1. ArchDaily
  2. Oslo

Oslo: The Latest Architecture and News

Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape

Subscriber Access | 

Cultural centers continue to serve as a productive ground for unbuilt architectural exploration, reflecting how architects are rethinking the role of public institutions in relation to landscape, experience, and program hybridity. In this Unbuilt edition, submitted by the ArchDaily community, the selected projects bring together a range of proposals that expand the definition of the cultural center beyond a singular building. These works position architecture as a spatial framework that mediates between research, exhibition, retreat, and public life, often embedded within or distributed across natural and urban contexts.

Across varied geographies, from northern Norway and Oslo to Łódź, Vienna, Marrakech, and New Tashkent, the projects demonstrate diverse responses to cultural infrastructure. They include landscape-integrated complexes shaped by topography and climate, bridges that combine gallery and public circulation, zoological pavilions structured as immersive sequences, adaptive reuse of military buildings into performance spaces, courtyard-based environments rooted in local traditions, and climate-responsive institutions informed by environmental analysis. Together, these proposals explore how cultural programs can be organized through movement, spatial layering, and relationships between interior and exterior conditions.

Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape - Image 13 of 4Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape - Image 10 of 4Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape - Image 7 of 4Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape - Image 26 of 4Cultural Centers Beyond the Building: 6 Unbuilt Projects Integrating Landscape - More Images+ 31

Remembering Frank Gehry and Looking Toward Architecture in 2026: This Week’s Review

This week's news reflects architecture's simultaneous engagement with cultural reflection, professional legacy, and the material realities of building cities. The passing of Frank Gehry prompted a broader reassessment of late 20th- and early 21st-century architectural practice, while Shigeru Ban's selection as the recipient of the 2026 AIA Gold Medal brought renewed attention to socially driven design and the profession's public responsibilities. These milestones unfolded alongside wider conversations sparked by Human Rights Day, examining architecture's role in equity, housing access, and safety worldwide, and forward-looking discussions setting the architectural agenda for 2026 through major international events and cultural programs. At the scale of the built environment, these themes are echoed in three projects shaping future urban conditions: Powerhouse Company's transformation of a former limestone quarry into a mixed-use neighbourhood in Bærum, near Oslo; the groundbreaking of Riverside Wharf, a hospitality-led development contributing to the regeneration of Miami's River District; and Foster + Partners' approved retrofit of 1 St James's Square in London, focused on structural retention and long-term urban resilience.

Remembering Frank Gehry and Looking Toward Architecture in 2026: This Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4Remembering Frank Gehry and Looking Toward Architecture in 2026: This Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4Remembering Frank Gehry and Looking Toward Architecture in 2026: This Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4Remembering Frank Gehry and Looking Toward Architecture in 2026: This Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4Remembering Frank Gehry and Looking Toward Architecture in 2026: This Week’s Review - More Images+ 6

Rundtjernveien Apartment Renovation / Studio Et al

Rundtjernveien Apartment Renovation / Studio Et al - Apartment InteriorsRundtjernveien Apartment Renovation / Studio Et al - Interior Photography, Apartment Interiors, Kitchen, Countertop, SinkRundtjernveien Apartment Renovation / Studio Et al - Apartment InteriorsRundtjernveien Apartment Renovation / Studio Et al - Apartment InteriorsRundtjernveien Apartment Renovation / Studio Et al - More Images+ 18

  • Architects: Studio Et al
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Oa Studio

Gimle 4 Student Housing / CODE: arkitektur

Gimle 4 Student Housing / CODE: arkitektur - Educational ArchitectureGimle 4 Student Housing / CODE: arkitektur - Exterior Photography, Educational ArchitectureGimle 4 Student Housing / CODE: arkitektur - Exterior Photography, Educational ArchitectureGimle 4 Student Housing / CODE: arkitektur - Exterior Photography, Educational ArchitectureGimle 4 Student Housing / CODE: arkitektur - More Images+ 20

  • Architects: CODE: arkitektur
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  8580
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2023
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Kvint Blendex, Parmarine, RVT AS, Straye AS
  • Professionals: Ny Struktur, COWI, IN'BY, HSH

Architecture Now: Designing Future-Ready Spaces for Work, Culture, and Public Life

Subscriber Access | 

From Bangkok to Billund, a new wave of architectural project announcements is reshaping how spaces for work, culture, mobility, and public life are conceived. Across Norway, Thailand, the United States, Denmark, Australia, and Thailand, these projects reflect an increasing emphasis on technological integration, sustainable construction, and flexible, future-ready environments. Whether designing production hubs for digital creators, adaptable media campuses, or civic landscapes layered with history and ecological intent, each scheme offers insight into how architecture is evolving to support emerging industries, cultural programming, and new forms of public engagement. This edition of Architecture Now brings together a selection of recently announced projects that highlight the intersection of design, technology, and innovation in a global context.

Architecture Now: Designing Future-Ready Spaces for Work, Culture, and Public Life - Image 1 of 4Architecture Now: Designing Future-Ready Spaces for Work, Culture, and Public Life - Image 2 of 4Architecture Now: Designing Future-Ready Spaces for Work, Culture, and Public Life - Image 3 of 4Architecture Now: Designing Future-Ready Spaces for Work, Culture, and Public Life - Image 4 of 4Architecture Now: Designing Future-Ready Spaces for Work, Culture, and Public Life - More Images+ 10

The Red House / MORFEUS arkitekter

The Red House / MORFEUS arkitekter - Exterior Photography, Houses, GardenThe Red House / MORFEUS arkitekter - Interior Photography, Houses, LightingThe Red House / MORFEUS arkitekter - Interior Photography, Houses, Lighting, Table, ChairThe Red House / MORFEUS arkitekter - Exterior Photography, HousesThe Red House / MORFEUS arkitekter - More Images+ 25

Oslo, Norway
  • Architects: MORFEUS arkitekter
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  77
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2022
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Dinesen, FLOS, Louis Poulson, Monier, New Works, +1
  • Professionals: AMI Prosjekt AS

Unveiling the 15 Most Significant Architectural Events of 2025

2025 promises to be a landmark in architecture, heralding a vibrant renaissance of creativity and exploration. As societies confront challenges such as climate change, rapid urbanization, and technological evolution, architecture is both a mirror to these dynamics and a compass pointing toward a sustainable and inclusive future. This year's architectural calendar offers abundant opportunities to celebrate the discipline's transformative power — from boundary-pushing festivals to thought-provoking exhibitions that explore pressing cultural and environmental narratives.

From well-established biennials to inaugural gatherings, including the World Architecture Festival 2025, Desert X Al Ula, and the COP Climate Conference, the 2025 calendar highlights themes such as sustainability, heritage, and community. These events underscore architecture's unique ability to shape a better future, addressing global challenges while honoring cultural diversity and design ingenuity.

Unveiling the 15 Most Significant Architectural Events of 2025 - Image 1 of 4Unveiling the 15 Most Significant Architectural Events of 2025 - Image 2 of 4Unveiling the 15 Most Significant Architectural Events of 2025 - Image 3 of 4Unveiling the 15 Most Significant Architectural Events of 2025 - Image 4 of 4Unveiling the 15 Most Significant Architectural Events of 2025 - More Images+ 14