Serenity Framed: Waetcher Architecture's Society Hotel Awarded Top Prize in 6th Best of LaCantina Competition
CategoriesArchitecture

Serenity Framed: Waetcher Architecture’s Society Hotel Awarded Top Prize in 6th Best of LaCantina Competition

Serenity Framed: Waetcher Architecture's Society Hotel Awarded Top Prize in 6th Best of LaCantina Competition

A classic paradox in architecture is that, quite often, the buildings that get people talking most are those that are gloriously defined by silence.

The stunningly serene spa at the heart of the Society Hotel in Bingen, Washington, is a perfect example of this phenomena, and its elemental beauty has now been recognized with the prestigious “Best in Show” award as part of LaCantina Doors‘ much loved annual design contest, the 6th Annual Best of LaCantina Competition.

Designed by Oregon-based firm Waechter Architecture, this carefully crafted project involved the adaptive reuse of a historic school building into a boutique hotel, with the addition a ring of minimalist cedar cabins and a unique, polygonal bath house containing a series of relaxing pools, changing rooms, a sauna, a kitchen and two massage rooms.

At the heart of the project, the community spa building serves as a feature gathering space with shared amenities for hotel visitors and guests. The spa employs a similar material palette of striated cedar as the surrounding cabins, yet has a distinctly volumetric form. Avoiding a singular front entrance, the building opens onto each side of the ring with dynamic apertures and floor-to-ceiling folding doors.

Within, the structure expands upward to a large skylight, which washes natural light over a series of pools below.

One of the most critical considerations for the spa’s design was how the interior and the exterior spaces could be seamlessly connected, providing shelter for visitors while also maintaining both a visual and a visceral connection with the hotel’s stunning natural surroundings.

In order to strike this balance, Waechter Architecture turned to LaCantina Doors. “We used a series of three custom-sized, six-panel Aluminum TC (Thermally Controlled) folding doors with a dark bronze anodized finish, all roughly 10′ high and 18′ in width,” explained the architects. “Two of the door systems were symmetrical 3L/3R configurations, and the last (in the highest-traffic area) was arranged as a 5L/1R configuration outfitted with panic hardware.”

The use of LaCantina doors were key to the success of the project, as Waechter explained: “In many ways, these doors were the most important single component of the entire project. After seeing the system and learning about other successful installations in this dynamic context and climate, they seemed to be an ideal choice.”

The architects continued: “We wanted the architecture of the spa to feel effortless and elemental, with as few materials and components as possible. The three openings between the cedar-clad ‘piers’ all wanted to open fully to the elements in good weather, and we also needed to protect against the snow and winds the Gorge is famous for at other times of the year.

“The La Cantina folding door system gave us the simplicity and solid construction we were seeking while providing an almost seamless connection to the landscape. It was the perfect fit for this challenging condition.”

The finished project is an exemplar in adaptive reuse architecture and spa design, creating a perfect destination for those looking for a scenic getaway in the Pacific Northwest. As the architects concluded: “Through its composition and pairing of historic and new architecture, the Society serves as a model for how buildings can reconcile the needs of a sensitive site, visitors, and the local community, and maximize connection to the surrounding landscape.”

To see every winner of the 6th Annual Best of LaCantina competition, click here, and learn more about LaCantina Doors here.

Project photography by Lara Swimmer

Reference

Architectural Gems: Explore the Stunning Winners of the 6th "Best of LaCantina" Competition!
CategoriesArchitecture

Architectural Gems: Explore the Stunning Winners of the 6th “Best of LaCantina” Competition!

Architectural Gems: Explore the Stunning Winners of the 6th "Best of LaCantina" Competition!

Architizer is excited to reveal the champions of one of the year’s most inspiring architectural design contests!

Returning for its sixth year, the renowned Best of LaCantina Design Competition attracted submissions from innovative architecture and design firms across the United States. Each participant seamlessly incorporated LaCantina’s exquisite doors and windows into their projects in inventive ways. Although the entries varied in location, building type and scale, they all shared a commonality: The ingenious integration of LaCantina products, fostering a seamless connection between indoor and outdoor spaces, accentuated by using beautiful and durable materials.

Taking the coveted Best in Show title this year is the Society Hotel in Bingen, Washington, designed by Waechter Architecture. As part of their winnings, the firm will enjoy an all-expenses-paid trip for two to the 2024 AIA Conference, covering both travel and accommodation. Be sure to stay tuned for an in-depth exploration of their award-winning project, which will soon be featured on Architizer!

Without further ado, delve into each winning design from this year’s competition — projects that truly embody “The Best of LaCantina.”


Best in Show and Best Commercial Project: Society Hotel by Waechter Architecture, Bingen, Washington

Photos by Lara Swimmer

Located in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, The Society Hotel offers stunning views of the river, surrounding hills and basalt outcroppings. The program includes the adaptive reuse and conversion of a former schoolhouse and gymnasium, twenty new cabins and terraces linked by a covered pathway, and an iconic, freestanding spa.

The spa employs a similar material palette of striated cedar as the surrounding cabins, yet has a distinctly volumetric form. Avoiding a singular front entrance, the building opens onto each side of the ring with dynamic apertures and floor-to-ceiling folding doors by LaCantina. Within, the structure expands upward to a large skylight, which washes light over a series of pools below. Four “hollow” piers shape this collective space while containing more private areas, including changing rooms, a sauna, a kitchen and two massage rooms.

Through its composition and pairing of historic and new architecture, the Society serves as a model for how buildings can reconcile the needs of a sensitive site, visitors and the local community, and maximize connection to the surrounding landscape.


Best Urban Residential Project: Wilson Lane Residence by Michael Belisle Design, Bethesda, Maryland
Consulting Architect: Will Cawood; Interior Design: Renato Parisotto; Lighting Design: Quinn Murph

Photos by Anice Hoachlander, Hoachlander Davis Photography

Wilson Lane Residence sits on a small urban lot within walking distance to downtown Bethesda, Maryland. The client desired to be close to the city center and wanted something drastically different form the more conventional housing styles in the area. The house was designed for entertainment, with open interior spaces, well-conceived exterior spaces and an abundance of natural light.

LaCantina’s Aluminum Outswing 3 and 6 Panel doors allowed for the interior to merge with the exterior, literally and figuratively: in the open position, the family room, deck and patio merge seamlessly; in the closed position they frame a view of the exterior with minimal obstruction.


Best Suburban Residential Project: Two Gables by Wheeler Kearns Architects, Glencoe, Illinois

Photos by Kendall McCaugherty

Located on a one-acre wooded ravine site north of Chicago, the house is strategically positioned within existing trees on the site to take advantage of the picturesque views. Twin gabled volumes — one for sleeping and one for living — are connected by a glazed breezeway that fuses house and landscape. The home, situated upward and slightly angled away from the street, creates an eccentric approach that delays frontal views and enhances privacy.

The frontal procession presents the flanking gabled volumes as solids, composed of warm gray Accoya siding, zinc colored standing seam roofing, punctuated by deeply inset windows. LaCantina Doors were utilized to address unique challenges within the project by incorporating thermally broken construction and optimizing the scale of units. They also enhance visibility and create spacious open areas when the units are opened.


Best Rural Residential Project: Ranch Poolside Retreat by Cabana Concepts / Imagine Beyond, Murrieta, California
Designed by Imagine Beyond; Installed by Cabana Concepts

Photos by Cabana Concepts

Cabana Concepts and Imagine Beyond completed a new poolside retreat for a ranch house, in Murrieta California, featuring a rooftop sunset deck designed for entertaining over 100 guests. The retreat can sleep up to 12 and includes a full kitchen, bar, office, garage, laundry and craft room. The property features a range of sliding, folding and swing doors by LaCantina, all unified by a beautiful finish: Bronze anodized aluminum equipped with flush bottom tracks and black hardware.


Most Innovative Project: Topanga Canyon Hunting Cabin by MSP Design Inc., Topanga, California

Photos by Mason St. Peter

The Topanga hunting cabin features indoor-outdoor living, featuring two open corners aided by LaCantina double pocket doors, an open plan and a large wraparound deck. What was once literally a room, added onto a room, added onto a room, added onto a room with a stairway to another room above is now a very simple and elegant 2-bedroom-2-bath, open living home, that welcomes the outside in and embraces it.


Best Compact Project: Swift Cabin by Ment Architecture LLC, Cougar, Washington

Photos by Luke and Mallory Leasure

This linear cabin stretches out along the length of a site that overlooks a reservoir in southwest Washington, with spectacular views of Mt. St. Helens beyond. A shed roof allows for a vast array of solar panels for this off-grid cabin, which power the main cabin, a custom-designed sauna building and a garage for the family boat.

A warm interior palette is defined by exposed Douglas fir glulam beams and tongue and groove decking at the ceiling, along with warm wood floors and exterior charred wood cladding wrapping through to the interior. The large deck can be enjoyed by walking directly from the living room through a 12-foot-wide opening featuring LaCantina sliding doors.


Best Renovation Project: Waverly Residence by Sasquatch Architecture, Portland, Oregon
Interior Design by Kami Gray Interiors

Photos by Crosby Dove

Located in the Waverly neighborhood in Portland, Oregon, the existing midcentury modern home went through an entire remodel on both the interior and exterior. The interior was transformed with updated floor plans and new finishes by Kami Gray. On the exterior, Sasquatch Architecture designed all of the windows and doors to be replaced and resized, while new paint, cedar soffits and siding were added to warm up the exterior of the home.

The standout feature is a new 16′ wide La Cantina bifold door, seamlessly connecting the interior and exterior. With careful attention to detail, the architects blended the old with the new, creating a timeless and elegant space bringing the beauty of nature inside and enhancing the home’s overall charm.


Best Unbuilt/Planned Project: Contemporary Respite by Sutton Suzuki Architects, Mill Valley, California

Renderings by Sunny Render Studio, photos by Sutton Suzuki Architects

Perched above a sleepy inlet of the San Francisco Bay, this now contemporary home was originally built in 1966. Over the years a number of insensitive additions were built, resulting in a maze-like home disconnected from the surrounding natural beauty. After an extensive remodel and addition of square footage, the home now offers floor to ceiling glazing and a number of water-facing decks where the owners can watch pelicans fish and nature unfold. The flow between rooms is ideal for entertaining, providing a mix of open spaces and cozy corners. Neutral finishes with hints of blue evoke the nearby water and offer a calm respite from the world beyond.

LaCantina’s Zero Post Corner System increases the sense of spaciousness from the kitchen into the slender side yard. When the project is complete, it will be hard to tell whether one is inside or outside, and each respective space will feel doubly as large.


These eight award-winning projects show just a glimpse of the incredible architecture and interiors made possible with the help of LaCantina’s versatile range of contemporary doors and windows. See more amazing case studies like these and learn more about the systems behind them over at LaCantinaDoors.com.

Reference

Call For Entries: Submit Your Projects for the 2023 Best of LaCantina Competition!
CategoriesArchitecture

Call For Entries: Submit Your Projects for the 2023 Best of LaCantina Competition!

Call For Entries: Submit Your Projects for the 2023 Best of LaCantina Competition!

It’s time to honor the most beautiful glazed projects in architecture! Architizer is thrilled to announce the 6th Annual Best of LaCantina Competition, proudly presented in collaboration with LaCantina Doors, the nation’s leading design and manufacturing company of folding, sliding and swing door systems. Architects and designers are cordially invited to submit built and in-progress projects featuring LaCantina Doors systems for a chance to win a grand prize and receive major industry coverage.

The competition is completely free to enter, and the only requirement is that your project was completed in the last six years and includes one or more LaCantina products. Begin your submission today and make sure to complete it before November 24, 2023 to secure your place in the running:

Enter the Competition

This renowned competition stands as a testament to innovation, creativity, and the seamless fusion of indoor and outdoor living spaces that LaCantina products enable. This year’s Best of LaCantina contest introduces some exciting changes, including an extended eligibility period and the addition of a brand new award category designed to recognize in-progress and under-construction projects.

A selection of former winners of the Best of LaCantina Competition; images courtesy of the architects / LaCantina

Extended Eligibility: 6 Years of Architectural Excellence

In response to the evolving landscape of architectural design, the eligibility period for the 6th Annual Best of LaCantina Competition has been extended to include projects completed any time from 2017 to today. This expansion allows more architects and designers than ever to showcase their recent masterpieces featuring LaCantina Doors.

Introducing the “Planned Concept” Category

In a nod to the innovation and forward-thinking spirit of the architectural community, we are thrilled to introduce a new award category: “Planned Concept.” This category is designed to recognize and celebrate projects that are currently in progress or under construction. It’s a unique opportunity for architects to showcase their vision and creative genius before their projects come to life. LaCantina Doors is excited to support architects at the forefront of architectural innovation.

Submit a Project

Casa Loro by IM-KM Architecture and Planning, Winner of “Best in Show” in the 2022 Best of LaCantina competition. Photo by Fernando Alda

Award Categories for Excellence

The 6th Annual Best of LaCantina Competition will honor excellence in architecture across nine distinct categories:

  • Best in Show
  • Best Commercial
  • Best Rural Residential
  • Best Urban Residential
  • Best Suburban Residential
  • New: Planned Concept
  • Best Compact
  • Best Renovation
  • Most Innovative

Architects and designers can enter their projects into multiple categories that align with their project’s characteristics, ensuring that their work receives the recognition it deserves.

Grand Prize: A Remarkable Journey Awaits

The coveted “Best in Show” award will once again take center stage, with the winning designer being offered a Grand Prize Trip for two to the 2024 AIA Conference on Architecture (A’24) in Washington D.C, June 5–8, 2024. But that’s not all! The “Best in Show” winner will also enjoy:

  • An article and promotion on Architizer.com (see last year’s winning editorial here).
  • Publicity across Architizer’s vast social media network, reaching an audience of 4.5M+
  • A Featured Project write-up on LaCantinaDoors.com
  • Inclusion in LaCantina Doors’ marketing efforts, including emails, social media, digital display ads, brochures, and print ads
  • An exclusive opportunity to be part of the judges’ panel for the Best of LaCantina 2024 entries
  • Inclusion in Best of LaCantina 2024 contest promotions

Start Submission

A selection of former winners of the Best of LaCantina Competition; images courtesy of the architects / LaCantina

Enter Now for Your Chance to Shine

Every submission will be meticulously reviewed by a panel of industry experts, comprising architects, product designers, and media representatives. Our esteemed guest jurors for the 6th Annual Best of LaCantina Competition will include Architizer’s Editor in Chief Paul Keskeys, together with other creative thought leaders and former Best of LaCantina Winners, soon to be announced.

If you’ve designed a remarkable project featuring LaCantina Doors’ products in the past six years or have an inspiring planned concept, this competition offers an outstanding platform to showcase your expertise and creative vision. Join us in celebrating the seamless integration of LaCantina Doors into architectural masterpieces and be part of this exciting exhibition of design innovation!

The deadline for entries is Midnight PT on November 24, 2023. Visit the competition site for more details, and get started on your submission today:

Enter Now

Reference

One Drawing Challenge 2022: The 100 Finalists (Part 2)
CategoriesArchitecture

One Drawing Challenge 2022: The 100 Finalists (Part 2)

One Drawing Challenge 2022: The 100 Finalists (Part 2)

Explore a further 25 extraordinary architectural drawings, each one a Finalist in the 2022 One Drawing Challenge. Let us know which are your favorites on Instagram and Twitter with the hashtag #OneDrawingChallenge!

Previous 25 Drawings     Next 25 Drawings →


“Martı” by Pelin Demiryontar

Mount Allison University

“With this ink on paper drawing I explored the relationship of narrative and drawing. Drawn images often tell stories: the strongest stories often create imagery. The imagery I created is about, Jonathan Livingston Seagull, a book that I associate strongly with my own life. Jonathan is a seagull who leaves his flock to fly higher, explore, and learn new things. In the end, he finds his freedom and escapes from the cage where the cage represents limitations and a reality that was told to be the only reality. For me, the best way to realize that there are other realities is to travel and see people born and raised in different societies and cultures. The more I explore, the more I become free.”


“iliCity: The Vertical Fantastical” by Anna Kondrashova and Mariana Orellana

Pratt Institute

“The tower of ilicity is an exquisite corpse that explores the duality of urban city life. Similarly to the SoHo block, the tower stitches together familiar, essential and mundane elements into a randomized agglomeration of components that follow a Truchet aperiodic tiling composition. This stitching together of random parts is a social and spatial condition, that challenges the occupant as they experience the assemblage through the lens of dirty realism.

Our project seeks to understand the conditions of the SoHo block, extracting the dynamics of overlayed and adjacent programs, functional elements and remainder spaces. By acknowledging grey zones as essential elements in urban conditions, the tower of iliCity integrates remainder spaces as symbiotic and non-detachable element of its composition. The project blurs the line between built, social, and even political grey zones that exist as a reality within contemporary life, and will continue to exist and grow as humanity evolves.”


“Quiet River – China” by Thomas Schaller

Schaller Architectural Fine Arts

“A semi-fictional view of an evening in Fengjing, China. All hand-done graphite pencil drawing with watercolour wash.
76x56cm”


“Aqueous Rhizome” by Sam Wu

University of Queensland

“Monsoon arrives misery every summer in the City of Chandigarh, Le Corbusier’s modernist metropolis. How does a landscaping intervention protect the city from inundation caused by climate change? Rather than obstruct the water, a network of sunken landforms and water-purifying facilities invites water into the city fabric. Waterscapes are juxtaposed against Le Corbusier’s greenery fingers across the city. Purified water will recharge the deep aquifers, an indispensable water source for commercial and domestic use.

This drawing cuts a section through the main street in Sector 17, which is the centre for street vendors, hawkers, entertainment, and various commercial activities. The red element indicates the new intervention in the city. Stairs and Ramp connect the sidewalk to the canals, which act as an open space and bikeway in the dry season. Pocket open spaces and bridges above water channels allow residents to cross the water after adverse weather.”


“Alzheimer’s. Stage 4.” by Brent Haynes

“Alone. Confused. Frustrated. The more I try to hold on to memories that are slipping away from me, the more afraid I am that someday, there will be nothing left at all—nothing but a memory that has been forgotten by time itself.

I walk through the city, trying to balance what I think is true with what I’m sure I don’t know. As my surroundings disappear, I try to remember what they used to be like. But as time goes on and my mind gets weaker, it’s harder and harder to remember the details of the past.”


“In between” by Anastasia Fedotova

Architectural Association School of Architecture (drawing submission from the final year work 2021-2022), currently employed by Foster and Partners

“Nowadays, demolition waste creates the most significant waste stream in the world. By considering cities undergoing renovation, the author proposes a physical dissection of destructible buildings, their dismemberment and recycling through robotic automation according to their structure, material and condition. Specially designed machines curate and organize virtual and physical (“theatre”) archives of the targeted buildings under the demolition plan. Newly developed tectonic systems and spaces created in this way can be integrated into the urban fabric in close interaction with the existing landscape. In this way, the connection between the past and the future is built, and the identity and memories of previous generations, which are hopelessly erased in modern society, are preserved.”


“Windows to the Future” by Nir Levie

Kloom Studio

“I imagine a future where the only boundaries of architecture are creativity and physics.
The image is a combination of 8 A3 papers.
Ink on paper”


“DELIRIOUS COFFEE PALACE” by Pengcheng Yang

The Melbourne University

“Cafe Palace selected a series of plans of landmark buildings with different cultural backgrounds according to the composition of immigrants in the block, which served as the inspiration and design starting point of the overall underground space layout. Through the redefinition and blend of different architectural styles, an architectural atmosphere similar to the situationist concept was created.

At the same time, the coffee underground palace introduces phenomenological concepts and guides and creates underground circulation ideas from touch, hearing, smell and taste. This architecture can also be seen as an experiment in phenomenology. Elite food etiquette is often quite luxurious, and this program not only summarizes the traditional coffee washing process, but has deliberately designed these machines to be overly fussy in order to satirize the pursuit of the ultimate in coffee culture.”


“Galveston Bay Park” by Robert Rogers, Tyler Swanson and Alex Warr

Rogers Partners Architects + Urban Designers

“The Galveston Bay Park Plan (GBPP) project is a surge flooding protection, navigation enhancement, public recreation and environmental enhancement project that is unique in its scale, impact, innovation, and long-term adaptiveness. The GBP approach will be transformative to the Galveston Bay region by creating a permanent thirty-mile landmark that is central to the region’s resiliency strategy, economic vitality, habitat preservation, and standard of living.”


“The city drowned by coffee” by Pengcheng Yang and Zirui Wang

The Melbourne University

“This is a painting about the concept of architecture expressed through images in a dream world. The theme of the painting revolves around the culture of coffee and the society that is triggered by coffee as a sober dependency of people.

1. A distant coffee factory produced an explosion, and the excess coffee caused great pressure inside the building.
2. The origin of coffee often comes from relatively poor countries, such as Brazil, Ethiopia or Colombia.
3. The shepherds mingling in the line represent the story of how coffee was first discovered by the shepherds of Ethiopia.
4. The fragile console tries as much as possible to hold the balance of people’s coffee intake.
5. There are ads and signs like iLLY and Nespresso for capsule coffee everywhere.
6. The mountains of waste formed by coffee consumption.”


“KEEP OUT” by Alain Linck

Linck

“A new stage in urban sprawl in a context of physical, environmental and energy insecurity: a pioneering and vertical colonization of abandoned places in urban or industrial centers. Of course, properties are being protected and mobility is being adapted, far from the architectural utopias. Factories are still running, weighing down a starless sky that vanity jets cross, each for himself, more than ever. After all, the garden is not doing so badly; as for the fauna, it is less certain.”


“‘Interior Late Afternoon’” by Alan Power

Alan Power Architects Ltd

“This work depicts an interior view of a house we built in Whitechapel. The view is of the main ground floor living space, looking south to towards the courtyard. The space has contrasting volumes, with the large diagrid lantern light glazing contrasting with the lower perimeter spaces. I was interested examining the way in which the space is lit naturally, and how the fall of natural light affects the volumetric impression of the space. I felt that this required an image of high contrast. I tried to depict that wonderful time of day in early summer, when the sun has almost disappeared, but where the light remains vivid, and where the areas of the interior not directly lit recede into the increasing darkness.

The approach to creating the image was reductive, rather than one of architectural detail, and the tones and colours are pushed towards a sense of geometric abstraction.”


“Vanity Fair: Architectural Icons Issue” by Ben Friesen

University of Nebraska-Lincoln

“Iconic architecture enjoys celebrity status, a fame generated by the dissemination of glamorous images presented to the public for admiration and praise. While the formal language of this “star-chitecture” varies widely around the world, these static icons share rarified air in the top-ten lists and google searches where their images are most commonly consumed.

In ‘Vanity Fair: Architectural Icons Issue’ these buildings are collected for a group portrait worthy of their shared esteem. Still as they are, they perform for their audience. Their vanity is apparent. The issue is not.”


“Palimsest_Ghosts + Reincarnations” by Steven Quevedo

School of Architecture, The University of Texas at Arlington

“The process of this drawing relies on previous reiterations from an earlier collage of building constructions, which fragmented into an imaginary landscape of ruins. Using a Xylene transfer of a black and white copy onto plaster, the ghostly images provide a ghost in which new constructions can be developed. The idea of the city as a continuous palimpsest evokes the nature of how cities transform throughout time by demolition, re-use or new construction. This additive transformation builds on the old to re-invent the composition. As an architectural speculation, the generative process of drawing yields new spaces and forms influenced by the pre-existing context of the ghost collage. These graphic ponderings stitch together the fabric of the old and new, complimenting and contrasting the organic and the man-made.

This world is nowhere yet acts as if it has always been, masking behind a fragmented façade, a darker and deeper space.”


“Everything in Between” by Zeb Lund and Samah Al Sarhani

BVH Architecture

“The head, the heart, and Everything In Between. A Charlie Chaplin experience provides us humor, joy, and purpose connecting senses, feelings, and thoughts.

We consider perception as an experience transmitted from a physical world through the lens of an eye. We consider cognition as qualities experienced in our past pitted against the moment in our head. We consider feeling as our soul understands gravity, emptiness, boundaries, and so much more in our heart. Intuition, emotion, and Everything In Between here is illustrated as recollections of the Pantheon.”


“”Every Bud can be Revived”- The Complete Narrative of Burt Hall” by Aman Tair

“Tied to its age-old exclusion of a ‘Colonial Party House’ Burt Hall reminiscences to days that now are gone. The drawing imagines an Adaptive Habitation future, breathing life into this melancholic giant. Home as an ever-evolving skin; shedding yet rejuvenating.

THEIR House now begins to breathe all…

As they chatter and sip tea at the barber’s Sunday visit.
As sun pierces atop saturated May skies,
they find relief midst moss-covered pools.
When monsoon becomes laden with dew & stardust,
they crawl atop towers to see mid-summer lights.
As clouds downpour along rusted roofs,
children dance in watercolor puddles and sail paper-boats.
And when North wind blows loud in cold dark Decembers,
menfolk gathers at the peanut seller, listening to crackles of wood and salt.
As spring glides in her all-bejewelled beauty,
terraces bow heavy with clusters of jasmine

THEIR House now feels the same, that every bud can be revived…”


“Pakistantecture” by Zeeshan Javed

Elisava Escola de Disseny Enginyeria de Barcelona

“Human race is living in the world which has all the impact of socio political, chaotic crisis and environmentally modified world. Weather its pandemic or any other natural disaster which is shaping up our society and climate. It’s the spirit of time which bring the evolution to any entity. No vision can be drawn by itself, it needs to have a situation, which brings the desire to accomplish absoluteness.

Current scene is set in Karachi city,where gravity is effected by climate change hence this organic form of architecture has all the advance properties in terms of materials and technology which is embedded in its soul dna.Pakistantecture is the depiction of well advance highly technological nation striving for the betterment human society giving hope towards perfection. Its communication mediums are the state-of-the-art engineering marvels, buildings are organic living beings, Keeping its traditional and monumental value alive.”


“The 42’s Cradle” by Jason wang

“Humanity has resorted to forsaking their flesh for the planet’s survival, and thus exists as immortal, machine lifeforms, as virtualised consciousness within vessels.

This is a glimpse of a world where materialistic obsessions and temporal limitations are irrelevant. Yet, the environment and the architecture have evolved into cradles, to nurture the non-corporeal inhabitants even though they have forgotten what they once looked like.

Will the humans then debate their philosophical and intellectual fulfilment without bodies and limbs, whilst bathing in existential despair? Will they attempt to search for mortality due to the lack of value in eternity? Are there pleasures to explore without fragility? Or will they transcend beyond dimensions?”


“The Stamper Battery” by William du Toit

Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

“Drawing from EM Forster’s 1909 short story “The Machine Stops”, this allegorical architectural drawing re-presents a seminal tale of environmental devastation caused by the 1860 New Zealand goldrush. Propelling the Otago region into economic prosperity, the mining operations were abandoned once the gold dried up—the forgotten industrial artefacts, environmental scarring, and their historic narratives slowly decaying over time, destined to be lost forever.

The Stamper Battery is the final drawing in a series of 7, each preserving the narrative of a different artefact of the historic goldmining process. It combines orthographic, notation and layering techniques to compose a drawing that shifts restlessly on its page—depicting fragments of architecture as they transform and decay over time. The drawing is intended to be exhibited in sequence, avoiding direct intervention on the site while preserving a national heritage story of place identity—acting as a lesson for future generations to learn from past mistakes.”


“Night City” by Peter Wheatcroft

10 Design

“A Dystopian metropolis constructed with on top of multiple levels of roads, Buildings and Structures. Sky ships deliver cargo from the air, while logistical lorries, tucks and cars services the city from the complex network of elevated highways. A place to explore endlessly.”


“The Choice” by Rachel Powers

Red Rocks Community College

“The Choice” portrays a person standing on the brink of decision. He or she began life in today’s world, which is pictured behind them in a dim cityscape. The reason for the landscape tilt illustrates the uneasy feeling that we often get in life that things are not quite right. The personal decision that every human faces is represented: joining either utopia or dystopia.

Utopia is a future dream where technology, environment, and beauty coincide with people and are fully represented by architecture. Dystopia appears as a blistering, torturous, bland place. Overall, the picture shows a broad timeline of the past, present, and future. The past started wonderful, a lush green place. The present presents the choice that we implement everyday in our own actions. The future is a result of these choices. May we all choose to work toward the utopia rather than the dystopia in our world.”


“The wall. 2021-2022” by Anton Markus Pasing

“The wall wasn’t just there, it was everywhere. My gaze wandered endlessly and yet the wall seemed to move. What did you separate me from? The deeper I looked into it, the less I could grasp it and the more complex its structure became. It seemed to me that the wall was looking for a counterpart. She was a surreal lonely reality and my soul could see no beginning or end. Unlimited truth and infinite questions.

But coupled with the certainty that she was as real as my dream. In some places she reflected, and what I saw, I wasn’t me. It was her almost endless projection of everything I was longing for…it was starting to happen raining.. and I went inside. i am the wall And there is nothing else.”


“God is in the detail” by Farshid Amini

“Nature has always inspired architects. The famous architect Mies van der Rohe suggested that details are essential for architectural drawings as they are essential in nature. He used the term “God is in the detail” to emphasize this point. The infinite level of detail in nature is an abstract concept. In order to visualize this concept, I have drafted an architectural-themed cosmology drawing. This drawing is characterized by some scientific infographic about nature and an artistic interpretation of the universe.”


“Gate” by Naomi Sirb

POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY TIMISOARA-Architecture and Urbanism

“Art cannot solve humanity’s problems, but it can be a refuge from daily frustrations or make us temporarily forget about problems by visiting a gallery, listening music etc.

The volume offers a passage between everyday life and the world of art. This gate makes the connection between the world of creation that emanates a feeling of inspiration, hope and the urban world where we experience states of agitation, stress “darkening” our lives

The building is shaped like a hug that exudes the feeling of refuge. This offers a special view, having at the end of the perspective a cathedral that plays an important role in people’s lives.

The rendering expresses the difference between the outside of the art gallery (people “burdened” with problems, the congestion in the city) and the one inside it (when people approach the “gate” that opens to the world of creation, they detach of everyday life).”


“No Title” by Jane Grealy

“Observation and imagination. The white lines are a wireframe perspective of GOMA (Gallery of Modern Art) which sits on the Brisbane River at Kurilpa Point (Queensland, Australia). Using early photographs of European settlement, explorers’, convicts’ and botanist’s’ accounts along with indigenous histories, I was able to site this existing building within a landscape which I imagine would be very similar to that the indigenous population experienced pre settlement.

The name of this work, “No Title”, refers to the contested nature of land ownership here in Australia as a result of invasion and colonization. The Native Title Act 1993 is a law passed by the Australian Parliament that recognizes the rights and interests of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in land and waters according to their traditional laws and customs.”

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Reference

One Drawing Challenge 2022: The 100 Finalists (Part 3)
CategoriesArchitecture

One Drawing Challenge 2022: The 100 Finalists (Part 3)

One Drawing Challenge 2022: The 100 Finalists (Part 3)

Explore a further 25 extraordinary architectural drawings, each one a Finalist in the 2022 One Drawing Challenge. Let us know which are your favorites on Instagram and Twitter with the hashtag #OneDrawingChallenge!

Previous 25 Drawings     Next 25 Drawings →


“Living Lemon Life” by Siyang CHENZiyue Zhou

The University of Melbourne

“‘Living Lemon Life’ responds to the current development dilemma in Ikuchijima, Japan. Ikuchijima, a trading hub in the Seto Inland Sea, is a beautiful island famous for its popular cycling route, best-selling domestic lemons and an abundance of museums. However, population loss has been affecting the island’s population structure and sustainable development.
Living Lemon Life is a communication center that combines industrial communication, incubation, culture experience, and product transaction. The hub will utilize the potential of the local lemon industry, fill in the gap in relevant comprehensive communication places, and attract industrial immigrants, so as to activate the local community and improve the population structure. Rather than relying solely on agriculture and tourism, the island will see a better lemon life and community atmosphere when combined with new industries and immgrants.”


“Up” by Thomas Schaller

Schaller Architectural Fine Arts

“Examples of architecture can too often be seen as solid objects, but of course, they are not. They contain spaces, voids in which humans interact, work and play, love and live. In this sense, the volumes contained by architecture are the collective kinetic stories of all who have gone before and will yet arrive. This drawing – “Up” – explores the energies of that process, the ideas of entrance and exit, of doors and stairways that we all employ to knit our internal lives to the external world and in some silent way, to one another and to time itself.”


“Lift Cabins” by Stéphane Bolduc

MGA | Michael Green Architecture

“Perched in the soaring West Coast treeline, accessed by pully operated elevator cabs, the Lift Cabins provide the ultimate nature-immersion experience. Ride up as a solo cabin’er or get extra cozy with a +1, enjoy your time way up high, just below the sky!”


“Mirror” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox

University of Houston

“In cold grey concrete and abstract forms, spomeniks are monuments imposed on remote historical sites as the symbol of unity during the socialist Yugoslavia. However, as they became associated with opposing ethnic groups during the 1990s Yugoslav Wars, many were destroyed and vandalized as the prime targets for hate crimes. Today, they are the embodiment of war and violence.

Ordinary and unindoctrinated, K-67 is a modular kiosk mass-produced in 1970s to be dispersed around urban centers as small shops. Due to this ability to adapt to the user’s daily life regardless of who they are, K-67 remained a timeless invention which people of Yugoslavia held dear in their memories through the days where the country no longer exist.”


“Destroyed Unity” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox

University of Houston

“In cold grey concrete and abstract forms, spomeniks are monuments imposed on remote historical sites as the symbol of unity during socialist Yugoslavia. However, as they became associated with opposing ethnic groups during the 1990s Yugoslav Wars, many were destroyed and vandalized as the prime targets for hate crimes.

Today, they are the embodiment of war and violence.”


“Star-Crossed: Urban Sijelo the Movie!” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox

University of Houston

“Long, long ago in a galaxy not so far away… there was a place named “Meeting of Cultures” which marked in Sarajevo where the eastern Ottoman empire kissed western Austro-Hungarian. On this historically diverse landmark where nobody is meeting, and among the ruins of Yugoslav Brutalist monument laid like scars to the ethnic division, clouds of simple materials – wood sticks and nails – formed modular polyhedron units. They bonded into seats, tables, movie screens, theatrical platforms… all of which allows for long-lost nostalgic dialogues. Eventually, Urban Sijelo was concieved.

This is the story of interstellar lovers who reunited in the embrace of Urban Sijelo. Together, the two explored endless possibilities brought by the assembly’s versatile functions and forms.”


“Urban Sijelo: Defining Space!” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox

University of Houston

“Urban Sijelo is the materialization of an old Yugoslav concept Sijelo – a social evening gathering featuring traditional music and amusement. The assembly intends to bring people together through endless possibilities in forms, allowing for various leisure communal functions illustrated. The versatile spirit is enabled by multiple 1′ – 6″ polyhedra, the homage to our inspiration K-67 – a modular, spaceship-lookalike kiosk associated with day-to-day memories of the united socialist Yugoslavia.”


“This Is Ecological” by Shawn Teo

DP Architects Pte Ltd

“Hsinta Ecological Power Plant really wanted an innovative design to establish its green corporate image. Yet is it possible to design the three chimney stacks that breaks away from the industrial past? How do we deal with this issue honestly while balancing the fact of energy consumption vis-à-vis conservation of wildlife? What if the building’s skin generates wildlife, becoming an interface for social and environmental uses?

Our design manifesto:

1. By stacking and compacting the facilities, we intensify the land to benefit Man and nature.
2. To be ecological is to understand and accommodate the needs of various habitats and communities.
3. Hsinta Ecological Power Plant brings together the needs of Man and nature for a better future.
This is an imagery, of what is perceived by society and what is imagined by dreamers. It lyricises, or chastises; revolving around what we know and not, what we see or not.”


“Sun-seeking” by Hamid Akhtarkavan

Iowa State University

“Every year, we build taller buildings. Our cities are becoming taller and taller without taking into consideration the natural surroundings. Our cities become more polluted as they become more crowded. Have you thought about the future? Have you considered our children? They are our future.

With the speed that our cities rise, their pollution increases, and we are increasingly missing nature; we are losing it. There will come a time when our children (our future) are searching for the sun (as a symbol of nature) amongst our tall buildings and polluted cities.”


“Unearthing Nostalgia” by bruno xavier and Michelle Ovanessians

University of Houston

“The people of Bosnia & Herzegovina yearn for a sense of unity, once shared by South Slavs during the golden years of late Yugoslavia. The loss of unification in a diverse field of ethnicities, coupled with following years of ravishing war, have instilled an intense feeling of what was now only a nostalgic memory. The government inflicted Spomeniks of the Yugoslav era, now represent the conflicts further perpetrating division and plaguing the Bosnian people.

Despite all plans of unification, a long-lost Yugoslav relic designed by architect Sasa Machtig became the natural unpartisan symbol manifesting a sense of community through its modularity, multifunctionality and temporal nature. The K-67 capsule adopted by all Yugoslavs as an integral part of daily life, naturally brings all walks of life together. Unearthing what was once a monument in its own right and reinventing a method of unification through the rediscovery of the historical K-67.”


“Great Room” by steve marchetti

Studio Marchetti Architecture PLLC

“Design Image for a Modern house in the Hudson Valley. The perspective drawing shows the easy transparency of the public rooms, fostering an inside-outside connection for the family who will dwell here. The house employs western red cedar, local sandstone, and salvaged oak flooring to lend a rustic feel to the architectural crispness. The soft pencil drawing helps to convey this feeling.”


“Hiroshima Hacchobori-no-zu” by Tomoaki Hamano

NIKKEN

“This is a drawing of the near future in Hiroshima Hatchobori intersection.
It creates a new landscape while preserving the traditional landscape.”


“Wheels of Exploitation” by Salmaan Mohamed

““Civilization has done little for labor except to modify the forms of it’s exploitation” – Eugene V. Debs

Overwork culture makes one think of long hours and constant exhaustion as a marker of success. Unpaid overtime work has increased substantially in the present times and people on top of the corporate ladder glamourize the hustle culture. Employees are taught to sacrifice their personal time and sleep to achieve success but in reality their efforts only keep the wheels of exploitation moving.

This scenario is compared to a giant wheel inside a warehouse which is powered by exploited labor. The warehouse being a metaphor to how mechanical the work culture is in the modern times and the workers are constantly reminded to keep the “wheel” moving. Harder they work, more is their depletion of mental and physical well being, with burnout as their only badge of honor.”


“Monsters in Architecture” by Naomi Vallis

Babbage Consultants

“The etymology of a Monsters is to not scare, but rather to show and reveal hidden truths.

The name of this drawing “Monsters in Architecture” attempts to shed light on the architectural hybridity that exists in Aotearoa (New Zealand), which had been previously suppressed in the nation’s historical, architectural narrative.

The drawing aims to showcase some of these culturally hybrid architectures, such as the Indo-Gothic style and the Bungalow style, but also allude to how these had been conceived – primarily from the global migration and transportation of people and cultures.

Digital collage helps to capture this migration of people, particularly from South Asia, who brought with them architectural styles and culture – that have come to merge and influence the environment these were transported to. The result of these movements is the formation of the “Architectural Monster” – a representation of the diversity that exists in New Zealand today.”


“The Woven City” by Shaun Jenkins

J2 Corporation

“The Woven City – an interlaced architectural landscape with a complex array of structures, materials and textures forming part of a cohesive whole.

The built environment is a definition of a city; a statement about its history, ambition or how it wants to be seen. This can affect how people feel about there city and how they identify with the space and place they occupy. The Woven City is an abstract exploration of the possible ways that the built environment can better intertwine with its culture and heritage taking inspiration from the cities of Salford and Manchester and its strong ties to the textile industry.”


“A Glimpse into Mercato” by Polen Guzelocak

Cornell University

“Mercato, Africa’s biggest open-air market located in Ethiopia, is a neighborhood of informalities under the danger of urban erasure by insensitive developer projects. Searching for a solution that can both densify and respect Mercato’s existing social networks, the project looks at architecture through the users’ daily lives and traditions rather than standardized formal methods architects are trained to use and investigates architecture’s potential as a stage that allows creating stories. Through the use of the section cut, the drawing reveals a glimpse of daily lives of Ethiopian women in the project. Nothing is static about the project but the constant dynamism. The section welcomes us to the center with all of the market’s smells, noises and textures, but finds calmness in its architectural expression.”


“The Gardener’s Diary” by Glory Kuk

KPF

“Dear Diary,

I recently rummaged through my old diaries and found melancholic entries.

Located in Renwick Ruins of Welfare Island, an island that housed the undesirables of the city, much like our rejection of mental health problems.

The drawing diary is informed by small details in life and on site, which is spatially translated. It grows as more details are noticed, the drawing itself as a growing diary where it is reconditioned daily by me, tending, caring and maintaining the space. There is a visitor within me who might create chaos within the garden based on their emotions, the other side of my psyche. We shall leave traces for each other as we will never meet.

The drawing is where the garden is architecturised, and the architecture is gardenised.
It is a safe haven to defuse my worries, through this drawing I shall find my peace…

Yours Truly, The Gardener”


“A Conversation of Residential Modernism” by Scott Lafferty

University of Nebraska – Lincoln

“Three iconic pieces of modernist architecture, one each of three architects that we might call pillars of modernism, stack upon one another forming a pedestal. Sitting atop rests a piece, studied and acknowledged, yet somehow less celebrated. Eileen Gray’s E-1027 built upon foundations developed by Le Corbusier, Mies Van Der Rohe, and Frank Lloyd Wright, to develop a design that would become coveted by at least one of them. The piece is held together by its own voids, also acting as the glue holding the pedestal intact to further build upon.”


“A Garden Reconsidered” by Zeb Lund

BVH Architecture

“A Garden Reconsidered explores the notions of divine beginnings/middles/ends and of earthly past(s)/present(s)/future(s) that exist simultaneous, cyclical, and linear. It is an exercise of what might lie behind the facade of divine follies conceived of centuries ago.

It asks questions of real and imaginary when occupying the same space; of dualities amongst groupings of threes. This piece is composed of pieces recalling futures that never came to be and pasts that never quite existed.

It is a visual study of seduction and liberties existing alone and partnered.”


“Trumpopolis” by Victor Enrich

“This drawing essentially warns us about what it would mean for a country such as the US to re-elect the ‘unmentionable’ back for president in 2024 — just in case people forgot about him already.”


“Emotional Structure” by Ying Chang

Ilinois Institute of Technology, Sheehan Nagle Hartray Architects

“The main character in the story is based on a building from hundreds of years ago, the Sendai Mediatheque.

With the rapid development of AI, buildings after hundreds of years will become a “machine for living in”. Buildings will have their own personalities under continuous renovation. In the future, buildings will live in buildings and will express their feelings. They will be happy, upset, and angry… They will express their emotions through their “mood channels”(the colorful pipes). It is a language that humans can easily read to feel their state and improve the “living environment of the building.” No matter which building humans live in, change will occur where humans and buildings live and work together.

Without a human reading of their language, they would die. Helping others to help themselves, human beings will be in this form of beautiful symbiosis with buildings, together with the future environment and resources.”


“un_bound” by Grace Gruverman

California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo

“Boyle Heights is often seen as a separate entity to the overall Downtown Los Angeles area. This separation translates physically by this historic district barriered between Eastern Los Angeles freeways and the LA river. However, part of this barrier renews and keeps Boyle Heights prominent and preserves the present Hispanic Community. But, part of this separation has been slowly deteriorating in certain sections like first street that bridges Boyle Heights with neighboring communities.

I decided to explore this complex topic of transportation in relation to my studio site this quarter beside the iconic Mariachi Plaza. I analyzed the various methods of transport to our site to highlight major barriers but also countless connectors as well. While my drawing is primarily black and white, I recognize that this urban fabric of Boyle Heights simply stands as several shades of gray and reiterates that not all borders are merely black and white.”


“BODY // ARCHITECTURE” by Katherine White

University of Kentucky

“The architecture we know now is created with the elements of the “body” that is the earth. A bird’s nest is just as architectural as any man-made structure, but one is considered “nature” while most man-made architecture is not. Partly this is because much of human architecture is, whether desired or not, harming the body of the earth.

What if our architecture was made from our bodies? Would we approach building differently or not? Where is the line between “man-made” and “nature” – is “human” not natural? Here the participants walk through the dreamscape- a sublime horror and beauty created with “somatic” architecture. Is this a design of the human hand and mind, or are we just experiencing it? All of these questions are either answered or left unanswered by the one who walks the path.”


“Cathedral crossroads” by Brian Varano

Silver Petrucelli

“The cathedral as a cross roads signifies a convergence of the community at large. The plaza opens wide to embrace all that approach. This edifice’s presence symbolizes the community’s strength and beckons all to gather. Its towers reach to the heavens reminding one to embrace the beauty in daily life. The cathedral endures and embodies the community’s past, present, and future.

The cathedral depicted shortly after a storm reminds one of the cathedral serving as a beacon even during the worst of times. As the image is dream like, the cathedral takes all who enter into another realm of awe and beauty, even for a fleeting moment. It forever remains present in one’s mind even after one departs. It is continuously cloaked and unveiled with the light and darkness of each day and night and amazes one with it’s monumentality and yet delicate details.”


“Vista Fragmentado” by Malia Marantan

California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo

“Through the interlacing of two distinctly different cities – Downtown Los Angeles and Boyle Heights – the relation of consistent, cyclical geometry provides a moment for distinct views to take place, fragmenting each cityscape into an abstract piece of solid and void that come together as one.”

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Reference

Best of LaCantina 2022: Competition Winners Revealed!
CategoriesArchitecture

Best of LaCantina 2022: Competition Winners Revealed!

Best of LaCantina 2022: Competition Winners Revealed!

Architizer is thrilled to announce the winners for one of this year’s most inspiring design competitions! The 5th Annual “The Best of LaCantina” attracted entries from architecture and design firms around the world, each integrating LaCantina’s stunning doors and windows into their projects in innovative ways. The projects ranged widely in location, building type and scale, but they all share one thing in common: Their use of LaCantina products allows for a seamless connection between inside and out, framed by beautiful, durable materials.

The designers behind this year’s Best in Show, the Panama and US-based firm IM-KM Architecture and Planning — led by Kristin and Ivan Morales — win a trip to next year’s AIA Conference, complete with travel and accommodation. Stay tuned also for an in-depth look at their winning project, Casa Loro, which will be published soon on Architizer!

Without further ado, explore every winning design from this year’s competition, projects that truly encapsulate “The Best of LaCantina”.


Best in Show: Casa Loro by IM-KM Architecture and Planning, Puerto Escondido de Pedasi, Panama

Photos by Anita Calero, Fernando Alda, and Emily Kinskey

IM-KM’s concept for the main house at Casa Loro was to create a “modern tree house” made with contextual materials, designed to enclose indoor and outdoor spaces equally. The pavilions of the main house are all balanced around the central pavilion, which contains the vestibule and indoor and outdoor living rooms. The façades of each pavilion are operable; when opened, the perimeter of the interior spaces become permeable and create a single larger room including the adjacent garden spaces and the ocean at the horizon.


Most Innovative Project: Oyster House by Randall Kipp Architecture, White Stone, VA

Photos by Maxwell MacKenzie

Approached to design a modern, waterfront home yet still fitting in with the local vernacular, Randall Kipp Architecture put a modern spin on classic forms with transparent, gabled rooflines, open spaces, and a steel framework wrapped in glass. The floor-to-ceiling glass panels provide views of the Chesapeake Bay as well as marsh grasses and grains — a bridge between ecosystems.


Best Compact Project: Abodu One by Abodu, San Jose, CA

Photos by Abodu

Specializing in the design and construction of ADUs (accessory dwelling units), Abodu created the eponymous Abodu One, a 500-square-foot, one bedroom ADU dark cedar vertical siding, an integrated deck and LaCantina bifold doors.


Best Urban Residential Project: West Village Historic Townhouse by READ Architecture Design DPC, New York, NY

Photos by Zack Dezon

Located in a quiet street of the West Village, this landmarked carriage house was renovated with a motive of protecting the essence and the character of the townhouse while creating unique and contemporary moments. Through the respectful restoration of the front façade and bringing it back to its original 1925 state, an unexpected transformation is awaiting on the back façade, opening to a joyful surprise of a contemporary urban backyard.


Best Rural Residential Project: Hood River Residence by Catch Architecture, Hood River, OR

Photos by David Papazian

This residence is nestled into a scenic hillside, overlooking an active orchard. All the main rooms open up with LaCantina doors onto this view corridor. LaCantina’s wood option in walnut was a perfect match that continued to enhance the main design feature highlighting the active outdoors lifestyle. The floor-to-ceiling window in the main bedroom upstairs features a Juliette railing, enabling inhabitants to bring the outdoors in with fresh light and plenty of air. With its live green roof over the garage, the house melds with the existing landscape and blurs the lines between indoor and outdoor living.


Best Suburban Residential Project: Westchester Views by Workshop/APD, Armonk, NY

Photos by Read McKendree

Workshop/APD designed this 5 bedroom, 7,000 SF home in Armonk, which offers the convenience of an easy commute to New York City, but on a hilltop site where you are fully immersed in nature. The home has a unique sense of openness, light and air, with soaring vaulted ceilings in the great room and the ability to open almost every room to the outdoors thanks to LaCantina sliding doors. Breezes blow through and the views to the beautifully landscaped site feel like they are part of the interior design.


Best Commercial Project: Alila Marea by Joseph Wong Design Associates – JWDA, Encinitas, CA

Photos by Eric Laignel Photography and JMI

Alila Marea is a fully appointed luxury resort hotel with 130 guest rooms, 6,300 square feet of meeting space, spa, fitness, swimming pool, two restaurants, coffee shop, bar, and underground parking on a 4.3 acre site located on a coastal bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Encinitas, California. JWDA utilized LaCantina Doors to open up the exterior walls and offer as much indoor-outdoor connectivity as possible to the hotel guests. The architects customized the doors to fit the exterior envelope, maintain a waterproof assembly, and comply with acoustic, thermal and accessibility requirements.


Best Renovation Project: North Ranch Remodel by Horwitz A+D and Nancee Wolfe Designs, North Ranch, CA

Photos by Gary Moss Photography

For this radical remodel, the architects started with a French Country style home and unapologetically transformed it into a ‘transitional contemporary’ residence, whilst holding onto the original warmth of the property. Harnessing LaCantina’s bifold and sliding door systems in different parts of the house, the final structure possesses clean lines and a rear wall of the house that blurs the line of indoors and outdoors. Other standout features include a floating glassy spiral stair, a world class kitchen and master suite with an adjacent 350 square-foot patio/balcony.

These eight award-winning projects show just a glimpse of the incredible designs produced by architects with the help of LaCantina’s versatile product range. See more amazing case studies like these and learn more about the systems that make them possible over at LaCantinaDoors.com.

Reference

This Epic Architectural Triptych Depicts the Complexities of Hiroshima's Past, Present and Future
CategoriesArchitecture

This Epic Architectural Triptych Depicts the Complexities of Hiroshima’s Past, Present and Future

This Epic Architectural Triptych Depicts the Complexities of Hiroshima's Past, Present and Future

Upon first look over the minute details of One Drawing Challenge Student Winner Victoria Wong‘s award-winning triptych appears to revel in the medium itself. A drawing that harnesses the powers of digital processes, it certainly requires close looking to grasp the changing perspectives, intertwining scenes and layers of time that are compounded in each of the three scenes. One would be forgiven for assuming that the University of Michigan student set out to explore the aesthetic possibilities of digital sketching, 3D modeling and the various uses of other graphic software.

Yet, while Victoria demonstrates mastery of these techniques, they only tell one part of the story behind the drawing. At a fundamental level, before the composition and execution of these ideas, Victoria set out to explore the boundaries between designing, modeling and post-production. In this way, she approaches her subject matter, the site of Hiroshima, through a kaleidoscopic lens that incorporates Japanese aesthetic theory, contemporary music, and photographing imperfections in daily life. In this sense, the end goal was actually to overcome the hurdles of focusing on the technicalities of the design itself to instead foreground the emotive dimensions of a place, unlocking creative possibilities.

“Suggested by Lebbeus Woods, architecture is essentially an internalization of society yet an externalization of ourselves,” Victoria explained. “Through investigating the decay and death of artifacts and events, Into the Void illustrates the new collisions of regrowth and reshaping our relationship with different agencies.”

Architizer’s Architecture Editor invited Victoria to expand on conceptualization of her winning triptych. In the conversation that follows, the designer, who will be starting at Perkins&Will‘s Dallas studio this May, offers insights into her creative process and the underlying themes of her thesis project.

Hannah Feniak: Congratulations on your success with the One Drawing Challenge! What sparked your interest in entering the competition and what does this accolade mean to you?

Victoria Wong: Thank you, Hannah and your team, for hosting and curating! Also, congratulations to all the winners. I came across the One Drawing Challenge several years ago and appreciated Architizer showcasing a wide variety of entries so the public can appreciate those drawings. The simplicity of one image accompanied by storytelling has also been compelling. Regarding this accolade, it’s an honor to conclude my time as a student by sharing my thesis with the architecture community.

POSSIBILITIES.

Photo Study: The starting point of Victoria’s winning entry was idea curation. To this end, she sought to understand her subject matter through taking photos and analyzing music. 

HF: What were the primary challenges of conceiving your work, from forming the idea to the physical process of creation? 

VW: The triptych serves as the final scenes of my thesis, “Into the Void: Fragment Time, Space, Memory, and Decay in Hiroshima.” It was about a six-month study of various Japanese aesthetic theories of imperfections, including life and death, decay and rebirth, shadow and lights, etc. Since the topic is very conceptual, I took a non-traditional route to build my understanding of the matter by photographing the imperfections in daily observance and analyzing contemporary music after the first round of research. 

The major challenge was translating multiple layers of Hiroshima’s research and new information into the final scenes while acknowledging the historical, cultural and natural aspects of the site. There is a delicate balance in respecting the gravity of the past while proposing a parallel timescape that accepts and appreciates imperfections and the scarring. Another challenge was to showcase the idea through an appropriate medium; in this case, the stages are oversaturated yet harmonizing to counter argue our understanding and concept of “void.” 

The final production was relatively short once I decided what to highlight and how to narrate my thesis. All elements in the triptych were modeled digitally, thus requiring very little post-production work. I specifically enjoyed the production process of this triptych; it was an experiment in challenging how much the post-production process can be minimized. The boundary between designing, modeling and post-production is blurred. The strategy of ‘manipulating’ the illustrations fulfilled my curiosity in examining if the creation of an image can be as interesting as the design and the story behind it. 

Photo Study: A zoomed-in showing one of the panoramic views that was described in the text that Victoria was working with.  

HF: Could you describe why you gravitated towards these specific illustration techniques? 

VW: I usually gravitate towards two types of illustrations: imaginative and informative. The creative illustration reveals how the space feels instead of the technicality of the design, i.e. the mood palette, while the informative illustration showcases relationships in all scales, from connectivities of agencies to architectural detailing to a building’s contextual relationship with its site or cityscape on a larger scale. This triptych lays between the two categories. It is a relatively new way of seeing illustrations for myself, but it seemed fitting for this theme. 

For example, the middle panel conveys the “void in culture” by depicting an afternoon at Yagenbori, previously known as one of the largest red-light districts in Japan. It is currently at its sunset stage and losing its identity as the cradle of Geisha. To capture its story and depict the diversity of the area, I chose to collapse multiple perspectives and timescapes into a one-point perspective allowing time and space to condense into one scene where layers of imagination coexist. The duo-perspective illustrates different timelines in the scene. When the panel is viewed ‘top-down,’ it tells the story of the current days; when it is viewed ‘forward,’ it illustrates the past events. Other floating devices and elements demonstrate futuristic connections bridging the two. The timeline, scale, and space are distorted in ways where elements from different eras are reorganized and coexist in the same world. 

Mini Prints of Testing Images

HF: Your piece explores Japanese aesthetic theories through the city of Hiroshima’s past, presents and future. Do you have other drawings that are as conceptual as this? In terms of format, have you explored the narrative potential of the triptych format in the past?

VW: This is my first time creating a triptych, but I have always gravitated towards illustrations with a sense of humor and leaving room for imagination. The project started with a trio of panoramic collages using historic photos from WWII to re-visualize the same three Hiroshima sites shown in the triptych. They depict a parallel timeline in which human and non-human agencies got to reclaim the ruins and transform them into their habitat instead of reconstructing how the sites were before they were annihilated. In terms of format, I am currently researching a couple of other sites that follow the same trail of investigation and presentation format besides Hiroshima. They both have their challenges – historically, environmentally, culturally, and politically– and I’m excited to see where this way of investigation will affect our views towards scarring that are shared between generations and to inform architects of alternative possibilities.

HF: How did the process and workflow of creating your drawing compare to traditional architectural drafting?

VW: While technology certainly helps people visualize and communicate ideas, I’m attracted to the simplicity of pen and paper when thinking through ideas. During covid, when our mobility was primarily restricted, I started exploring digital sketching. The medium is different, but the general technique remains unchanged. While my ideas begin with analog and digital sketching, 3D modeling and other graphic software are productions and experimental tools that elevate my understanding of design. On the one hand, I enjoy how forgiving digital platforms are, yet making mistakes is the best part of experimenting. 

Detail of the final product: 1/3 of the triptych. 

HF: What one tip would you give other students looking to win next year’s One Drawing Challenge?

VW: Go wild and explore your imagination. There is no right or wrong answer to creating an excellent image as long as the message is conveyed. I’m excited to see how people depict their logic and systematically translate it into a visually pleasing drawing. Have fun, and enjoy the process! 

Thank you, Hannah and your team, for hosting and curating! Also, congratulations to all the winners. I came across the One Drawing Challenge several years ago and appreciated Architizer showcasing a wide variety of entries so the public can appreciate those drawings. The simplicity of one image accompanied by storytelling has also been compelling. Regarding this accolade, it’s an honor to conclude my time as a student by sharing my thesis with the architecture community.


Interested in seeing more work by Victoria Wong? Peruse her portfolio and connect:

> https://www.linkedin.com/in/vwongwt/ 
> https://www.instagram.com/vw.archive/ 

The winners of Architizer’s Fourth Annual One Drawing Challenge have been revealed! Interested in next year’s program? Subscribe to our newsletter for updates. 



Reference

One Drawing Challenge 2022: Winners Revealed!
CategoriesArchitecture

One Drawing Challenge 2022: Winners Revealed!

One Drawing Challenge 2022: Winners Revealed!

The results are in for one of Architizer’s most inspiring competitions of the year: We are excited to announce the Winners for the 4th Annual One Drawing Challenge! Featuring extraordinary details and produced using a wide range of artistic mediums, the two top winners and 10 commended entries showcase the powerful potential architectural representation to tell stories about our built environment and the wider world in 2022.

This year’s Top Student Prize goes to Victoria Wong from the University of Michigan, whose intricate triptych, entitled “Into the Void”, captured the imagination of the jurors. The incredibly detailed panels depict the “the new collisions of regrowth and reshaping our relationship with different agencies” in Hiroshima, Japan. Meanwhile, artist and architect Thomas Schaller scooped the Top Non-Student Prize for his atmospheric depiction of “Octavia – Suspended City”, a fantastical image of a mysterious metropolis inspired by Italo Calvino’s book Invisible Cities.

Reflecting on this year’s competition, juror Wandile Mthiyane commented: “This year’s finalists stretched my notion of what it means to be a designer: they used the medium of architectural drawing to express their political views, show their support for equity, and stress the importance of climate change. Architecture and design are the frames, but people are the big picture. This year’s best drawings were truly thought-provoking, challenging, and creative.”

The two top winners receive $3,000 each, an exclusive editorial feature on their work, and a seat on an Architizer jury panel next year. Without further ado, view the Top Winners and the 10 Commended Entries from this year’s One Drawing Competition, together with descriptions by their creators. Be sure to share your favorites with the hashtag #OneDrawingChallenge on Instagram and Twitter!


Student Winner: “Into the Void: Fragmented Time, Space, Memory, and Decay in Hiroshima” by Victoria Wong

University of Michigan

“Into the Void” Detail

“Suggested by Lebbeus Woods, architecture is essentially an internalization of society yet an externalization of ourselves. This triptych adapts Japanese aesthetic theories of transience & imperfection, and applies them to the city of Hiroshima. Through investigating the decay & death of artifacts and events, Into the Void illustrates the new collisions of regrowth and reshaping our relationship with different agencies.

The three selected locations are experimental adaptations to the spatial and environmental challenges that facilitate ‘changes’ according to our mental statuses and behaviors. Through displaying site-specific elements, Into the Void captures the heterotopia voids in time, culture, and nature. The over-saturated sites are witnesses and flaneurs through time that capture the architectural scars in the parallel universe where the past, present, and future coexist simultaneously.”


Non-Student Winner: “Octavia – Suspended City” by Thomas Schaller

Schaller Architectural Fine Arts

“Inspired by the iconic book Invisible Cities. by Italo Calvino, this drawing tells the story of Octavia, a city suspended above the Earth by a spider’s web of cables and wires. Interpretations are limitless, but in my interpretation, the inhabitants of Octavia depict the central truth about humanity – connections are profound – but tenuous; just as is our grasp on life itself. Isolation is not sustainable and connectivity – for all its impermanence – remains a more beautiful response.”


Commended Entry: “The city drowned by coffee” by Pengcheng Yang and Zirui Wang

The Melbourne University

“This is a painting about the concept of architecture expressed through images in a dream world. The theme of the painting revolves around the culture of coffee and the society that is triggered by coffee as a sober dependency of people.

1. A distant coffee factory produced an explosion, and the excess coffee caused great pressure inside the building.
2. The origin of coffee often comes from relatively poor countries, such as Brazil, Ethiopia or Colombia.
3. The shepherds mingling in the line represent the story of how coffee was first discovered by the shepherds of Ethiopia.
4. The fragile console tries as much as possible to hold the balance of people’s coffee intake.
5. There are ads and signs like iLLY and Nespresso for capsule coffee everywhere.
6. The mountains of waste formed by coffee consumption.”


Commended Entry: “Remembering Hanami” by Seah XinZe

WilkinsonEyre Architects

“Every spring, cherry trees in Japan bloom with a fleeting magnificence, captivating the nation for two weeks before wilting. During this time, parks are shrouded in pink and the ephemerality of cherry blossoms is appreciated as they are a reminder of the transitory yet overwhelming beauty of life.

Located in Yoyogi park, Tokyo, the project aims to immortalize the spirit of the cherry blossom. The building is a hand-woven landscape of experiences that engage the senses through the extraction of the different aspects of cherry blossom. The distillery boils flowers from the adjacent cherry grove, distributing scented steam through a network of pipes into the various spaces of the building. Visitors enjoy cherry blossom tea under a canopy crafted from sakiori weaving dyed pink from cherry trees and are invited to picnic by the scented water pools.”


Commended Entry: “Synopolis” by Lohren Deeg

Ball State University

“Content with the limitations of their small apartments and quaint terraces, warmly greeting their neighbors, and strolling among the stepped streets, the citizens of Synopolis greet the sunset each evening with decanters of bubbly concoctions, slowness in their constitutionals, diving into delectable sweets, and chatting away the day’s trials and travails over stacks of plates of tapas.”


Commended Entry: “Mycelium Modularity” by Dustin Wang

Young Guns Studio

“This drawing illustrates a forest that has been populated with housing pods made out of mycelium, conceptualizing the utilization of this material in modular architecture.

Mycelium, a natural fungi found in forests, can form rigid, water-resistant structures when molded and grown. Possessing a flexible form, this allows for the creation of these pods around trees and hills – existing in harmony with nature, rather than replacing it. The resulting effect are teardrop-like structures, differing in shape as each is hand-built.

In this scene, pollution is the origin of the hazy, grey sky. With plastic and waste reduction having become an everlasting consequence, mycelium is used in this small community of hopeful outliers, being a last ditch effort to slow down the deep-rooted repercussions of the changing climate.

In an inevitable future where the natural lives in the artificial, the increased awareness of the benefits of mycelium, will aid in revitalization.”


Commended Entry: “(Your) My Bedroom” by Daniel Ho

University of Auckland

“Many see in architecture the plan, section, elevation, axonometric, and BIM model; mathematical conventions communicating the means of construction. However, drawing by measurement to prescribe beyond the floor, walls, and roof is a perverse overstep; measurements cannot make singular the continuous performance of everyday living.

‘(Your) My Bedroom’ departs from such Cartesian description. It draws a transient domestic, where violence and protection coalesce. A place to laugh, cry, hate, love, reflect, and regret; to feel ambition, faith, passion, cynicism, pleasure, and pain. To draw the bedroom should reflect these experiences with all the egotism of the eye, lest the drawing repels the character it endeavors to express.

Singular compositionally, yet multiplicative in evoking identities of the viewer’s own ‘Bedroom.’ Recalling these identities with blue pencil on 2000 x 1500mm paper means democratizing these everyday experiences. Identities range from bodily to microscopic scales; zoom up, explore, and analyze the character, ‘Bedroom.’”

Juror Sabina Blasiotti said of (Your) My Bedroom: “The drawing that excited me the most is (Your) My Bedroom. It immediately spoke to me, and straight away I saw the bedroom in a way that I’d never seen before. The bedroom is often the subject of architectural illustrations, but Daniel is giving us a completely fresh view of the bedroom which can speak to a wider audience. Daniel talks about a coalescence of violence and protection, passion and pain. The bed is the place where we seek refuge when we are sick and suffering, where we stare at the ceiling when we are anxious, but also a place to relax, think and so on. How to depict one single space that encapsulates such a wide spectrum of contrasting feelings and emotions? I believe Daniel successfully did this.”


Commended Entry: “The Stamper Battery” by William du Toit

Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

“Drawing from EM Forster’s 1909 short story “The Machine Stops”, this allegorical architectural drawing re-presents a seminal tale of environmental devastation caused by the 1860 New Zealand goldrush. Propelling the Otago region into economic prosperity, the mining operations were abandoned once the gold dried up—the forgotten industrial artefacts, environmental scarring, and their historic narratives slowly decaying over time, destined to be lost forever.

The Stamper Battery is the final drawing in a series of 7, each preserving the narrative of a different artefact of the historic goldmining process. It combines orthographic, notation and layering techniques to compose a drawing that shifts restlessly on its page—depicting fragments of architecture as they transform and decay over time. The drawing is intended to be exhibited in sequence, avoiding direct intervention on the site while preserving a national heritage story of place identity—acting as a lesson for future generations to learn from past mistakes.”


Commended Entry: “Up” by Thomas Schaller

Schaller Architectural Fine Arts

“Examples of architecture can too often be seen as solid objects, but of course, they are not. They contain spaces, voids in which humans interact, work and play, love and live. In this sense, the volumes contained by architecture are the collective kinetic stories of all who have gone before and will yet arrive. This drawing – “Up” – explores the energies of that process, the ideas of entrance and exit, of doors and stairways that we all employ to knit our internal lives to the external world and in some silent way, to one another and to time itself.”


Commended Entry: “The Gardener’s Diary” by Glory Kuk

KPF

“Dear Diary,
I recently rummaged through my old diaries and found melancholic entries.
Located in Renwick Ruins of Welfare Island, an island that housed the undesirables of the city, much like our rejection of mental health problems.
The drawing diary is informed by small details in life and on site, which is spatially translated. It grows as more details are noticed, the drawing itself as a growing diary where it is reconditioned daily by me, tending, caring and maintaining the space. There is a visitor within me who might create chaos within the garden based on their emotions, the other side of my psyche. We shall leave traces for each other as we will never meet.
The drawing is where the garden is architecturised, and the architecture is gardenised.
It is a safe haven to defuse my worries, through this drawing I shall find my peace…
Yours Truly, The Gardener”


Commended Entry: “Pocket Size City: The Atlas” by Stefan Maier

University of Applied Arts Vienna

“The Atlas – a loose assemblage of maps. It constitutes a multitude of scales within itself. It links between the content and its representations, creates relationships, and references – a hyperlink into the digital space. The atlas holds the weight of the digital mesh.”


Commended Entry: “Ronin’s Lair” by Eduardo Perez

California State University Long Beach

“‘Ronin’s Lair’… an environment that lies between two parallel universes. These series of spaces are a continually morphing and warping training grounds for the ‘wayward samurai’. They are part Japanese Edo Period and part digital future, they are neither today nor tomorrow… they are in a continually shifting threshold space; a warped interim and an evolutionary and non-chronological series of physicality’s and landscapes. My explorations also lie within 2 worlds of the analogue and the digital, my submission is one of the analogue (ink on parchment paper) and it is one of a series of many such explorations in digital, analogue, and hybrid mediums.”


We have been blown away once again by the response from our community for this popular ideas competition. “This year’s entries raised the bar for creative storytelling through visual means, demonstrating again that technology need not kill off drawing as architecture’s medium of choice,” remarked Architizer’s Editor in Chief, Paul Keskeys. “In fact, with advancements in digital sketching and even AI as an additional creative tool, our fundamental approach to ideation is evolving, and I am excited to see what the future holds for architectural drawing in the next decade and beyond.”

As the art of architectural representation continues to evolve, so will our competitions and awards programs, in order to accurately reflect the incredible ability of architects, designers and creative people to communicate complex ideas about the built environment. Sign up for our newsletter in order to be notified when our next evolution is announced, with bigger, bolder opportunities set to emerge in 2023:

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Panama Perfection: IM-KM's Casa Loro Wins "Best in Show" in 2022 LaCantina Competition
CategoriesArchitecture

Panama Perfection: IM-KM’s Casa Loro Wins “Best in Show” in 2022 LaCantina Competition

Panama Perfection: IM-KM's Casa Loro Wins "Best in Show" in 2022 LaCantina Competition

The 5th Annual Best of LaCantina competition saw its most inspiring range of entries to date, with a diverse range of stunning architectural designs submitted from the United States and beyond, each utilizing the unique qualities of LaCantina Doors‘ systems to blur the boundaries between indoors and outdoors. Of the top projects submitted this year, a striking residence in Panama — Casa Loro — scooped the prestigious title of “Best in Show”. Its designers, the Panama and US-based firm IM-KM Architecture and Planning — led by Kristin and Ivan Morales — win a trip to next year’s AIA Conference, complete with travel and accommodation.

The project was approached with a deep sensitivity to local context. “The intent was to first restore, then relate to and engage with the site,” stated the architects. “The design needed to emerge from the restored forest to find wide open plains through, in, and around the main house. The concept of the main house at Casa Loro was to create a modern tree house made with contextual materials that enclose indoor and outdoor spaces equally.”

IM-KM paid special attention to material selection and spatial layout, seeking to create a home in which each space is uniquely designed to enhance the client’s sensory experience: “As we designed each of these spaces, we wanted them to have unique qualities of sound, materials, and light, that become integrated components that enhance the user’s experience and create specific memories of the place.

“This was achieved by hierarchically separating the spaces by a series of steps and platforms that are surrounded by gardens that attract biodiversity. As you circulate, each space becomes gradually more intimate until you reach the bedrooms and their private gardens. The ocean and fountain provide different acoustics depending on which space or garden you are in, and the shade from the various trees and palms create shadows that move around with the ocean breeze.”

The architects sought to create a hierarchical sequence of spaces that would offer inhabitants a sense of escape as they transition between each living space. IM-KM explained: “The pavilions of the main house are all balanced around the central pavilion which contains the vestibule and indoor and outdoor living rooms. From this central space, you transition from the modern world to somewhere else, where you can forget your day, and just be on holiday.”

Utilizing LaCantina’s sliding door systems, the façades of each pavilion are fully operable. When opened, the perimeter of the interior spaces become permeable and create a single larger room including the adjacent garden spaces and the ocean at the horizon. “When passing through the modern pavilion — from the vestibule into the outdoor living room — you are compressed and released into the vastness of the outdoor living room which looks out to the sea and the surrounding playful roof forms. It is meant to be an exciting, all-encompassing transition,” said the architects.

Casa Loro powerfully demonstrates how smart material and product selection can enable a seamless transition between interior spaces and the surrounding landscape. IM-KM’s adept use of LaCantina Doors systems helped create a serene home that is intimately connected to the unique natural environment of Panama, while producing an open-plan layout that is flooded with natural light. The house is proof that, when the right building products are employed and the details are well considered, a “Best in Show” outcome is possible.

To see every winner of the 5th Annual Best of LaCantina competition, click here, and learn more about LaCantina Doors here.

Photographs by Anita Calero, Fernando Alda, and Emily Kinskey.

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One Drawing Challenge Winner Explores Enduring Truths at the Heart of a Classic Book Beloved by Architects Worldwide
CategoriesArchitecture

One Drawing Challenge Winner Explores Enduring Truths at the Heart of a Classic Book Beloved by Architects Worldwide

One Drawing Challenge Winner Explores Enduring Truths at the Heart of a Classic Book Beloved by Architects Worldwide

The winners of Architizer’s Fourth Annual One Drawing Challenge have been revealed! Interested in next year’s program? Subscribe to our newsletter for updates. 

Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities is officially more than 50 years old; yet, its enduring appeal is attested to by the special place reserved on most architect’s bookshelves for the Italian fables. For young architecture students and experienced practitioners alike, the book remains a source of inspiration and a constant reminder of the infinite possible experiences inherent to any place. This year’s One Drawing Challenge Non-Student Winner, Thomas Schaller, is one of those architects.

While at first glance, the city in his painting appears to be reflecting on a body of water, longer gazing reveals that the buildings grow both up and down. As the fine artist explains, “This drawing tells the story of Octavia, a city suspended above the Earth by a spider’s web of cables and wires. Interpretations are limitless, but in my interpretation, the inhabitants of Octavia depict the central truth about humanity – connections are profound – but tenuous, just as is our grasp on life itself.” The razor’s edge distinction between precarity and strength is at the core of the urban experience.

Expertly oscillating between the precision of fine lines, seen in details like the bridge and cables, and the more atmospheric and reflective qualities of diffused pigments, the image is mind-bending: not only in terms of subject matter but also in terms of technique. Schaller’s use of his medium, therefore, amplifies the thematic subject matter at the heart of the image.

To learn more about his conceptual and creative processes, Architizer’s Architecture Editor, Hannah Feniak, was delighted to chat with Thomas, who delved into topics such as the relationship between architecture and fine art, and the inspiration for his winning entry. Keep scrolling to see process sketches by the award-winning architectural artist!

Hannah Feniak: Congratulations on your success with the One Drawing Challenge! What sparked your interest in entering the competition, and what does this accolade mean to you?

Thomas Schaller: First, I want to say a very big “Thank You” to everyone at Architizer who designed and hosted this competition and exhibition. It is a great honor for me to even be included. I appreciate all your hard work. And I am in awe of the incredible work entered. Congratulations to all.

From the time I could see, drawing has been fundamental to who I am. As a child, I drew to try to make sense of the worlds I saw both around me and within my imagination. To this day, I am never without a sketchbook and a pocket full of sketch pencils in order to keep a kind of “visual diary” of the ideas in my head as well as to record my impressions of the world we all inhabit. And so, I am thrilled that this competition even exists.

It is my belief that drawing is the most effective and direct connection between the visual image and the human need to record, express, and create. While I rely on traditional pencil and paper, I have no opposition whatsoever to any means, method, or technological tool anyone uses to draw. But for the human mind to open the windows upon the landscapes of perception, creativity, and imagination, drawing is the most effective, enjoyable and expressive way to do so.

HF: What were the primary challenges of conceiving your work, from forming the idea to the creation process?

TS: Like many, I worship the iconic work, Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino. It was written in the early 1970s but its themes of exploration, the clash of the real and the imagined, the built and the unbuilt, the plausible and the impossible, dreams, memories and the human condition are simply timeless. The book’s protagonist — an adventurous interpretation of Marco Polo — travels a dreamscape of a world visiting cities built of memory and dreams and offers endless insights into the nature of cities and the very fabric of human life here on Earth.

One of the cities visited is Octavia, described in the book as suspended high above the Earth between two rocky mountain peaks by a tenuous spider’s web of cables and wires. Countless metaphors and analogies can be drawn. One of course is the dependence of any city on a healthy infrastructure of roads, bridges and lines of communication, etc. But another more broad theme is the “infrastructure” of humanity itself. Our very real need to congregate, to form groups for safety, sanity and survival was, for me, the takeaway and the theme of my drawing.

Especially after coming through two years of pandemic, the themes of human interaction and the need for interconnectivity were at the forefront of my mind as I designed this work. We can take our society’s survival for granted, but if we fail to care for and nurture one another, as well as the very planet upon which all societies depend, we can learn just how frail and fragile our infrastructure may truly be.

Preliminary sketch for the winner entry courtesy of the artist

HF: You trained as an architect but now have a successful international career as an architectural watercolor artist and author. How do you think the medium itself contributes to the scenes that you depict — in particular, in your winning entry?

TS: In my earlier days, I felt that I had to choose between my wish to become a visual artist and my desire to become an architect. In time, I became both, but my career interests operated on separate tracks, divided by an arbitrary and faulty belief that each had separate aims. It has taken many years for me to understand that these interests,  as well as many others, could be successfully merged into a single creative energy. The key to this for me was in realizing that all things — all ideas, all people, all places, all atmosphere and negative space itself has a kind of architecture. There is a shape and a volume to everything seen and unseen, real or simply imagined. And so anything can be studied, modeled and drawn. If I concentrate on drawing what I “see” rather than what I “look at” — drawing genuine emotional experiences rather than simple visual observations, the landscapes for creativity become boundless.

HF: Your winning entry was inspired by Italo Calvino’s classic, Invisible Cities. Are your other architectural paintings and drawings as conceptual as “Octavia – Suspended City”?

TS: Repeat readings of Invisible Cities helped me to form the cornerstone of what would become my “artistic voice”. I am more aware of contrasts than anything else as I move through the world. By that I mean of course the clash of dark and light, but also ideas about what is real or simply imagined, the man-made and the natural environments, warm and cool tonalities, vertical, horizontal, and diagonal energies, and thoughts about time — what is past, present, or yet to be.

As polarities meet and find some kind of resolution — or not — this is what my work is always about, trying to find a resolution on paper of two or more things in opposition. And so yes, such conceptual work is exactly what I have been long most interested in exploring.

HF: What first drew you to watercolor as a medium for depicting the built environment?

TS: As a choice of medium, watercolor is a perfect fit for me. It has the ability to be either very precise or completely abstract, controlled or wild. The use of watercolor is a study in edges: hard and explicit, or soft and ephemeral. Watercolors can at once be subtle and suggestive or bold and explicit.

I think of watercolor too as a “subtractive” process in that we begin with a piece of white paper, 100% in light. And we proceed to subtract away some of this light as we go. The transparent nature of watercolor enhances our potential to study light. And in the end, the parts of our work that are not painted can be as powerful and full of meaning as those which are painted.

And the connection to drawing itself cannot be ignored. I actually consider what I do with watercolor as drawing, but I draw with shapes of value and tone rather than with lines.

Planning the concept and colors for the winner entry, image courtesy of the artist

HF: My next question is somewhat related to the preceding one: How did the process and workflow of creating your drawing compare to traditional architectural drafting?

TS: As stated, watercolor is a form of drawing to me. But rather than depicting ideas of space and form with a line, we do so by using shapes of tone and value, shadow and light, and color. But line-based sketching and more precise architectural drawing are always an element in what I do as well. These are time-honored and beautiful means of expression which I hope never to abandon. In my work, I try to merge the precise with the suggested, the implied with the stated, and so while I wander quite far from my more precise architectural roots, they are always there as a kind of north star shading any wild flights of fancy with at least a note of plausibility.

HF: What one tip would you give the other participants looking to win next year’s One Drawing Challenge?

TS: Oh my … “ advice”. I always say that the best advice I have is to take very little advice. This is a glib non-answer I realize but there’s something in it. What I mean is that as we all try to improve and advance in our careers and our own sense of achievement, it becomes all-too easy to compare our work or measure ourselves against our colleagues or others whose work we admire. This is natural, but should be avoided as much as possible.

I am nowhere near the artist I hope to be some day, but I only started to make noticeable improvements when I trained my ego to be a bit more self-reliant and less “noisy”. It’s too easy to live on social media and if we succumb to the flattery or the uninformed critiques we hear online, we are doomed. I think we should take any feedback onboard, process it quickly and move past it.

Genuinely, I celebrate the accomplishments of my colleagues. But I understand that another’s win does not equal my loss. And anything I might achieve does not diminish any other’s work. While you can never draw or paint like anyone else, neither can anyone else draw or paint like you.

And so rather than by seeing the world always by looking outward, spend as much time exploring the worlds you see by looking inward. And listen. There is your voice telling you what you need to do and where you need to go. We already have within us all we need to do most anything we wish to do. So if we trust that voice and learn to hear it more clearly, it will lead us in the direction we should be traveling.


Interested in seeing more work by Thomas Schaller Fine Art? Peruse his portfolio and connect with the artist through your preferred channel:

> www.thomaswschaller.com
> www.facebook.com/thomaswschaller
> www.twitter.com/twschaller
> www.instagram.com/thomaswschaller

The winners of Architizer’s Fourth Annual One Drawing Challenge have been revealed! Interested in next year’s program? Subscribe to our newsletter for updates. 



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