1. ArchDaily
  2. Unbuilt Project

Unbuilt Project

How to Prompt and Annotate Multiple Images with AI

 | Sponsored Content

This guide explains how to structure multi-image prompts in the RunDifussion platform. Explore RunDifussion's product catalog.

Buildner Launches Unbuilt 2026 and Reveals Unbuilt 2025 Winners

 | Sponsored Content

Buildner has launched Buildner's Unbuilt Award 2026, the third edition of its annual competition, offering a 100,000 EUR prize fund.

Buildner has also announced the results of Buildner's Unbuilt Award 2025, the second competition in a series celebrating architectural design that has yet to be realized. With a generous 100,000 EUR prize fund, this initiative provides a global platform for architects and designers to showcase their most compelling unbuilt projects, whether conceptual, published, unpublished, or fully developed.

From Iran to Argentina: 9 Unbuilt Contemporary Residences Exploring Form, Context, and Identity

Subscriber Access | 

Across geographies and generations, architects are rethinking the idea of home, balancing personal expression, contextual sensitivity, and material clarity. These contemporary residential proposals, submitted by the ArchDaily community, reveal how the house continues to evolve as both an architectural statement and an intimate landscape for living. From the sculptural and futuristic to the grounded and vernacular, they explore how built form balances between identity, environment, and lifestyle in an increasingly complex world.

From Iran to Argentina: 9 Unbuilt Contemporary Residences Exploring Form, Context, and Identity - 7 的图像 4From Iran to Argentina: 9 Unbuilt Contemporary Residences Exploring Form, Context, and Identity - 15 的图像 4From Iran to Argentina: 9 Unbuilt Contemporary Residences Exploring Form, Context, and Identity - 28 的图像 4From Iran to Argentina: 9 Unbuilt Contemporary Residences Exploring Form, Context, and Identity - 38 的图像 4From Iran to Argentina: 9 Unbuilt Contemporary Residences Exploring Form, Context, and Identity - More Images+ 47

Clorindo Testa's Artistic and Architectural Experimentation: Colors and Asymmetrical Plays in Spaces of Worship

Subscriber Access | 

Amid questions, reflections, and debates, the work of Clorindo Testa embodies an innate connection between artistic and architectural experimentation, reflected in many of his built projects, sketches, models, and plans. From the Mariano Moreno National Library to the former Bank of London building in Buenos Aires, his production is of such scope, diversity, and complexity that it constitutes a major source of study, one that also includes unbuilt projects that deserve visibility and recognition on a global scale. In his final years of professional activity, two unbuilt projects of religious architecture highlight Testa’s work not only as an architect but also as a visual artist.

The use of primary colors, pure forms, and concrete represent some of the most distinctive characteristics of Clorindo Testa’s architecture, which is inseparable from his visual art. Reflecting on themes such as living in large cities or the conditions of life in urban spaces, the powerful expressiveness and plasticity of his works, together with the character of the line, his typical color palette, and the frequent presence of the human figure, reveal the importance and meaning he attributed to scales, uses, and perceptions as an architect who never settled for the first idea.

Clorindo Testa's  Artistic and Architectural Experimentation: Colors and Asymmetrical Plays in Spaces of Worship - Imagem 1 de 4Clorindo Testa's  Artistic and Architectural Experimentation: Colors and Asymmetrical Plays in Spaces of Worship - Imagem 2 de 4Clorindo Testa's  Artistic and Architectural Experimentation: Colors and Asymmetrical Plays in Spaces of Worship - Imagem 3 de 4Clorindo Testa's  Artistic and Architectural Experimentation: Colors and Asymmetrical Plays in Spaces of Worship - Imagem 4 de 4Clorindo Testa's  Artistic and Architectural Experimentation: Colors and Asymmetrical Plays in Spaces of Worship - More Images+ 34

From Bologna to Mexico City: 8 Unbuilt Masterplans Reimagining Communities Through Regeneration and Design

Subscriber Access | 

In today's architectural discourse, masterplanning is increasingly recognized as a means to reconcile growth with long-term social, cultural, and environmental priorities. Beyond organizing buildings and infrastructure, these large-scale proposals aim to regenerate urban fabrics, adapt historic or underutilized sites, and establish frameworks for inclusive and resilient communities. Submitted by the ArchDaily community, the projects featured in this edition of Unbuilt Architecture highlight how masterplans can respond to contemporary challenges while preparing cities for an uncertain future.

Spanning diverse geographies, from Europe to the Middle East and the Americas, the selected projects reinterpret industrial complexes, cultural sites, and residential neighborhoods through strategies that prioritize sustainability, mobility, and collective identity. Many share a focus on regenerative design: reopening historic canals, creating climate-adapted public spaces, and introducing green corridors and community hubs to reconnect people with their environments. Together, they showcase how masterplanning is evolving into a critical tool for rethinking how cities grow, adapt, and sustain civic life.

From Bologna to Mexico City: 8 Unbuilt Masterplans Reimagining Communities Through Regeneration and Design - 9 的图像 4From Bologna to Mexico City: 8 Unbuilt Masterplans Reimagining Communities Through Regeneration and Design - 22 的图像 4From Bologna to Mexico City: 8 Unbuilt Masterplans Reimagining Communities Through Regeneration and Design - 30 的图像 4From Bologna to Mexico City: 8 Unbuilt Masterplans Reimagining Communities Through Regeneration and Design - 38 的图像 4From Bologna to Mexico City: 8 Unbuilt Masterplans Reimagining Communities Through Regeneration and Design - More Images+ 45

Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium / Perkins&Will

The Boston office of Perkins+Will has been selected to design a new mixed-use sports complex in Dubai. The development's centerpiece will be the 60,000-seat Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium, which when completed will become the largest stadium in the UAE. Other facilities will include training facilities, a practice pitch, warm-up areas, a 5,000 space car park, a museum, and a multi-purpose sports hall, as well as retail, restaurant and public plaza areas.

Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium / Perkins&Will - Image 1 of 4Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium / Perkins&Will - Image 2 of 4Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium / Perkins&Will - Image 3 of 4Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium / Perkins&Will - Image 4 of 4Mohammed bin Rashid Stadium / Perkins&Will - More Images+ 8

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.