Whenever I see an objective that interests me, I start thinking. Anton Burdein and Diana Burdein from Germany! You always learn from them. It's a great way to get exposed to new topics and materials, and thereby expand your horizons. Celine Kohlhaas from Germany! They also present the architect with a special kind of client: an absent one.
What better challenge for an architect? Thinking conceptually, applying new ideas, and developing sketches into actual buildings and concepts — in some small measure, it is a feeling of the divine, because you are allowing something that was not there to be created.
It appears later in its context, providing meaning and experience. This is something that can become quite rare or difficult to achieve in professional practice.
The arena of the competition lets you tune out the noise of the world. It is a great way of entering new sectors and learning about countries where I may not have worked yet. It is clear that by their merit-based nature, competitions push architects to cross new creative thresholds. I consider it a great exercise in delivering ambitious ideas while also aligning with realistically achievable results.
I would like to dream forward with the client while also making sure it is a vision that we can concretize and edify successfully. Rand El Haj Hasan from France! Participating in competitions is a great learning opportunity. Different tasks can develop creativity, skills, and knowledge. Often, there are aspects of the architecture tasks that are unfamiliar to us, which gives us the opportunity to learn something new.
Competitions motivate us to strive to become better at what we do, competing with architects from all over the world. Plamena Draganova and Tsvetelina Gadzhelova from Bulgaria!
This allows us to deal with different topics, programs, and contexts. The pragmatic answer in an architecture competition can become more peremptory and archetypal. Andrea Smaniotto and Barbara Sandri from Italy! Having great and inspiring ideas is one thing, but competitions provide realistic boundaries, further shaping and honing whatever you have in mind. Additionally, they present a real need and purpose, and nothing is more satisfying than a realised project that may be of benefit to others.
The competition also allowed us to direct an architecture project on our own, which benefited us greatly as recent graduates. Facing different programs and topics is a way to explore the great field of architecture and creativity.
It is also a way of doing architecture without the constraints of real-life buildings. Adrian Wetherell from Switzerland!
We are curious to see how the methodology and our self-imposed set of rules will crystallize into a clear design. It is a great opportunity to question your design process detached from the educational context. By being free from supervision, preconceived ideas, or expectations, we feel closer to the nature of architecture. Simpert Hafenmeier from Germany! Although I am typically a practical thinker, architecture competitions allow me the freedom to remove myself from the basis of reality to create more radical designs.
Caitlin Chin from Canada! Customers can see different approaches to a design task, and so have the opportunity to fully understand what they can get. For designers, they are an opportunity for healthy competition with other participants, strengthening teamwork and stimulating creativity. Participation in the competition is also an opportunity to approach interesting and inspiring topics.
One of the main goals is to develop trust as a team in pushing ourselves as far as possible in order to achieve our goals. From this premise, the modular house must be constructed most economically, but also solving the problem of lacking living spaces.
Therefore, we believe that this competition is an opportunity for us to respond to our growing environment and show our views on architecture. We want to provoke discussions on topics important to us in architecture and society.
Thanks to competitions, we can reach a larger group of recipients. The experience and process throughout empowers creative thinking and provides opportunities to learn from each other. Although it can be a challenge, it is a way to apply the knowledge we have acquired and let ourselves explore our interests. Lastly, it is always rewarding if you win a prize! Giorgia Martella from Italy! This stimulates the imagination and the creative mind. We believe that each competition can nurture our own concerns and expand knowledge in those research fields in which we want to deepen it.
We feel able to explore spatial possibilities that may be difficult to achieve in specific commissions. We are also interested in thinking globally. We find it extremely attractive to get involved with problems from other latitudes. Jackson Gaylord from United State! It showcases our work and the way we think.
As students, we can escape from scholar or corporate projects. It gives us the freedom to venture into our very own obsessions. As students, it is particularly important because we easily stick to thinking in one way which is taught at school. They are the perfect medium to experiment and explore new limits, that is, to innovate and open your mind towards the architecture of which you would be really proud.
For this reason, we participate in competitions in which we value our way of understanding architecture. Not only working as a group, but also time management skills — these are crucial achievements that architecture competitions contribute to a team. We felt connected to their values and wanted to show our support and help translate their ideas into architecture.
Ani Zakaryan and Aigerim Syzdykova from Denmark! We think the best way to know something is by doing it. And we think that participating in architecture competitions is a good starting point for us.
Ji Zhang and Wenjun Deng from Belgium! At the same time, it is an opportunity to break the daily routine and think about new architectural concepts and strategies. Competitions are ideal for testing their design abilities on universal, international design platforms and providing an environment for independent design claims.
Ekin Turgay and Serkan Sonar from Turkey! Doug Smith from Denmark! Competing keeps us on our toes. We seek out architecture competitions because sometimes we are so bored of our jobs. Escaping for us means to find the other way, our way, to express our inner thirst for honest work in this field, to take another attempt to design for certain problems and topics.
It allows me to re-think my positions, to connect with different contexts and learn about them. Architectural competitions are a way to keep learning about our world, and about architecture.
Gabriel Foulquier-Gazagnes from France! The design that I create through the storytelling and penetrating concepts awaken potential creativity. Projects that emerge through many concerns and discussions help the further growth of participants and demonstrate their potential for development. Dabeen Kim from South Korea! Competitions open the door to new unconventional projects and possibilities. Besides the benefit of exploring ideas and representational methods beyond the sometimes-banal day-to-day tasks of the profession, competitions allow me the opportunity to demonstrate who I am as an architectural designer, from the selection of competition briefs and sites to the choice of materials and organizational strategies, to the final panel layouts.
Mat Winter from Canada! It is a passion project that fills you up with energy even if you're already overworked. There is a presence of the unknown, and the only thing guiding you is your sense. And there is that sweet beginning of a new project and all the possibilities it brings. I participate in competitions to continue to develop my own way of thinking and practicing architecture.
Pedro Henrique Figueiredo Magalhaes from Netherlands! Even though some ideas are deeply anchored in our conceptual reflex, we have to go beyond and reshuffle the dice. It is an exciting time to open ourselves to new subjects, new landscapes, and new practices. What we particularly enjoy is debating our ideas to turn them into a vision which would eventually become a built project.
So, participating in competitions also means simply having a good time with colleagues and friends. Second of all, we aim to take part in a wider, maybe even international, discussion about what architecture can give to spaces and people. Competitions offer a great chance for young academics or small firms to show their work. Since this competition took place during a time when travel was limited, this competition allowed our group to direct our creative energy into an expression that allowed for exploration of a new place, which further expanded our knowledge of the world.
While we are deeply immersed in the practical, we wish to maintain our keenness and acuity on conceptual design and design theories through participation in architecture competitions. They also provide useful insights for the creative presentation of your project. This way, competitions invite innovation. Marco Moretto and Maciej Abramczyk from Netherlands! It allows us to test out possibilities that are often constrained in professional practice. Competitions such as SKYHIVE provide us with an opportunity to work outside traditional requirements, while also with constraints that challenge us to be innovative in creating solutions.
Phil Stien from United States! Wang Rujin and Zhang Yu from Hungary! They offer unusual tasks and uncommon contexts, which I have to solve and propose the proper solution for in my projects.
Therefore, it develops me as a flexible architect able to cope with different tasks and issues. Another thing is that international competitions give the best opportunities to declare myself and promote my ideas and philosophy among the worldwide architectural community. Vladislav Dudyrev from Russian Federation! Ahmed Helal from United States!
The assignment offered a work approach on the edge between the field of art installation and architecture, which fits the type of work that excites me.
As such, the creative and conceptual line that defines this type of competition is the motivation we need to keep investing in the quality of the architecture we produce daily. It is an incredible chance to step away from the conventional means of execution and present a different perspective to a broader audience. Competitions are a great venue for experimentation, and a laboratory to unpack and test design philosophies. Also, they challenge you to solve problems that on any other occasion would be difficult to solve.
Steven Rubio from Colombia! We believe it is important for our creative development to continue exploring ideas that challenge us and promote a strong dialogue. Hopefully, the result is innovative, I have learned something from the experience, I can share what I learned, and continue to evolve in this ever-changing world. Domenico Francesco Lio from United States! Kaili Sun and Carmen Kam from Canada! It helps us to develop a system of thinking and methodology. Working in teams, it is also important to sharpen our ideas via debating and implement them in design.
Finally, to present the project is another practice of communication. The whole process gives us a nice opportunity to formulate our argument in answering an architectural question. And because it reminds me of being in architecture school, a time I will always cherish. Idea competitions such as this one also provide venues for the unfettered exploration of ideas, and allow architects an idealized opportunity to imagine the way the world ought to be, instead of how it is.
Jerry Hacker from Canada! We also firmly believe that each competition we have participated in represents a step towards a learning curve, affecting our practice and teaching deeply. Entering a competition deepens the knowledge of place, typology, and tectonic of architecture. Designers are asked to communicate an idea visually in a concise and compelling fashion. Through failures and successes, competitions are skill builders and thought-provoking bombs for those who participate.
This competition was in line with our current research and spoke to topics that we feel are important for architects to explore. As this one was right in our backyard, we used it to test some new ideas we've been developing.
Due to various reasons, architects are often facing multiple restrictions in routine work. However, in this competition we can think more about current social issues and problems and pay more attention to the context of our designs. Through improving the design philosophy and updating the traditional design style, we strive to pursue optimum solutions.
They stimulate creativity among individuals or teams regardless of their professional experience and background. One the one hand competitions offer fascinating and complex projects to work on.
On the other, they allow more freedom in the design process than in real-life projects. Vassil Vandov and Gergana Georgieva from Bulgaria! We think that besides the practice that we gain from these competitions, participating in them is a good way of observing how others perceive a task and respond to the same challenge. We are always looking for different types of competitions on various subjects to gain the upper mentioned experience and get out of our comfort zone.
I entered so that I could regain some autonomy over the type of design practice I wish to engage in. Carley Chastain from United States! This is the reason we take part in architectural competitions: to constantly reframe the field of interest, to travel mentally to new places where the restrictions and freedoms we have may be different. Minas Kosmidis Architects from Greece! We take each competition as a learning opportunity and build an archive of knowledge out of it to be more holistic designers.
As designers early in our architectural careers, competitions allow us the opportunity to not only lead projects but refine our ethos and experiment with its application. It is also an opportunity for me to design a broad variety of programs. What excites me the most is being able to design different buildings, scales, programs, etc. Johann Evin from France! Architecture competitions also allow us to express our sense of creativity and explore different ways to create an architectural design.
Also, we saw it as a way to show our work to a bigger audience and make our little contribution to the world. As working professionals, diverse competition projects are a great luxury. Architecture competitions are conducive to remote learning and helped us remain engaged during the Covid pandemic.
Furthermore, we explored design problems outside of the traditional architectural setting and within a unique cultural context. Choosing our competitions allows us to escape our pragmatic daily routine, is a way to exercise our minds, and acts as a platform to test our ideas. Competitions are also challenges that give us the opportunity to work on different scales and discover diverse locations. Bachir Benkirane and Megi Davitidze from Morocco!
An idea is growing without all the noise of daily work- life. To grow as a designer, we believe, this exploration is critical. The competition process also enables our studio to explore new project opportunities which otherwise we would not have access to. To measure oneself with uncommon themes, in different environmental contexts where one can express one's own art. Giacomo Cozzi and Andrea Maltinti from Italy! They remain the main means of being able to condition the image of the landscape without private superstructures, following a common vision of architecture.
Barbara Drud Henningsen from Denmark! As you get older, a competition is a good way to break routine. Competitions offer a rare opportunity to showcase and experiment with ideas and architectural expression without restrictions.
You challenge your skills and learn new things. It develops us as professionals and motivates us to search for new ways of thinking about architecture. Kamila Szatanowska and Paulina Rogalska from Poland! It provides us with an opportunity to work in a group setting and prepares us for our future careers.
Participation in competitions enables us to present our design vision to a larger audience and compare it with the ideas of other participants. Joe Bruschy from Portugal! Furthermore, it is a great opportunity to experiment with new graphic representation techniques to communicate about architecture.
As vital as they are for the architectural field in general, they represent a form of intellectual playground for developing our innovative thinking. Beyond the individual benefits of personal and professional growth and work fulfilment, architectural competitions facilitate the most democratic system for designing our environment.
For all these reasons, participation in architecture contests proves to be very challenging, as it makes it possible to materialize ideas freely and spontaneously, which often does not happen in the professional context. Contests are the means of expressing our creativity, finding tools and knowledge that we can later apply in our professional practice.
It was highly instructive to design a building in the framework of structural, practical, and environmental boundaries. Jan Nicolas Zimmermann from Switzerland! It is also an engaging way to maintain the excitement, creative freedom, and professional motivation for the development of individual extracurricular design projects and collaborations. It can take up to a year or even a decade to complete a single project.
And it takes more time to solve practical problems than to actually do the plan. The competition allows us to think of new ideas and test them out in various projects in different countries that are not usually encountered.
Competitions give you the opportunity to think of new things and it will motivate you to work on them. Taking part in competitions allows me to step away from reality; it is a chance to explore your creativity and exhibit the most interesting works. Participation in competitions offers a privileged time to refocus and provoke reflection on subjects that interest us through conceptual and immediate responses. We integrate this time into an internal research process, more global and transversal than the usual pragmatic practice of an agency.
Sitting in a bar with a couple of beers, smoking cigarettes, and sketching on paper napkins — it is usually the moment when the best ideas come to the table, and we look for the right competitions to showcase them. We try to always challenge ourselves to go further than the most obvious answer to the questions asked.
For us, it is an opportunity to test the congruency in the process of elaboration of our ideas, hence testing the integrity of our work.
Alexa Burkle and Santiago Esquive l from Mexico! In participating in architecture competitions, we see an important opportunity for growth and greater acquisition of professional skills through an experiential process that stimulates creativity and innovation in a competitive environment.
Commercial projects tend to be driven by stakeholder interests, and that draws away from a very pure and even wild form of design. Architecture competitions stretch the imagination, allowing for us to do stuff that we are unable to do in everyday projects.
It is a great way to explore and refine our architecture ethos through different architecture competitions. Entering competitions has allowed me to do exactly this. Thiam Yi Donovan Ong from Australia! It takes time to prepare a good project for any competition, and, quite frankly, it is not easy to win them.
So, surely, they could start to feel like a wasted effort and a drain of intelligence, as Rem has put it. But at the same time, architectural competitions provide a platform for both the student and the professional to deliberate on a dissimilar typology, which can be beneficial in a number of different ways. It is indeed a stimulating environment that challenges our mentality and point of view and pushes the boundaries of design.
These competitions are a canvas for new opportunities. In these briefs, there are no right or wrong answers. At the end of the competition, I love to go through my sketches and steps to see the path that I have taken and what I can improve in the future. A brief is the key that opens up and constrains our imagination.
Ben Mc Quaid from Ireland! Mauricio Bastidas Azotla from Mexico! It is an excellent opportunity to discipline ourselves and push forward our design limits. We see it as a chance to refine and practice the skills we have and through this find our purpose and identity in the way we think and design.
We can work through ideas without being distracted by the conservative restraints and limitations that our projects typically encounter. Another reason is to also convey our design intention and content through an open architecture medium. I participate in architectural competitions to immerse into a creative process, guided by a set of difficult challenges, and to bring to life a solution and response that did not exist before.
Tarek Abou Dib from Australia! I also love the idea of tackling a real-world issue whilst remaining free to explore conceptual ideas. Alex Stein from Australia! Competitions are a great way to develop our thinking and ideas, creating a starting point to make these visions become a reality. Our work is more about high-rise buildings, so thinking about a socially related project would exercise our way of thinking in more complex things.
Also, acting as not just a designer in a team helped us develop a deeper understanding about the operation of a project. We recapped after we submitted the competition board and summarized which aspects we can improve in and how we will plan the next one. I choose to participate in architectural competitions as a means of eliminating some of these limitations and opening the door to new paradigms and possibilities within my designs. This allows me to push my interests far beyond their typical barriers and produce topical projects that can inspire real world works.
Evan Langendorfer from Australia! They help to rekindle the inspiration necessary to maintain healthy creativity. Nicholas Brown from the United States! Additionally, it is a medium that enables us to render ideas with a potential physical outcome — spaces that people will be able to inhabit and experience.
Alejandro Saldarriaga and Isaac Tejeira from Colombia! I left the real world for a moment and participated in the competition to ask myself questions.
This is like participating in an F1 match. I wanted to get out of the city streets where I had to commute, and run the autobahn at unlimited speed.
Ju Seok Park from Korea! On the other hand, one could always decide to base the design on more pragmatic decisions, as we intended to do in the proposal submitted.
This duality makes vision competitions unique. Barbara Mazza and Claudio Cortese from Belgium! Participating in architecture vision competitions allows me to explore the productive side of my personality. Evin Johann from France! We see architecture vision competitions as frameworks for us to structure and explore ideas, while simultaneously creating a platform for us to advance our skill sets and hone our design sensibilities. I can experiment however I want with less constraint than in professional practice.
Jinwoo Kim from the United States! They keep us looking for new ideas and maintaining a fresh design approach. When you work in a team, ideas originate from the union of different sensibilities and you learn from the confrontation with other members of the group, whereas working alone you have the chance to look inside yourself and to understand what really interests you.
Leonardo Rossi from Italy! Koki Masumi and Makoto Wada from Japan! Approaching projects such as this with freedom and experimentation allows us to develop new skills and mediums for project delivery.
This has been seen to inspire the team to develop new skills and knowledge that can be adapted into live projects ongoing within the practice. Architecture vision competitions give us the opportunity to think outside of the box and stimulate our creativity with diverse ideas and project locations that challenge our comfort zone. Look for your own approach and carefully study the context, delicately add new objects, woven into the prevailing culture and locality.
Arseniy Rabotnov from the Russian Federation! Whilst they are grounded in contemporary issues, they allow for the freedom to engage in a far more conceptual way. This ability to design with fewer constraints offers an opportunity to enhance our creative thinking skills and demonstrate our abilities to a wider audience.
Luke Draper from the United Kingdom! Having had my work placement in Copenhagen cancelled due to COVID, I decided to take part in an architectural competition to challenge myself and practice the design skills I have learnt at university. It was also an opportunity to explore my own interests and explore ideas which may not be possible within the restrictions of a university project brief. Ingrid Bjerkan from the United Kingdom! Architecture vision competitions provide a great opportunity and platform to see and learn a lot from other great works and ideas.
Jierong Lyu from Germany! Jingyeong Park and Yejin Kim from Korea! Uri Lewis and Yasha Lewis from Mexico! Thomas Harrington and Irwin Ho from Australia! Moreover, a competition is always a way to learn more and more about yourself and your way to design. It is a great way to challenge ourselves by trying to bring new ideas and develop our thoughts in the field of architecture. Additionally, the elegant appearance of flamingos and their choreographic movements inspired us to design an interactive pavilion.
And besides, this is a good opportunity to present our solutions to the many problems with which the world today is measured. Kinga Gawlik and Piotr Rajewski from Poland! Laurent Herbiet and Giordana Rojas from Mexico! It offers us the chance to experience and learn from different cultures, to evolve our ideas, to gain a better understanding of the relationship between humans and architecture.
Thanks to these competitions, we as designers are able to widen our capability of thinking and discover new methods. These competitions allow us to push the creative limit with innovative ideas. We also prefer working on competitions where there is an opportunity to build, not only create ideas. These competitions allow us to develop our architectural design skills and project representation. Furthermore, these are an endless source of inspiration which enable us to begin our professional career.
In a very competitive architectural world, this is also a way to have more visibility. Yann Beuzit and Vincent Lecler from France! Duc Ngo and Piotr Pasierbinski from Japan! These competitions allow us to dive into our own interests in architecture, space, and construction without the usual limitations of a standard project structure.
Indeed, on one hand, we are confronted with other realities by discovering different cultures, geographies, local practices and challenges, which open our eyes to the foreign world.
Topped by a four-horse bronze chariot, they became impressive stone monuments to Roman vanity. The Arch of Constantine c. Arch of Titus, Rome. Arch of Septimius Severus, Rome. Croatia , in the eastern suburb of Salona, ran the Urbs vetus, the westernmost backwater of the Jadro the ancient Salon. In the 1st century BC it was crossed by a five-arch bridge supported by massive pillars.
It was built with finely chiseled stone blocks arranged regularly and bonded with mortar. The bridge was located on an important regional road which was a continuation of the main communication route of the old city, the decumanus maximus.
Today, it is located near the city of Bonnieux. The nine pillars of the bridge date back to the 2nd century AD. The upper part was renovated at the beginning of the 12th and early 18th century, after having suffered destruction in the war. It is designated as part of the Roman Monuments, St.
Ponte Pietra at Verona. The bridge has since been rebuilt in various eras and most of the current structure dates back to the Moorish reconstruction in the 8th century. Ads Blocker Detected!!! The style of Tintern Abbey saw the arch become not only a trope for an architectural style, but for a whole cross-cultural movement.
The pointed Gothic arch, slender and sinister, reduced the horizontal thrust of the traditional Roman arch; less force on the foundations was key to creating the lightness Gothic architecture strove for. In the Chinese Paifang, the arch becomes a conveyor of narrative, historically acting as the means of moving between fangs, similar to modern-day precincts. The Paifang dates back to the Zhou Dynasty 11th century to BC , and is usually built using fine wood or stone, consisting of multi-tiered roofs and supporting posts, often celebrating the achievements of family ancestors.
Praising its mechanical ability to distribute great weight evenly, it was this logic that was behind his wildly original architectural style. The technical perfection and rich aesthetic that Gaudi is remembered for could be summed up entirely through the arch. A metre vision in stainless steel, the Gateway Arch is national expansion writ large, an icon of mid-century Modernism that has become architectural shorthand for the city of St Louis.
Designed by Eero Saarinen and Hannskarl Bandel, the catenary arch was technically ambitious; it remains the tallest stainless-steel monument in the world, its graceful form belying some 2, tonnes of steel. Plagued with many setbacks because of the scale of its construction, it opened to the public in , thrusting the arch into a sleek, technological future.
While we may only briefly pass through a triumphal arch, this icon is a place to dwell and reflect. Boats are welcome to move through this temporary arch, as long as they are prepared to be drenched during the process in what looks like a bizarre cleansing ritual.
Unveiled at the Taiwan Forestry Bureau art festival, nArchitects employed the local Amis tribe, masters of traditional bamboo construction, to create the arches from freshly cut bamboo. Arcades , a project by London-based design studio Troika, uses the arch as a celebration of openness rather than enclosure.
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