Remaining tickets for the Dezeen Awards 2023 party in London on Tuesday 28 November are now available to buy on general release. Book your tickets now before they sell out!
Early-bird ticket sales ended last night, Tuesday 31 October, at 11:59pm London time. All remaining tickets are now available at our general release price of £175 + VAT. You can also save a further 10 per cent if you book a package of 10 tickets or more.
Taking place at Shoreditch Electric Light Station in London on 28 November, we will celebrate the winners of Dezeen Awards 2023 with food, drink, live entertainment and music throughout the night.
The winners of all 39 Dezeen Awards project categories will be revealed, as well as the overall architecture, interiors, design and sustainability projects of the year.
We will also be announcing the six Designers of the Year and revealing the winner of the inaugural Bentley Lighthouse Award.
The party will be a chance for everyone to come together to celebrate their achievements with fellow nominees and winners, as well as our illustrious Dezeen Awards 2023 judges.
Judges this year include Patrik Schumacher, Patrizia Moroso, Giulio Cappellini, Sabine Marcelis, and Tola Ojuolape. See who they crowned as winners when they collect their trophies, and join in the celebrations.
Tickets selling out fast
With three quarters of all tickets already sold for this year’s glamorous event, make sure to grab the final few tickets before they are gone. Don’t miss out on this year’s celebrations!
Email [email protected] if you have any questions. Sign up to our Dezeen Awards newsletter to get updates on the winners party and future editions of Dezeen Awards.
There are just five days left to save on tickets for the Dezeen Awards 2023 party. Book now to secure your place at our reduced early-bird rate and see this year’s winners announced.
Early-bird tickets will be on sale until 23:59 London time on 31 October 2023. Save 20 per cent and book your ticket for the special early-bird price of £145 (excluding VAT) if you order before 23:59 on 31 October 2023.
You can also save a further 10 per cent if you book a package of 10 tickets or more.
Buy your early-bird tickets now!
Taking place at Shoreditch Electric Light Station in London on 28 November, we will celebrate the winners of Dezeen Awards 2023 with food, drink, live entertainment and music throughout the night.
The winners of all 39 Dezeen Awards project categories will be revealed, as well the overall architecture, interiors, design and sustainability projects of the year.
We will also be announcing the six Designers of the Year and revealing the winner of the inaugural Bentley Lighthouse Award.
Stay at One Hundred Shoreditch
If you are travelling to London for Dezeen Awards 2023 you can save further on your stay with our hotel partner, One Hundred Shoreditch. Located just under a 10 minute walk away from the venue in the heart of Shoreditch, it is the ideal spot for your stay in London.
Use the code Dezeen23 as a “rate access/corporate code” when booking to save an extra 20 per cent off the best available price.
Email [email protected] if you have any questions. Sign up to our Dezeen Awards newsletter to get updates on the winners party and future editions of Dezeen Awards.
Tickets for the Dezeen Awards 2023 party to celebrate this year’s winners are now on sale. Book now to secure your place at our reduced early-bird rate!
Taking place at Shoreditch Electric Light Station in London on 28 November, we will celebrate the winners of Dezeen Awards 2023 with food, drink, live entertainment and music throughout the night.
The winners of all 39 Dezeen Awards project categories will be revealed, as well the overall architecture, interiors, design and sustainability projects of the year.
We will also be announcing the six Designers of the Year and revealing the winner of the inaugural Bentley Lighthouse Award.
The party will be a chance for everyone to come together to celebrate their achievements with fellow nominees and winners, as well as our illustrious Dezeen Awards 2023 judges.
Judges this year include Guilio Cappellini, Patrizia Moroso, Sabine Marcelis, Yves Béhar and Thom Mayne. See who they crowned as winners when they collect their trophies, and join in the celebrations.
Tickets for the event cost £175 + VAT. However, you can save 20 per cent and book your ticket for the special early-bird price of £145 + VAT if you order before 31 October 2023. You can also save a further 10 per cent if you book a package of 10 tickets or more.
Email [email protected] if you have any questions. Sign up to our Dezeen Awards newsletter to get updates on the winners party and future editions of Dezeen Awards.
Twenty-three leading architects and designers from more than 10 countries met last week in a final round of judging to decide the winners of the Dezeen Awards 2023.
The Dezeen Awards master jury took place at hotel One Hundred Shoreditch in London and included architect Sanjay Puri and designers Giulio Cappellini and Sabine Marcelis, among others.
Interior designers Colin King and Tola Ojuolape, designer Patrizia Moroso and architect Andrea Cesarman also joined to finalise the 50 award winners.
They include the winners of the inaugural Bentley Lighthouse Award, a special award supported by Bentley Motors that rewards an individual whose work has had an overwhelmingly beneficial impact on social and environmental sustainability.
Winners will be announced in November
Winners will be announced at the end of November at the winners’ party in London. Longlist announcements will be revealed next week, followed by the shortlist in October.
The master jury discussed 235 shortlisted entries selected from 4,800 projects from over 90 countries around the globe.
Judges also included Kevin Carmody and Titi Ogufere
Joining Cesarman and Puri on the architecture master jury panel were Lara Lesmes, co-founder of architecture and art studio Space Popular, Chilean-based photographer Cristóbal Palma, SketchUp architectural designer Sumele Adelana and Kevin Carmody, co-founder of London-based studio Carmody Groarke.
Eny Lee Parker and managing director and head of Material Bank Europe Philippe Brocart joined King and Moroso on the interiors master jury.
The design master jury panel included the founder of Design Week Lagos Titi Ogufere, Spazio Rossana Orlandi founder and curator Rossana Orlandi, Paris-based designer Erwan Bouroullec and head of design collaborations at Bentley Motors Chris Cooke.
They joined art director and founder Cappellini and artist and designer Marcelis.
Designer Piet Hein Eek, MASS Design Group senior director Kelly Alvarez Doran and A Plastic Planet co-founder Siân Sutherland were on the sustainability panel.
They were joined by professor of circular design and innovation Kate Goldsworthy, founder and creative director of Officina Corpuscoli Maurizio Montalti and director of design at Brookfield Properties Pragya Adukia.
An exclusive judges’ dinner took place on the night of the master jury day in the One Hundred Room at One Hundred Shoreditch, where the master jury was joined by other Dezeen Awards 2023 judges.
These included Jayden Ali, co-curator of the British Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2023, CEO of the Design Council Minnie Moll and Raw Edges co-founders Yael Mer and Shay Alkalay. The dinner featured glassware by Nude Glass.
Dezeen Awards winners’ party
Following the longlist and shortlist announcements, the next big date in the Dezeen Awards calendar is the culmination of this year’s programme – the Dezeen Awards winners’ party, which will take place on Tuesday 28 November in London.
Dezeen Awards winners will be able to collect their unique trophy at the event and it is a chance for everyone who was shortlisted for Dezeen Awards, or who judged the entries, to celebrate and network.
Tickets will be available to purchase later this year. Subscribe to the Dezeen Awards newsletter to keep up to date with the latest announcements.
The photography is by Mark Cocksedge.
Dezeen Awards 2023
Dezeen Awards celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design. Now in its sixth year, it has become the ultimate accolade for architects and designers across the globe. The annual awards are in partnership with Bentley Motors, as part of a wider collaboration that will see the brand work with Dezeen to support and inspire the next generation of design talent.
Dezeen has announced the 93 projects longlisted for this year’s Dezeen Awards in the sustainability categories, including projects by Universal Design Studio, Foster + Partners, Blond and Fletcher Priest Architects.
The 93 longlisted projects, which are in the running for awards in six different sustainability project categories, are by studios located across 28 different countries including Peru, Taiwan, Austria, Israel, Norway and Germany.
The top three represented studio countries are the UK, with 30 longlisted entries, followed by the US and the Netherlands, which are tied with six each.
Amongst the sustainability longlists are a low-carbon community arts space in Uganda, a mass-timber office building in London and a redeveloped brutalist housing estate in Sheffield.
Other longlisted projects include a biomaterial construction block made from a sugarcane by-product, a residential building wrapped in colonnades of tree trunks and a collection of colourful surface tiles made of paper waste.
All Dezeen Awards 2023 longlists revealed this week
Dezeen Awards 2023, in partnership with Bentley Motors, revealed all longlisted projects this week. The architecture, interiors and design longlists were announced earlier this week.
Longlisted projects have been selected from over 4,800 entries from 94 countries for the sixth edition of our awards programme, which celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design, as well as the studios and individuals producing the most outstanding work.
The next stage of Dezeen Awards 2023 will see all longlisted projects assessed by our international jury of leading professionals including architects Chitra Vishwanath and Koichi Takada, designers Maurizio Montalti, and Piet Hein Eek.
The judges will determine the projects that feature on the shortlists, which will be announced in October. A further round of judging by our master jury will determine the winners, which will be announced in November.
The six winners of the sustainable project categories will then battle to be crowned overall sustainable project of the year.
Read on for the full sustainable longlist:
Sustainable building
› 24 Public dwellings in Platja d’en Bossa, Ibiza, Spain, by 08014 Arquitectura › Subterranean Ruins, Bangalore, India, by A Threshold, V Sampth Bhaskar and Kiran Mai › Nightingale Village, Brunswick, Australia, by Architecture architecture, Austin Maynard Architects, Breathe, Clare Cousins Architects, Hayball and Kennedy Nolan › Tipai, Maharashtra, India, by Ariane Thakore Ginwala › House Hoinka, Bavaria, Germany, by Atelier Kaiser Shen Architects › Nursery in Alma Palace, Paris, France, by Atelier Régis Roudil Architectes › Children’s campus Theodoor, Jette, Belgium, by Cuypers & Q Architecten › Layher Macropolis, Lima, Peru, by Dessin Technisch › The Rajkumari Ratnavati Girl’s School, Jaisalmer, India, by Diana Kellogg Architects › Forest Bath, Eindhoven, The Netherlands, by GAAGA and MAAK Space › 54 Social Housing Inca, Columbia, by Joan J Fortuny and Alventosa Morell Arquitectes › Yukinohako, Joetsu City, Japan, by Kei Kaihoh Architects › Precise Acts – Hermès Workshops, Louviers, France, by Lina Ghotmeh Architecture › Atri, Brålanda, Sweden, by Naturvillan AB › 32° East Arts Centre, Kampala, Uganda, by New Makers Bureau › Östermalm Hall Padel, Mölnlycke, Sweden, by Tengbom › The Black and White Building, London, UK, by Waugh Thistleton Architects › Fire Station in Straubenhardt, Germany, by Wulf Architekten › Center for Handy skills, Hormuz, Iran, by ZAV Architects
This category is sponsored by Moda Living.
Browse all projects on the sustainable building longlist page.
Sustainable renovation
› Prank Project Aoyama, Tokyo, Japan, by AtMa › Bafta Headquarters, London, UK, by Benedetti Architects › Villa VD, Waasmunster, Belgium, by Britsom Philips Architects › National Youth Theatre, London, UK, by DSDHA › The Three Little Pigs – Cork House, Madrid, Spain, by EME157 › All Saints, London, UK, by EPR Architects › Entopia, Cambridge, UK, by Eve Waldron Design › Warwick Court, London, UK, by Fletcher Priest Architects › Ombú, Madrid, Spain, by Foster + Partners › Sayeah, Shantou, China, by JG Phoenix › Takaone, Tokyo, Japan, by Kei Kaihoh Architects › MIT Hayden Library, Cambridge, USA, by Kennedy & Violich Architecture › Park Hill Phase 2, Sheffield, UK, by Mikhail Riches › Qing Dynasty Post Office Renovation, Shanghai, China, by More Design Office › Art_1 Office, Athens, Greece, by Neiheiser Argyros › Maakleerplek, Leuven, Belgium, by Polo
Browse all projects on the sustainable renovation longlist page.
Sustainable interior
› Evagreen, London, UK, by Artform and Scenesmith › Visy Recycling’s Education Room, Auckland, New Zealand, by Atelier Jones Design › COS Biblioteksgatan, Stockholm, Sweden, by COS › Dr. Sarphatihuis Amsterdam, The Netherlands, by D/DOCK › Edit, London, UK, by Elly Ward and Joe Morris › Entopia, Cambridge, UK, by Eve Waldron Design › Freitag Store Shanghai, China, by Kooo Architects › Delatite Cellar Door, Mansfield, Australia, by Lucy Clemenger Architects › Corrugated Cardboard-formed Exhibition Space, Shanghai, China, by Luo studio › Big, London, UK, by Nina+Co › Family Home, Paris, France, by Retrouvius › Lai Zhou Bar, Shanghai, China by RooMoo Design Studio › Zero Restaurant, Surat, India, by Studio A+S › Coachtopia, London, UK, by Studio XAG › Our Time on Earth, London, UK, by Universal Design Studio › Larch Loft, London, UK, by Whittaker Parsons
Browse all projects on the sustainable interior longlist page.
Sustainable design (consumer)
› Gus by Tori Deetz for Good Growing › Glyph by The New Raw › Rango Ki Duniya rug by Jaipur Rugs for Project Freedom Manchaha › Biosphere Cellulose Kitchen by Abi Lambert Design › Blue Sky Lab by NIO Life › Tesoro Refillable Candle by Blond › Ruka Edge Slick by Blond › Kind Bassinet by DockATot by Wild Child Stockholm › Living Urn by Studio Hendrikx and Loop Biotech › PulpaTronics by PulpaTronics › Living Coffin by Studio Hendrikx and Loop Biotech › Ibuju by Fango › Phenomenal Fungi by Monash University Department of Design with K5 Furniture › Pix by Normann Copenhagen › Kankan Soap Dispenser by Kankan, Morrama and Two Times Elliott › Alpina by Barber Osgerby for Magis Spa
Browse all projects on the sustainable design (consumer) longlist page.
Sustainable design (building product)
› Alted H01 Collection by Berta Julià Sala for Alted Materials › Armourcoat Clay Lime Plaster (Clime) by Armourcoat › Unburnt Circular Tiles by Earth Mart › Phoenix by MycoMatters Lab › Re.Wrap by Ric Frampton and ReWrap › Erosion Mitigation Units (EMU) by Reef Design Lab › Flyt by Snøhetta › LinoFloor xf2 by Tarkett › Mano by Tom Fereday for Eco Outdoor › A Brick for Venice by Urban Radicals, AKT II and Local Works Studio › Permeable YiBrick by Yi Design
This category is sponsored by SketchUp.
Browse all projects on the sustainable design (building product) longlist page.
Material Innovation
› Vivomer by Shellworks › Pro-Turtle by Kai-Chieh Hsueh, Yu-Ting Chen, Hsun-Yu Chang, Zhong-Wei Lin, Kai-Chu Li › The Renu Jacket by Pangaia and Evrnu › Sugarcrete by Sugarcrete TM › Celium by Polybion › WoodenWood by Disrupt Design Lab › The Eggshell Project by Manufactura › Human Material Loop by Human Material Loop, Zsofia Kollar and Leonardo Avezzano › Herbier Project by Paula Cermeño León, Phytosphere Swiss Lab and Viviane Fontaine Paper Artist › Colorifix Limited invested in by The Mills Fabrica Investment Fund › Casta by Matter › Refoam by We+ › The Essence of Biocement by Friedrich Gerlach and Julia Huhnholz › Textile Tabletop by Kvadrat Really, Senator and Holmris › Bananatex® Jersey by Bananatex
Browse all projects on the material innovation longlist page.
Dezeen Awards 2023
Dezeen Awards celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design. Now in its sixth year, it has become the ultimate accolade for architects and designers across the globe. The annual awards are in partnership with Bentley Motors, as part of a wider collaboration that will see the brand work with Dezeen to support and inspire the next generation of design talent.
Dezeen has announced the 150 projects longlisted for this year’s Dezeen Awards in the interior categories, including interiors by studios Olson Kundig, Neri&Hu, Patricia Urquiola and Morris+Company.
The 150 longlisted projects, which are in the running for awards in nine different interior project categories, are by studios located across 32 different countries including India, Slovakia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark and Latvia.
The top three represented studio countries are the UK, with 27 longlisted entries, followed by the US with 23 and Australia with 15.
The top project city locations are London, with 18 longlisted entries, followed by Shanghai with seven and Sydney and Paris tied with four each.
Amongst the longlisted interiors this year are a refurbished 280-year-old courtyard house in Beijing, a textured beige ceramic home interior in Kyiv and a playful red brick-clad rooftop cafe in South Korea’s Gyeonggi-do province.
Other longlisted projects include a monochromatic office in Barcelona, a restaurant with a curved metal-mesh ceiling in London and a retail space featuring salvaged and biomaterials.
All Dezeen Awards 2023 longlists revealed this week
Dezeen Awards 2023, in partnership with Bentley Motors, will reveal all longlisted projects this week. The architecture longlist was published yesterday and the design longlist will be announced tomorrow, followed by the sustainability longlist on Thursday.
Longlisted projects have been selected from over 4,800 entries from 94 countries for the sixth edition of our awards programme, which celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design, as well as the studios and individuals producing the most outstanding work.
The next stage of Dezeen Awards 2023 will see all longlisted projects assessed by our international jury of leading professionals including interior designers Eny Lee Parker, Nick Jones and Tola Ojuolape.
The judges will determine the projects that feature on the shortlists, which will be announced in October. A further round of judging by our master jury will determine the winners, which will be announced in November.
One of the nine winners of the interior project categories will then be crowned the overall interior project of the year.
Read on for the full interiors longlist:
Home Interior
› WKA Penthouse, Antwerp, Belgium, by Bruno Spaas Architectuur › Leaside Avenue, London, UK, by Emil Eve Architects › Another Seedbed: From Domesticity to Hospitality, New York, USA, by Future Projects › House FC, Taipei City, Taiwan, by Fws_work › Atelier Chabot, Montreal, Canada, by Indee Design › Hiroo Residence, Tokyo, Japan, by Keiji Ashizawa Design › Cape Drive Residence, Hong Kong, China, by Linehouse › Mureli House, Kozyn, Ukraine, by Makhno Studio › Sun Dial Apartment, Paris, France, by Manuelle Gautrand Architecture › Kamoi House, Barcelona, Spain, by Mas-aqui › Hargrave Cottage Paddington, London, UK, by Michiru Higginbotham › Adventures in Space, London UK, by Owl › Union Street House, London, UK, by Prior Barraclough › North London Family Home, London, UK, by Retrouvius › Mexican and Galician influences in Madrid, Spain, by Sierra + Delahiguera › Belgravia Townhouse, London, UK, by State of Craft Limited › Tembo Tembo Lodge, South Africa, by Studio Asaï › Light House, Singapore, by Studio iF › Villa San Francisco, California, USA, by Studio Mortazavi › A Resolutely Maximalist Mini Loft, Bagnolet, France, by Zyva Studio
Browse all projects on the home interior longlist page.
Restaurant and bar interior
› Kiln at Ace Hotel, Sydney, Australia, by Atelier Ace › Frescohallen, Bergen, Norway, by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects › Nebula, London, UK, by Common Ground Workshop › Dolly, Unley, Australia, by Genesin Studio › Mala Sichuan Bistro, Houston, USA, by Gin Design Group › Beefbar Milan, Italy, by Humbert & Poyet › Chleo, New York, USA, by Islyn Studio › Gaga Coast, Shanghai, by Linehouse › Blue Bottle Zhang Yuan Cafe, Shanghai, by Neri&Hu Design and Research Office › Noma Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan, by OEO Studio › Prime Seafood Palace, Toronto, Canada, by Omar Gandhi Architects › Taproom in the Brewery Tenczynek, Poland, by Projekt Praga › Xokol, Guadalajara, Mexico, by ODAmx and Ruben Valdez Practice › Colemans Deli, Hathersage, UK, by SJW Architects › Cozinha das Flores and Flôr, Porto, Portugal, by Space Copenhagen › AOC Restaurant, Copenhagen, Denmark, by Spacon & X › Ikoyi, London, UK, by David Thulstrup › Light Years Asian Diner, Byron Bay, Australia, by Studio Plenty › Parconido Bakery Cafe, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea, by SukChulMok › Saint Hotel, Melbourne, Australia, by Telha Clarke
Browse all projects on the restaurant and bar longlist page.
Hotel and short-stay interior
› Birch (Selsdon), London, UK, by A-nrd studio › Drift Hotel, California, USA, by Anacapa Architecture › Ace Hotel Toronto, Canada, by Atelier Ace › Ember Locke, London, UK, by Atelier Ochre & House of Dré › Capella, Sydney, Australia, by BAR Studio › Bos-Cos Sevilla, Seville, Spain, by Febrero Studio › SABI, Tasmania, Australia, by Grounded Living › Albor Hotel, Tapestry Collection by Hilton, Guanajuato, Mexico, by Héctor Esrawe › Ying’nFlo, Hong Kong, China, by Linehouse › Monasty Hotel, Thessaloniki, Greece, by Not a Number Architects › The Standard, Ibiza, Spain, by Oskar Kohnen Studio › Our Habitas San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, by Our Habitas › Six Senses Rome, Italy, by Patricia Urquiola › Som Land Hostel, Shanghai, by RooMoo › Heymo 1, Espoo, Finland, by Rune & Berg Design Oy › The Standard, Bangkok, Thailand, by Standard International › Hay Boutique Hotel, Polyanytsya, Ukraine, by YOD Group
Browse all projects on the hotel and short stay longlist page.
Workplace interior (small)
› The Joint Works, Birmingham, UK, by 2G Design and Build › Lincoln St Workplace, Boston, USA, by Atelier Cho Thompson › Carnaby Club, London, UK, by Buckley Gray Yeoman › Mitsui & Co, Minato-ku, Japan, by Flooat › Studio Reisinger, Barcelona, Spain, by Isern Serra › LAJ Office and Shop, Vancouver, Canada, by Marcela Trejo › Workplace for the preparation of medicine in Riga, Latvia, by MUUD Architects › ScienceIO Headquarters, New York, USA, by Office of Tangible Space › Folk Kombucha, Copenhagen, Denmark, by Spacon & X › The Forest of Knowledge – CCI Library, Mumbai, India, by Studio Hinge › Artis Ventures, San Francisco, USA, by Studio O+A › Alera, Vancouver, Canada, by Studio Roslyn › Terroir Hobart Office, Hobart, Australia, by Terroir › Chief London, London, UK, by Thirdway › WOA Second Home, Ernakulam, India, by Workers of Art
Browse all projects on the workplace interior (small) longlist page.
Workplace interior (large)
› Government Office, Abu Dhabi, UAE, by Agata Kurzela studio › COX Sydney Studio, Australia, by Cox Architecture › Carlsen Publisher Campus, Hamburg, Germany, by de Winder Architekten › NeueHouse Venice Beach, California, USA, by DesignAgency › Here+Now, Reading, UK, by Hawkins\Brown › Sony Music UK HQ, London, UK, by MoreySmith › 215 Mare Street, London, UK, by Morris+Company › 800 Fifth Avenue, Seattle, USA, by Olson Kundig › Dice, London, UK, by Sella Concept › Bay Area Research Company by SkB Architects › Canopy Menlo Park, California, USA, by Studio Mortazavi › Adidas (GOLD, Performance Zone, and RED) campus, Portland, USA, by Studio O+A › World of Klarna, Stockholm, Sweden, by Studio Stockholm › 210 Euston Road, London, UK, by Universal Design Studio › Convene at 22 Bishopsgate, London, UK, by Woods Bagot
Browse all projects on the workplace interior (large) longlist page.
Retail interior (small)
› Aesop Palisades Village, Los Angeles, USA, by Odami › Big, London, UK, by Nina+Co › Bisque Golf Amsterdam, The Netherlands, by Barde vanVoltt › Buff, Edinburgh, Scotland, by GRAS › Camper Pop-Up Galeries Lafayette, Paris, France, by Penadés office › Chimi Store at NK, Stockholm, Sweden, by Campus › Coachtopia, London, UK, by Studio XAG › Cover Story Paint Studio, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, by Cover Story Paint › Dreams, Los Angeles, USA, by Adi Goodrich of Sing-Sing › Finesse, Melbourne, Australia, by Studio Edwards › Garrett Leight New York, USA, by West of West › Glossier, New York, USA, by Glossier › Mimco Flagship Store, Chadstone, Australia, by Studio Doherty › Net Zero Ecoalf Store, Madrid, Spain, by Medina Varela MVN Arquitectos › SOM Store, Bratislava, Slovakia, by D415 › The Art Gallery of NSW, Sydney, Australia, by Akin Atelier
Browse all projects on the retail interior (small) longlist page.
Retail interior (large)
› Harmay Chongqing, China, by Aim Architecture › Maison Special/Prank Project Fukuoka, Japan, by AtMa › Calico Club Cottage, Nistelrode, The Netherlands, by Barde vanVoltt › ToSummer Beijing Guozijian, China, by FOG Architecture › Xiaozhuo Shanghai Boutique, China, by FOG Architecture › Super Seed Concept Store, Hangzhou, China, by FOG Architecture › Freitag Store Shanghai, China, by Freitag Lab › GANT Flagship Store, Stockholm, Sweden, by GANT › Jasmin Black Lounge, Seoul, South Korea, by Hyundai Department Store Group › The Forum, Daegu, South Korea, by Hyundai Department Store Group › GrubStreet Arts Center, Boston, USA, by Merge Architects › XiaoZhuo Flagship Store, Shanghai, by Offhand Practise › Salvatori Showroom, New York, USA, by Salvatori › Cake 0 Emissions US Headquarters, Los Angeles, USA, by Shin Shin › BSTN Store, London, UK, by Sunst Studio › SVRN, Chicago, USA, by WGNB
Browse all projects on the retail interior (large) longlist page.
Health and wellbeing interior
› Eterno Health Hamburg, Germany, by Ahochdrei – Labor für Gestaltung › Leisure Area of Pediatric Ward of Hospital São João, Porto, Portugal, by ARG studio › Insight Body and Mind, Aberfeldie, Australia, by Biasol Studio › Placidus Student Welfare Spaces for Marcellin College, Melbourne, Australia, by Branch Studio Architects › Chi Chi Club, Hamburg, Germany, by Deglan Studios › Hooke London, UK, by Holland Harvey › Gym Town, Hong Kong, China, by MR Studio › Practice Dr. Sell + Dr. Stocker, Nuremberg, Germany, by Markmus Design › Seattle Children’s Odessa Brown Children’s Clinic, USA, by NBBJ › Ocean Cosmetics Clinic, Cottesloe, Australia, by Nickolas Gurtler Office › Paw, Beijing, China, by Office AIO › Symphony Orthodontics, Bristow, Australia, by OLI Architecture › La Maison de Beauté Carita, L’Oréal-Luxe, Paris, France, by Rev/Studio › Paste, Toronto, Canada, by Studio Author › Flow Space, Shanghai, by Super Rice Architects
Browse all projects on the health and wellbeing longlist page.
Exhibition design (interior)
› Søylerommet – The Pillars, Oslo, Norway, by 2050+ › Objects Of Desire: Surrealism and Design 1924, London, UK, by Alexander Boxill › Plastics: Remaking Our World, Dundee, Scotland, by Asif Khan › Scandinavian Design and the United States, 1890-1980 at LACMA, Los Angeles, USA, by Bestor Architecture › Flow, Milan, Italy, by Daisuke Yamamoto Design Studio › The Golden Age of Grotesque, Hannover, Germany, by Didier Fiuza Faustino / Mesarchitecture › Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear, London, UK, by JA Projects › Nature. And us?, Lenzburg, Switzerland, by Kossmanndejong & Stapferhaus › BIO27 Super Vernaculars Exhibition Design, Ljubljana, Slovenia, by Medprostor › Batman x Spyscape: Immersive Interactive Experience, New York, USA, by Mona Kim Projects › Shiny Gold, Paris, France, by Nelly Ben Hayoun Studios › Refik Anadol: Unsupervised, New York, USA, by Refik Anadol Studio › Illustration corner, Ljubljana, Slovenia, by Sara&Sara › The Welcome Center, Washington, USA, by Studio Joseph › Flugt Refugee Museum of Denmark, Oksbøl, by Tinker imagineers › Our Time on Earth, London, UK, by Universal Design Studio
Browse all projects on the exhibition design (interior) longlist page.
Dezeen Awards 2023
Dezeen Awards celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design. Now in its sixth year, it has become the ultimate accolade for architects and designers across the globe. The annual awards are in partnership with Bentley Motors, as part of a wider collaboration that will see the brand work with Dezeen to support and inspire the next generation of design talent.
Interior designer Little Wing Lee has joined Dezeen Awards 2023 as a judge. Here, she selects five projects that best reflect her work.
Lee’s interior design practice Studio & Projects creates spaces and products for cultural, commercial and residential clients, taking a “narrative approach to design”
“My designs are always informed by context, location and function,” Lee told Dezeen. “I always think about the project’s story and connect that to the design decisions I make.”
Lee is also the founder of Black Folks in Design, an organisation which raises awareness and promotes the culture and importance of Black designers. She was named the first winner of the Female Design Council and NicoleHollis Grant recognising women of colour-led interior design firms located in the US.
“The grant was an investment in my talent and skill and helped me sustain my momentum to build and invest in future projects,” said Lee.
Lee is currently working on a collection with Mexican rug brand Odabashian and the launch of a new lighting collection as well as several museum and restaurant projects.
Lee among Dezeen Awards 2023 judges
Dezeen Awards 2023, in partnership with Bentley Motors, is closed for entries. The longlists will be published on Dezeen in two weeks.
Other judges joining Lee this year include architects Jason Long and Zhu Pei, interior designers Diana Radomysler, Colin King and Martin Brudnizki, and designers Yves Béhar, Ineke Hans and Lani Adeoye.
Read on to find Lee’s views on the five projects that best represent her work:
National Black Theatre
“National Black Theatre is a unique project as it combines public, performance, and residential spaces.
“It is a historic major capital redevelopment project that will transform the current property into a 21st-century destination for Black culture through theatre.
“This project will anchor and recapitalise the institution with a 250-seat flexible temple space and a 99-seat studio theatre.
“As part of the same project, the developer Ray is also working on National Black Theatre Way, a building on 2033 5th Ave which will house residential, event and retail spaces.”
OKRA for Odabashian
“OKRA was the first design by Studio & Projects from our upcoming rug collection with manufacturer Odabashian.
“The collection will be carried by Verso with additional designs exhibited this summer in their Bridgehampton gallery.”
Ace Hotel Toronto
“Ace Hotel Toronto opened in July 2022 and is the brand’s first location in Canada.
“The 123-room hotel was designed by revered Toronto firm Shim-Sutcliffe Architects, led by Brigitte Shim and Howard Sutcliffe, in collaboration with Atelier Ace with me as the Atelier Ace/Ace Hotel Group present design director.”
Black Folks in Design
“Black Folks in Design (BFiD) is a network that connects Black designers within and across disciplines to support each other and share professional opportunities.
“We help people understand the excellence, contributions and importance of black designers to create economic and portfolio-building opportunities for Black designers.”
National Museum of African American History and Culture exhibitions
“The National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC is the only national museum devoted exclusively to the documentation of African American life, history and culture.
“The museum helps all Americans see how their story, their history, and culture are shaped and informed by global influences. It explores what it means to be an American and shares how values like resiliency, optimism and spirituality are reflected in African American history and culture.”
Dezeen Awards 2023
Dezeen Awards celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design. Now in its sixth year, it has become the ultimate accolade for architects and designers across the globe. The annual awards are in partnership with Bentley Motors, as part of a wider collaboration that will see the brand work with Dezeen to support and inspire the next generation of design talent.
There are only three weeks left to complete your Dezeen Awards China 2023 entry!
Dezeen Awards China, in partnership with Bentley Motors, is open for entries. The entry period ends at midnight Beijing time on Thursday 24 August, after which late entry fees will apply.
Why enter Dezeen Awards China?
Dezeen Awards China will celebrate the best Chinese design talent and highlight Chinese architects and designers’ growing global influence.
Shortlisted and winning entries will receive significant recognition! They will receive a page on Dezeen’s WeChat account and on the Dezeen Awards China site.
Projects will also be featured on Dezeen’s social media, with a following of seven million, as well as in Dezeen’s newsletters to over half a million subscribers.
Find out more about Dezeen Awards China ›
Who are the judges?
Your work will be judged by a panel of 15 leading professionals from the architecture and design world in China including Ma Yansong and Rossana Hu, as well as high-profile international figures such as Ilse Crawford and Michael Young.
Our judges are not only looking for beauty and innovation but also for projects that strive to benefit users and the environment. Full details of the judging process can be found on the terms and conditions page.
See the judges announced so far ›
Who can enter?
Dezeen Awards China is for studios based in China! Entries from international firms will only be eligible if they have an office based in China that primarily delivered the project. It is open to studios large and small, with adjusted entry prices to avoid large companies dominating the categories.
Your project must have been completed between 1 September 2021 and 31 August 2023 and doesn’t have to be located in China.
Read our terms and conditions ›
How do I enter?
For more information on how to create and submit your entry please click here. You can also drop us a line at [email protected] if you have any questions and someone from the team will get back to you!
For information about Dezeen Awards China in Chinese, please visit our WeChat mini program by scanning the code below with WeChat.
Dezeen Awards China is the first regional edition of Dezeen Awards, to celebrate the best architecture, interiors and design in China. The annual awards are in partnership with Bentley Motors, as part of a wider collaboration that will see the brand work with Dezeen to support and inspire the next generation of design talent in China.
For those who don’t want to keep their wine collection hidden away, our latest lookbook showcases some of the most inventive ways of showcasing wine bottles within a contemporary home interior.
Wine storage solutions can be created in homes of any size, by cleverly integrating shelving into wall niches or built-in furniture.
For those with enough space for a wine cellar, or even just a dedicated wine fridge, well-designed glazing and lighting can turn these spaces into focal points.
A more casual wine drinker could simply slot a small wine rack into a kitchen island or bookshelf.
Read on for 10 examples to suit homes of any size, including a wine cellar that doubles as a lightbox and a blue wine-rack wall.
This is the latest in Dezeen’s lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from our archive. Other recent editions showcase serene bedrooms and wood-panelled dining rooms.
Maison du Parc, Canada, by La Shed Architecture
Visible from both the staircase and a grand basement bathroom, this wine room was designed to be a key feature in a three-storey home in Montreal.
With frosted glass walls and stark lighting, it makes the bottles visible but partially obscured. They appear as a grid of spots across the surfaces of the bright white volume.
Find out more about Maison du Parc ›
AML Apartment, Brazil, by David Ito Arquitetura
Bright blue wine storage extends floor to ceiling in this apartment in São Paulo, lining up exactly with a doorway in front.
The wine rack sits alongside a utility area but it is also visible from the living and dining room, so it made sense to make it a feature. It offers space for 108 wine bottles.
Find out more about AML Apartment ›
Gallery House, UK, by Neil Dusheiko
Wine bottles are not the primary focus in this kitchen extension in north London, which features an entire wall of treasured objects including ceramics, glassware and framed pictures.
Instead, they neatly slot into 10 circular cubby holes within the oak kitchen island. These holes extend through, creating room for two bottles in each opening.
Find out more about Gallery House ›
Casa em Cotia, Brazil, by Una Arquitetos
The kitchen of this family home in São Paulo centres around a full-height glass-fronted pantry, offering plenty of storage space for food and crockery.
Wine storage is located within the front cupboard, slotted in underneath shelves for mugs and glasses. This places it within easy access of the adjacent dining room.
Find out more about Casa em Cotia ›
City Beach Residence, Australia, by Design Theory
Hexagonal terracotta modules are stacked up to create storage space for 50 wine bottles in this renovated 1960s beach house in Perth.
The arrangement slots into a niche in the wall, with the clay-based material helping to keep the wine at a stable temperature.
Find out more about City Beach Residence ›
Raft Loft, USA, by Dash Marshall
There is plenty of space for storing wine in this two-level home in New York’s Tribeca, which was converted from two previously separate apartments.
In addition to the main kitchen, the residence has a kitchenette that features both a wine fridge and a wine rack that slots in above the wall-mounted high cupboards.
Find out more about Raft Loft ›
Ski Slope Residence, USA, by LaRue Architects and Britt Design Group
The owners of this lakeside cabin in Austin, Texas, also own a vineyard in Argentina, so they were understandably keen to put their wine collection on full display.
A wine room takes pride of place near the main entrance. It is visible behind a glass door that extends from floor to ceiling, creating an unusual backdrop to a grand piano.
Find out more about Ski Slope Residence ›
Charred House, UK, by Rider Stirland Architects
In this London home, wine storage forms part of a bespoke kitchen created by Plykea, a British brand that specialises in customising IKEA kitchens.
The bottles are held in place by simple supports that sit within a series of shelves, offering space for 30 bottles.
Find out more about Charred House ›
Salva46, Spain, by Miel Arquitectos and Studio P10
Storage helps to organise the floor plan in this highly compact Barcelona apartment.
A very simple wood-framed wine rack slots alongside a set of drawers, which together create a soft divide between the entrance lobby and the kitchen.
Find out more about Salva46 ›
Soho Loft, USA, by Julian King
This warehouse apartment in New York offers a highly simple wine storage solution.
The living space features a series of shelves that together form a sizeable bookcase. A wooden rack slots into the bottom shelf, allowing wine to sit alongside the literature.
Find out more about Soho Loft ›
This is the latest in Dezeen’s lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from our archive. Other recent editions showcase serene bedrooms and wood-panelled dining rooms.
Shanghai-based interior designer Alex Mok has joined Dezeen Awards China 2023 as a judge. Here she selects five projects that best reflect her work.
Mok and Briar Hickling are the co-founders of architecture and interior design practice Linehouse. The female duo’s work has been recognised internationally and won a number of international design awards, including Emerging interior designers of the tear at Dezeen Awards 2019.
“Linehouse‘s approach is purposeful, creating poetic concepts through research of cultural, urban and historic contexts that respond to the program, site and function,” Mok told Dezeen.
“Each project has a strong narrative, a focus on craft and unique spatial experience with a dynamic intersection between disciplines,” she continued.
Currently, Mok is working on hotel projects in Hangzhou and Hong Kong, a food market in Shanghai, and a series of retail projects in Bangkok.
Alex Mok among Dezeen Awards China 2023 judges
Dezeen Awards China 2023 launched in June in partnership with Bentley Motors. It is the first regional edition of Dezeen Awards, celebrating the best architecture, interiors and design in China.
We have announced 10 out of the 15 Dezeen Awards China judges, including architects Ma Yansong and Rossana Hu, furniture designer Frank Chou and interior designer Andre Fu, who will be joining Mok on the interior design judging panel.
Entries close on Thursday 24 August. Submit your entry before midnight Beijing time on 24 August to avoid late entry fees.
Read on to find Mok’s views on the five projects that best represent her work.
Wework Weihai Road, Shanghai, 2016
“Linehouse worked with Wework in 2016 to create their headquarters in a spectacular turn of the century brick building in Shanghai. Linehouse celebrated the grandeur of the former opium factory and artist residence, encapsulating the feeling of a grand hotel, transporting guests and members on an unexpected journey of whimsy, voyeurism and festivity.
“The heritage facade surrounds the central atrium. A curved terrazzo tray was inserted to define the space, and pastel diagonal strips in blue, green, pink and grey wrap the floor and wall, creating a hardscape carpet.
“A bespoke lighting installation is suspended in the triple-height space. A new sculptural staircase was inserted to connect all three levels of the main public areas.”
Tingtai Teahouse, Shanghai, 2018
“Tingtai Teahouse was completed in 2018 in a former factory space and art gallery in Shanghai’s Moganshan Road art district. We stripped the space completely to reveal the beautiful patina of the original factory with concrete beams and columns as well as the brick walls.
“The teahouses are modern architectural responses to the raw factory interior. They read as singular insertions that contrast with the rough brick and concrete interior and reflect the surroundings. The upper rooms in particular have strong relationships with the existing building in the way they connect to the original clerestory windows.
“With each of these rooms bookended with full-height glazing, guests become spectators to the activities below. Each room has a different roofline, which forms modern architectural puzzle spaces where tea drinkers can enjoy this age old drink with a new perspective. “
Find out more about Tingtai Teahouse ›
Coast, Shanghai, 2022
“The Coast restaurant in Shanghai recalls a deep connection with coastal elements and Mediterranean soul. Linehouse transformed a three-storey building into a vertical journey of refined rusticity.
“Colours and materials across the three floors change, telling different parts of the story. Green earthy tones on the ground floor link the garden to the open cafe space, while the red fire tones on the first floor reflect the dining room centred on the parrilla grill. On the second floor black yakisugi wood contrasts against the whitewashed flanked stone walls and the existing traditional timber trussed ceiling.”
Find out more about Coast ›
Central World, Bangkok, 2023
“Central World is our largest architectural project to date; a renovation project of an existing shopping centre called Isetan in Bangkok. Linehouse was commissioned to design the exterior facade and seven floors of retail space including a food court.
“The project was located in an area once abundant in lily pads. Linehouse examined the stemming, radiating and circular profile of the lily pads, translating this into a spatial narrative of the exterior and interior condition.
“The exterior is a double-layered, arched facade. The front layer was defined by concrete form and the back layer rendered in black. The arches stem in various heights and widths shifting on the two planes, creating interesting intersections which operate as framed views through to the interior.
“Linehouse punctuated the arches to allow green terraces, providing a depth to an otherwise flat elevation, and blurring the exteriors and interiors.”
Ying’n Flo, Hong Kong, 2023
“Aiming to break the traditional hotel narrative of serious spaces and strict boundaries, Ying’n Flo is a lifestyle guesthouse for modern day travellers in Hong Kong.
“The spaces were designed to have a warm, welcoming and familiar feel, emphasising functionality and quality. Against this backdrop of curated simplicity is an edge of youthful attitude and local context, with vibrant elements giving the hotel its own unique flavour.”
Find out more about Ying’n Flo ›
Dezeen Awards China 2023
Dezeen Awards China is the first regional edition of Dezeen Awards, to celebrate the best architecture, interiors and design in China. The annual awards are in partnership with Bentley Motors, as part of a wider collaboration that will see the brand work with Dezeen to support and inspire the next generation of design talent in China.