-waste urban installations, large-scale residential efficiency, and infrastructure upgrades linked to global events like the Olympic Games. Framing these developments within a wider territorial perspective, discussions on relocating capital cities worldwide offer an example of how geopolitical discourses continue to shape architecture, revealing the evolving relationship between the built environment and structures of power over time.
Axis of Growth House / Elemental Living

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Interior Designers: Elemental Living
- Area: 1200 m²
- Year: 2025
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Manufacturers: Champaca, Flos, Kohler, L&E, Studio Italia Design - Lodes, +3
Projecting Future Heritage: A Hong Kong Archive 未來傳承:傳承未來

"Projecting Future Heritage: A Hong Kong Archive," one of the Roving Architecture Exhibitions organized by The Hong Kong Institute of Architects Biennale Foundation under the sponsorship of the Cultural and Creative Industries Development Agency of the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, held its ribbon-cutting ceremony on Saturday, 31 January, at the Former Residence of Prince Sawasdiprawat (Sommot Amornbhand) in Bangkok. Unveiled at the Hong Kong Pavilion at the Biennale Architettura 2025 in Venice, where it garnered widespread international attention, this Roving Exhibition series brings Hong Kong's archive of civic architectures to Bangkok. Responding to the theme of the Biennale Architettura 2025, 'Intelligens. Natural. Artificial. Collective', the exhibition's curators Fai Au, Ying Zhou, and Sunnie S.Y. Lau highlight the collective 'intelligens' of Hong Kong's public infrastructures that represents the Hong Kong's shifting paradigms.
Nova Contemporary Gallery / Skarn Chaiyawat

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Architects: Skarn Chaiyawat
- Area: 494 m²
- Year: 2025
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Manufacturers: Danpal
Terrarium House / Unknown Surface Studio

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Architects: Unknown Surface Studio
- Area: 450 m²
- Year: 2025
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Manufacturers: Lamptitude, Modernform, Siamtak, Timbercharm
Verdure Villa / Vessu Collaboration
Cloud 11 Creative Park / Snøhetta
OngAng 3D Concrete Printing Bridge / CPAC CS
From Bangkok to Florence: 6 Unbuilt Public Space Projects Rethinking Community, Ecology, and Urban Identity

Public spaces remain some of the most dynamic sites for unbuilt architectural experimentation, revealing how cities and architects can imagine accessibility, gathering, and civic identity. In this curated Unbuilt edition, submitted by the ArchDaily community, the selected proposals examine parks, pedestrian corridors, cultural landscapes, and open-access urban environments that invite people to meet, move, rest, and participate in collective life. Rather than treating public space as leftover terrain, these projects position it as essential infrastructure—shaping urban health, memory, and social interaction.






















