Fight Back with Fungi: How Mushrooms Can Help Solve the Global Housing Crisis
CategoriesArchitecture

Fight Back with Fungi: How Mushrooms Can Help Solve the Global Housing Crisis

Healthy Materials Lab is a design research lab at Parsons School of Design with a mission to place health at the center of every design decision. HML is changing the future of the built environment by creating resources for designers, architects, teachers, and students to make healthier places for all people to live. Check out their podcast, Trace Material.

Namibia’s diverse ecosystem is in trouble. The main culprit: Acacia Mellifera, better known as Black Thorn or simply ‘encroacher bush.’ This dense, thorny shrub is incredibly invasive and, over the last few decades, has smothered many parts of Namibia’s increasingly homogeneous ecology. Grassy savannas are being choked by the ever-expanding plant and turned into deserts. Namibia’s government has a plan to fight back. They’ve enacted a program to thin 330 million tons of black thorn over the next 15 years. The bush waste is chipped and turned into wood dust that can be used for fuel pellets and energy sources. As it turns out, it is also the perfect food for fungi.

MycoHab, a collaboration between MIT, Standard Bank and redhouse studio, is leveraging this surplus waste and harnessing the power of fungi to address both food and housing scarcity in Namibia. Here’s the basic MycoHab run-down: The wood dust from the Acacia Mellifera waste is used as a substrate to grow oyster mushrooms. The oyster mushrooms are harvested and sold to local markets, grocery stores and restaurants. Then, the waste left behind from the mushroom harvesting, teeming with the rootlike structure of fungi called mycelium, is pressed and fired into blocks that the team plans to use to construct affordable housing. This may sound far out, but allow us to explain. To understand how we get from mushrooms to housing, it’s helpful to know a bit about the life cycle of fungi.

Fungi 101

First, it’s important to understand that while all mushrooms are fungi, not all fungi are mushrooms. Mushrooms are the fruiting body of fungi. A mushroom is like an apple growing on an apple tree––it’s the fruit, not the tree. In the fungi world the “tree” is called mycelium. Mycelium is the living body of fungi. It’s a rootlike structure that is constantly eating, expanding, and connecting in large filamentous networks underground or in rotting trees. Mycelium is the star of the MycoHab project and the key to a future of fungi-based materials.

Nature’s Glue

MycoHab’s mycelium block molds

On a typical mushroom farm, once the fruiting bodies have been harvested, the mycelium would be left behind or composted. At MycoHab, the fungi’s substrate, chock full of mycelium, becomes the foundation for a new building product. While the mycelial network is growing and eating, waiting to sprout mushrooms, it’s filling up any available space in the woody substrate and binding everything together. We spoke to Christopher Maurer, Principal Architect at redhouse studio and a Founder of MycoHAB about how this works in practice. “The mycelium, which looks like roots basically, bonds with the Acacia Mellifera bush at a cellular level,” Chris says. “They create this cellular matrix of material that can be compacted and turned into a building material. It acts like cement or glue in different building products.”

Seeing other creatives working with mycelium materials, notably the mycelium materials company Ecovative in a packaging context, inspired Chris’ own fungi experimentation. “We always wondered, could this be something that could be structural as well? We thought about processes like the creation of plywood or MDF where small bits of wood are combined together either in veneers, like plywood is, or in pulp, like medium density fiberboard.” Chris and his team set about experimenting with heat and pressure techniques inspired by these composite materials and applied them to the mycelium blocks. The results are relatively strong. Chris says, “We relate our block to a concrete block. It has about the same mass. It has a similar compressive strength. But it also has insulation characteristics and has thermal mass to it.”

Constructing Carbon Stores

MycoHab’s mycelium block storage

The potential of the MycoHab blocks are impressive: they could be be stronger than concrete blocks, they are insulating, and they are made from waste two times over. If that’s not enough, they also sequester carbon. Carbon emissions are a massive concern for the future habitability of our planet, and the built environment is one of our worst offenders. The construction and operation of buildings is responsible for nearly half of global carbon emissions. And the materials we use in our buildings have a huge impact on those emissions. Just three materials: concrete, steel, and aluminum account for 23% of emissions worldwide.

The situation is dire, and according to Chris, the materials we build with are the place to start. “We imagine a future where the building industry could be a net carbon store. Because of population growth, we need to double our building area size by 2060. If we’re using carbon emitting materials, that is going to be a huge problem. If we use materials that store carbon then we can actually start to reverse the impact that the building industry and architecture has on the environment.”

Inflate, Deflate, Repeat

An inflatable arch formwork created by Chris and the MycoHab team

In addition to being made from waste, Chris and his team are developing new, waste-saving building methods to assemble the future myco-block affordable homes. Here’s how it will work: inflatable arch formwork is erected on site and the myco-blocks are stacked on top. Once everything is in place, the arch is deflated and is able to be used over and over again. This saves a ton of construction waste because, traditionally, the forms needed to build arch or dome structures can end up creating about as much building waste as the final product.

Next, a mud-lime render is added to the blocks to protect them from the elements and a roof completed. The homes are designed for disassembly and with end of life in mind. Chis says, “The block itself would be fully biodegradable. We designed the building with protective barriers on top of it, but if you were to strip those away and recycle those materials, then the myco-blocks could be broken down and used as compost to augment the soil. That’s the way we look at the life cycle of our project—from the earth and back to the earth.”

Fungi Futures

Ivan Severus holding a MycoHab mycelium block

As things stand, MycoHab Namibia functions as a vertically integrated operation, with profits from oyster mushroom sales funding block production. Chris says that patience in these early stages of the process is key. “As we’re getting started, we want to maintain control over the process and the building so that we can thoroughly test everything and make sure that the materials we’re making are used properly.”

But, according to Chris, scaling operations are not far off. “I don’t think it can be kept a vertically integrated system for very long. It will need to kind of branch out into these different endeavors and then they could end up on the shelves of hardware stores around the world so that anybody can build with them.”

MycoHab’s Namibia-based Team

Widespread access and affordability of myco-materials will be key to realizing their potential environmental impact in the coming decades both in Namibia and around the globe. Chris and his team have crunched the numbers and calculated that if they use just 1% of the biomass that Namibia plans to thin from the encroacher bush, they could house 25% of the population currently living in shacks and informal settlements over the next 15 years. In that time, they would also be able to harvest 2 million tons of mushrooms and sequester 3-5 million tons of carbon dioxide in the process. That is the promise of fungi.

We hope that fungi-based materials like the MycoHab blocks will become a standard rather than an exciting outlier. This innovative approach, looking at the entire life cycle and systems of making a material, while taking responsibility for its origins through to its disposal, is an excellent example for a healthier future of materials and the built environment. It took decades of research, innovation, marketing and systems-building for petrochemical based materials to take over our planet. That same energy, and patience, is needed now. Thankfully, the tide is turning and a healthier future is possible.


To hear more from Chris and the MycoHab team, take a listen to our podcast Trace Material. Our third season is all about the potential of fungi-based materials and Episode 5 “Harvesting Housing” provides a more in depth look at the MycoHab project.

Reference

© ingenhoven associates
CategoriesArchitecture

15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany

The German architectural landscape is both closely attuned to its European counterparts and characteristically individual. Traversing the nation, one will encounter a similar historic program to other European capitals — Romanesque churches, Renaissance monuments, and more — blended with functionalist and modernist structures.

Early twenty-first-century Germany brought forth the booming Bauhaus. Founded by Walter Gropius, this school introduced brand-new architectural thinking, an ideology rooted in function, clarity and mass production. Materials like concrete and glass were favored, socially progressive housing blocks were built, and a new-found appreciation for modernism was conceived. And the spirit of the great Bauhaus teachers, take Mies van der Rohe, for example, vigorously lives on and inspires contemporary designers today. The Bauhaus also influenced the nation’s interest and appreciation for technology and mass production. Modern industrial architecture took off post-war and has played a prominent role in the nation’s economic growth, continuing to do so today.

The architectural devastation from WWII resulted in mass reconstruction efforts. The post-war restoration and rebuilding embraced a functional attitude, which continued the legacy of the Bauhaus movement despite its closing over a decade prior. And today’s German architecture continues to champion the nation’s modernist brilliance through innovative designs that push technological boundaries and celebrate culture.

With so many architecture firms to choose from, it’s challenging for clients to identify the industry leaders that will be an ideal fit for their project needs. Fortunately, Architizer is able to provide guidance on the top design firms in Germany based on more than a decade of data and industry knowledge.

How are these architecture firms ranked?

The following ranking has been created according to key statistics that demonstrate each firm’s level of architectural excellence. The following metrics have been accumulated to establish each architecture firm’s ranking, in order of priority:

  • The number of A+Awards won (2013 to 2023)
  • The number of A+Awards finalists (2013 to 2023)
  • The number of projects selected as “Project of the Day” (2009 to 2023)
  • The number of projects selected as “Featured Project” (2009 to 2023)
  • The number of projects uploaded to Architizer (2009 to 2023)

Each of these metrics is explained in more detail at the foot of this article. This ranking list will be updated annually, taking into account new achievements of Germany architecture firms throughout the year.

Without further ado, here are the 16 best architecture firms in Germany:


15. ingenhoven associates

© ingenhoven associates

© ingenhoven associates

In 1985, Christoph Ingenhoven founded ingenhoven architects, a practice that is one of the pioneers of sustainable architecture. The firm aims to create architecture that responds to each respective location in a specific way and, at the same time, tries to find architectural answers to urgent questions of the present and near future. Using the term supergreen®, the practice pursues a comprehensive sustainability concept.

Some of ingenhoven associates’s most prominent projects include:

  • Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus, Düsseldorf, Germany
  • Freiburg Town Hall, Freiburg, Germany
  • Kö-Bogen 2, Düsseldorf, Germany
  • Marina One, Singapore, Singapore
  • Daniel Swarovski Corporation, Männedorf, Switzerland

The following statistics helped ingenhoven associates achieve 15th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Finalist 2
Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 24

14. HENN

Photo: HG Esch - © HENN

Photo: HG Esch – © HENN

HENN is an international architecture office in Munich, Berlin and Beijing and draws upon more than 70 years of expertise in the fields of work space, culture, health, education and research as well as production and master planning. Our architects, designers, planners and engineers benefit from a wealth of knowledge collected over three generations of building experience in addition to a worldwide network of partners and experts in a variety of disciplines. This continuity, coupled with progressive design approaches and methods and interdisciplinary research projects, forms the basis for a continual examination of current issues and for a consistent design philosophy.

Some of HENN’s most prominent projects include:

  • Porsche Pavilion, Wolfsburg, Germany
  • Zalando Headquarters Berlin, Berlin, Germany
  • Bugatti Studio, Molsheim, France
  • MobileLife Campus, Wolfsburg, Germany
  • Taikang Life Headquarters, Beijing, China

The following statistics helped HENN achieve 14th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Winner 2
A+Awards Finalist 2
Featured Projects 3
Total Projects 22

13. 4a Architekten GmbH

© 4a Architekten GmbH

© 4a Architekten GmbH

Shaping atmosphere, lending identity, creating quality of space: these are the values that characterize the buildings of 4a Architekten. The starting point and guiding principle of our work is the concept of architecture as living space. Our buildings come into being through intensive team work shaped by interdisciplinary thinking and action.

What characterizes a location in terms of its culture and history? What are the client’s expectations and objectives? What is viable within the budget and what are the benefits for users? These questions and this approach bring us to solutions with an individual character — and they apply just as much to the planning of buildings as to the design of interior spaces.

Some of 4a Architekten GmbH’s most prominent projects include:

  • Therme Lindau on Lake Constance, Lindau, Germany
  • Balingen Civic Hall, Balingen, Germany
  • Emser Thermal Baths, Bad Ems, Germany
  • Spreewald Spa Hotel, Burg-Dorf, Burg, Germany
  • Stegermatt Aquatic Centre, Offenburg, Germany

The following statistics helped 4a Architekten GmbH achieve 13th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

Featured Projects 9
Total Projects 15

12. GRAFT

© GRAFT

© GRAFT

What is graft? GRAFT is a full service design firm located in Los Angeles, Berlin, and Beijing. Our collective professional experience encompasses a wide array of design types including Hospitality Design, Fine Arts, Educational, Institutional, Commercial and Residential facilities.

With a staff of talented professionals and administrators, GRAFT has the resources and technology necessary to execute a project from programming to design and the supervision of the finished product. GRAFT has rigorously undertaken an increasing role in programming, master-planning and urban design. Additionally, our firm maintains successful relationships, as needed, with associate architectural and engineering firms and specialty consultants.

Some of GRAFT’s most prominent projects include:

  • Ice Stadion “Arena Schierke”, Wernigerode, Germany
  • Show Palace Munich, Munich, Germany
  • Autostadt Roof and Service Pavilion, Wolfsburg, Germany
  • Villa M , Berlin, Germany
  • Feuerstein Arena, Schierke, Wernigerode, Germany

The following statistics helped GRAFT achieve 12th place in the 16 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Finalist 2
Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 17

11. wulf architekten

© wulf architekten

© wulf architekten

wulf architekten emerged from the architecture practice established 1987 in Stuttgart by Tobias Wulf. Currently, the company has about 140 employees, nine of them being senior architects. With three office locations — Stuttgart, Berlin and Basel (CH) — wulf architekten works on a series of regional and international projects.

Some of wulf architekten’s most prominent projects include:

  • Parking Garage Facade P22a at the Cologne Exhibition Centre, Cologne, Germany
  • Four primary schools in modular design, Munich, Germany
  • School Center North, 153, Heilbronner Straße, Nord, Stuttgart, Germany
  • Chamber of Industry and Commerce, headquarters, Stuttgart, Germany
  • Protestant Primary School, Karlsruhe, Germany

The following statistics helped wulf architekten achieve 11th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Winner 1
A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 9
Total Projects 12

10. kadawittfeldarchitektur

© Andreas Horsky

© Andreas Horsky

We are kadawittfeldarchitektur. Originally founded in Aachen in 1999, we today stand for more than just architectural design. The interdisciplinary approach of our work, linking architecture, interior and product design on the one hand and at the interface of town planning and urban projects on the other hand, reflects the full range of our creative output.

kadawittfeldarchitektur develops added value space. In a team of more than 170 persons, we create architecture with added value space for living, communication and work environments. In the way we deal with volumes, materials, structures and functions, we strive to integrate our schemes into their surroundings with the objective of creating contemporary and sustainable architecture and meeting the needs of both the users and the general public.

Some of kadawittfeldarchitektur’s most prominent projects include:

  • CELTIC MUSEUM, Glauburg, Germany
  • ADIDAS LACES, Herzogenaurach, Germany
  • SPZ, HALLEIN, Hallein, Austria
  • SENIOR CITIZENS RESIDENCE ALTENMARKT, Altenmarkt im Pongau, Austria
  • SALZBURG CENTRAL STATION, Salzburg, Austria

The following statistics helped kadawittfeldarchitektur achieve 10th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

Featured Projects 9
Total Projects 23

9. Ippolito Fleitz Group – Identity Architects

© Ippolito Fleitz Group - Identity Architects

© Ippolito Fleitz Group – Identity Architects

ippolito fleitz group is a multidisciplinary, internationally operating design studio based in Stuttgart. We are identity architects. We work in unison with our clients to develop architecture, products and communication that are part of a whole and yet distinctive in their own right. This is how we define identity. With meticulous analysis before we begin. With animated examination in the conceptional phase. With a clarity of argument in the act of persuasion. With a love of accuracy in the realization. With a serious goal and a lot of fun along the way. Working together with our clients. As architects of identity, we conceive and construct buildings, interiors and landscapes; we develop products and communication measures.

Some of Ippolito Fleitz Group – Identity Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Das GERBER, Stuttgart, Germany
  • Hunke – Jewellers and Opticians, Ludwigsburg, Germany
  • Bella Italia Weine, Stuttgart, Germany
  • ippolito fleitz group | Residential Building, Denkendorf, Germany
  • WakuWaku Dammtor, Hamburg, Germany

The following statistics helped Ippolito Fleitz Group – Identity Architects achieve 9th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 8
Total Projects 26

8. TCHOBAN VOSS Architekten

© Ilya Ivanov

© Ilya Ivanov

We develop, plan, design, and build for both regional and international clients in both the public and private sectors. The broad range of fields in which we are active includes residential and corporate buildings, hotels, retail facilities, office complexes, leisure facilities, schools, educational and social buildings, as well as reconstruction and revitalization of historical monuments. We have provided a full range of architectural services — from interior design to general planning — from the very beginning.

Some of TCHOBAN VOSS Architekten’s most prominent projects include:

  • SKF Test Centre for large-scale bearings, Schweinfurt, Germany
  • Seestraße, Berlin, Berlin, Germany
  • Koenigstadt-Quartier, Berlin, Germany
  • EMBASSY – Living alongside Koellnischer Park, Berlin, Germany
  • Ferrum 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia

The following statistics helped TCHOBAN VOSS Architekten achieve 8th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Finalist 4
Featured Projects 9
Total Projects 23

7. Auer Weber

© Auer Weber

© Auer Weber

The architectural office Auer Weber, with offices in Munich and Stuttgart, was founded in 1980. The focus of our work is the conception and design of new buildings and the redesign and renovation for public institutions and corporate clients. Auer Weber provides expertise through all design stages on a broad range of projects including the sectors of education and research; administration and culture; hotels, residential buildings and sports facilities; as well as transportation terminals, urban development and master plans. The distinctive common denominator of Auer Weber projects is the architectural integration of design with the environment.

Some of Auer Weber’s most prominent projects include:

  • Aquatic Centre “Aquamotion” Courchevel , Saint-Bon-Tarentaise, France
  • Arena du Pays d’Aix, Aix-en-Provence, France
  • ESO Headquarters Extension, Garching, Germany
  • Azur Arena Antibes, Antibes, France
  • University Centre “des Quais” , Lyon, France

The following statistics helped Auer Weber achieve 7th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Winner 2
Featured Projects 10
Total Projects 15

6. Peter Ruge Architekten GmbH

© Peter Ruge Architekten GmbH

© Peter Ruge Architekten GmbH

Peter Ruge Architekten is a locally and internationally active planning office based in Berlin. Our mission is simple: to develop and build sustainable architecture of the future. The agenda of the team along with three partners Peter Ruge, Kayoko Uchiyama and Matthias Matschewski includes new buildings, optimization of existing properties and urban planning designs.

The projects are holistic, i.e. adapted to the climate, culture and needs of the users, and have received numerous awards and certifications. Our detailed understanding of sustainable design processes supports the decisions of our clients.

Some of Peter Ruge Architekten GmbH’s most prominent projects include:

  • Busan Opera House, South Korea, Busan, South Korea
  • Congress Center Hangzhou, Hangzhou, China
  • House O, Germany, Potsdam-Mittelmark, Germany
  • LTD_1 Hamburg, Germany, Hamburg, Germany
  • Muzeum Lotnictwa Krakow, Poland

The following statistics helped Peter Ruge Architekten GmbH achieve 6th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

Featured Projects 10
Total Projects 15

5. HPP Architects

© Christa Lachenmaier Photography

© Christa Lachenmaier Photography

HPP Architects is one of Europe’s leading architectural firms with a full range of architectural and master planning services. Since its foundation by Professor Hentrich, the 4th generation of HPP partnership today includes a global team of more than 25 nationalities and 480 architects, engineers, urban designers and specialists. Today it comprises 13 offices including 8 regional offices in Germany and 5 international branches in Turkey, China and Netherlands.

HPP Architects’ headquarter is located in the Düsseldorf Media Harbor. HPP has completed more than 1200 buildings worldwide and aspires to create an architectural quality of lasting value beyond the here and now: timeless and yet clearly part of their time, innovative and equally grounded in history.

Some of HPP Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • LVM 5 , Münster, Germany
  • Medical Library Oasis (O.A.S.E.), Düsseldorf, Germany
  • Hochschule Ruhr West, Mülheim, Germany
  • Henkel Asia-Pacific and China Headquarters, Shanghai, China
  • Dreischeibenhaus, Düsseldorf, Germany

The following statistics helped HPP Architects achieve 5th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Finalist 3
Featured Projects 11
Total Projects 25

4. Behnisch Architekten

The Stuttgart-based practice known today as Behnisch Architekten was founded in 1989 under the leadership of Stefan Behnisch. Originally established as a branch office of Günter Behnisch’s practice Behnisch & Partner, it became independent in 1991 and has subsequently developed into an international practice with offices in Stuttgart, Munich, Los Angeles (1999 – 2011), and Boston. From the outset, the social dimension of architecture has been a fundamental aspect of the firm’s design philosophy.

Some of Behnisch Architekten’s most prominent projects include:

  • City of Santa Monica Public Parking Structure #6, Santa Monica, CA, United States
  • Primary School Infanteriestrasse, München, Germany
  • Harvard University Science and Engineering Complex, Boston, MA, United States
  • John and Frances Angelos Law Center, University of Baltimore, Maryland, Baltimore, MD, United States
  • Marco Polo Tower, Hamburg, Germany

The following statistics helped Behnisch Architekten achieve 4th place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Finalist 8
Featured Projects 8
Total Projects 23

3. Barkow Leibinger

© Barkow Leibinger

© Barkow Leibinger

The scope of Barkow Leibinger’s work spans from cultural projects to industrial ones. Their focus on industrial architecture includes master planning and building representational and functional buildings for production, logistical and office spaces.

Some of Barkow Leibinger’s most prominent projects include:

  • Production Hall Trumpf, Hettingen, Germany
  • Stadthaus M1 – Green City Hotel, Freiburg, Germany
  • Harvard ArtLab, Boston, MA, United States
  • Production Hall, Grüsch, Switzerland
  • Fraunhofer Research Campus, Waischenfeld, Germany

The following statistics helped Barkow Leibinger achieve 3rd place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

Featured Projects 15
Total Projects 17

2. gmp von Gerkan, Marg and Partners Architects

© gmp von Gerkan, Marg and Partners Architects

© gmp von Gerkan, Marg and Partners Architects

The architects von Gerkan, Marg and Partners (gmp) are an architectural practice that was founded in Hamburg and has branches worldwide. With our generalist approach and more than 50 years of experience, we complete projects in dialogue with our clients and the participating planning disciplines, at all scales and cultural contexts, covering all design phases and working on all continents.

The range of our projects extends from family residences to high-rise buildings, from stadiums to concert halls, from office buildings to bridges, and from door hardware to urban planning. With holistic sustainability in mind, we aim to create new and refurbished architecture that is long-lasting and goes beyond temporary fashions, taking into account the global challenges and issues of urbanization, digitalization, and mobility.

Some of gmp von Gerkan, Marg and Partners Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Guna Villa, Jūrmala, Latvia
  • Universiade 2011 Sports Center, Shenzhen, China
  • Olympic Stadium, Kiev, Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine
  • Olympic Stadium, Berlin, Germany
  • Twin Towers, Commodity Exchange Plaza, Dalian, China

The following statistics helped gmp von Gerkan, Marg and Partners Architects achieve 2nd place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

Featured Projects 22
Total Projects 43

1. J.MAYER.H

J. MAYER H’s studio, focuses on works at the intersection of architecture, communication and new technology. From urban planning schemes, buildings, installation work and objects with new materials, the relationship between the human body, technology and nature form the background for a new production of space.

Some of J.MAYER.H’s most prominent projects include:

  • MIAMI MUSEUM GARAGE, Miami, FL, United States
  • n.n. Residence, Moscow, Russia
  • Hasselt Court House , Hasselt, Belgium
  • Highway Rest Stops, Lochini Street, Dzveli Tbilisi, Tbilisi, Georgia
  • Rest Stops, Gori, Georgia

The following statistics helped J.MAYER.H achieve 1st place in the 15 Best Architecture Firms in Germany:

A+Awards Winner 5
A+Awards Finalist 3
Featured Projects 20
Total Projects 29

Why Should I Trust Architizer’s Ranking?

With more than 30,000 architecture firms and over 130,000 projects within its database, Architizer is proud to host the world’s largest online community of architects and building product manufacturers. Its celebrated A+Awards program is also the largest celebration of architecture and building products, with more than 400 jurors and hundreds of thousands of public votes helping to recognize the world’s best architecture each year.

Architizer also powers firm directories for a number of AIA (American Institute of Architects) Chapters nationwide, including the official directory of architecture firms for AIA New York.

An example of a project page on Architizer with Project Award Badges highlighted

A Guide to Project Awards

The blue “”+”” badge denotes that a project has won a prestigious A+Award as described above. Hovering over the badge reveals details of the award, including award category, year, and whether the project won the jury or popular choice award.

The orange Project of the Day and yellow Featured Project badges are awarded by Architizer’s Editorial team, and are selected based on a number of factors. The following factors increase a project’s likelihood of being featured or awarded Project of the Day status:

  • Project completed within the last 3 years
  • A well written, concise project description of at least 3 paragraphs
  • Architectural design with a high level of both functional and aesthetic value
  • High quality, in focus photographs
  • At least 8 photographs of both the interior and exterior of the building
  • Inclusion of architectural drawings and renderings
  • Inclusion of construction photographs

There are 7 Projects of the Day each week and a further 31 Featured Projects. Each Project of the Day is published on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram Stories, while each Featured Project is published on Facebook. Each Project of the Day also features in Architizer’s Weekly Projects Newsletter and shared with 170,000 subscribers.

Top image: IGZ Falkenberg by J.MAYER.H, Falkenberg/Elster, Germany


 

We’re constantly look for the world’s best architects to join our community. If you would like to understand more about this ranking list and learn how your firm can achieve a presence on it, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us at editorial@architizer.com.

Reference

Climatically Climactic: 6 Modern North African Residences Reveling in Their Context
CategoriesSustainable News

Climatically Climactic: 6 Modern North African Residences Reveling in Their Context

Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work through Architizer and sign up for our inspirational newsletter. 

The architecture of North Africa is diverse and rich in history and culture, with a variety of architectural styles and building technologies that are influenced by the different civilizations who have inhabited the area that spans along the northern coast of Africa.

This is not to say that a region of that size and rich history is neither homogeneous nor singular in its architectural identity. On the contrary, this collection celebrates the heterogeneity of architecture in North Africa by sampling a handful of residential projects whose architectural elements have been remarkably responsive to the specificities of their sites’ environments, traditions and history while remaining modern and responsive to their time.


The Colonnade House

By Atelier Messaoudi Architectes , Tipaza, Algeria.

Photo by Reda Ait Saada

In this highly accessible house that was designed for two elderly parents in Tipaza, three factors guided the design process: privacy, weather conditions and activity, which reflected on the building envelope, building layout and building orientation. The design of the openings achieved the required level of privacy for Algerian culture, while opening up the house to the surrounding garden for natural ventilation, sunlight and views, taking in consideration the challenging weather conditions of the area.

The light colored and local building materials responded to the climate. Similarly, the overhanging colonnaded gallery adjacent to the main living spaces sheltered them against the southern sunlight, while simultaneously acting as an intermediate living space for the family for dining and circulation.


Villa Agava

By Driss Kettani Architecte, Casablanca, Morocco

Reinterpreting the courtyard layout, this house is reminiscent of traditional houses, highly introverted with openings and activity turned inwards, surrounded by enclosure walls and solid facades. The openness of the house increases along the north-south axis, complemented by three landscape sequences, beginning with a solid and closed façade containing the main entrance on the north, with the house gradually becoming more extroverted as it reaches an open garden on the south, in a manner that also responds to the weather conditions. Inside, the house layout is characterized with a high level of spatial fluidity, transparency and openness, with big windows opening to the outside pool, the mineral garden on the west and the huge vegetal garden on the south.


Cedar Street House

By Alia Bengana architect, Algiers, Algeria.

Photo by Myriam Bengana

The new remodeling of the Cedar Street House witnessed the enlargement of the 1950’s house and the addition of a new basement and terrace that overlooks the the Bay of Algiers. The new terrace comes as an extension of the living room, spanning over the expansion of the ground floor, extending up to the outdoor swimming pool. Huge local plants border the swimming pool to secure the privacy for the house owners and creates a more intimate outdoors space, while the white exterior walls succeed in reflecting the summer sun and ensure a more comfortable interior environment.


Dar bibi

By JELJELI studio, Tunis, Tunisia

The renovation of Dar Bibi was to accommodate the changes in the house users, after the passing of Hassene Jeljeli’s grandfather and his mother moving back into her childhood home to look after his grandmother. In that sense, the intergenerational use of domestic spaces is one aspect of the region’s culture and family structures that was exemplified in this project.

The changes consisted of turning the old living room into two new bedrooms, while adding a new and larger living room that would accommodate the whole family, in the form of a floating volume, which was added to the old building. The new white façade was designed as a climatic wall, consisting of modular breeze-blocks that are molded in situ, providing natural ventilation while diffusing the strong southern sunlight.


Reyard House Team Bosphorus

By Studio Hcrbzkrt, Ben Guerir, Morocco

 The name of the project consists of two parts: “Re” that stands for recycling and “Yard” that refers to the courtyard. Together the word reads as the word Riad, which is the traditional Moroccan courtyard house. The house was designed and built in Morocco by the Turkish Team Bosphorus for the Africa edition of the ‘Solar Decathlon’ competition. The team focused on finding solutions that would counter the hot and dry desert climate while honoring tradition.

The building envelope alternates between solid walls that ensure privacy and perforated walls that allow cross ventilation through the yard to cool off the interior. Built out of local materials consisting of rammed earth and wooden framed panels, the team increased the house efficiency by using a water treatment system and solar panels for energy.


Dar Mim 

Septembre, Hammamet, Tunisia

Photo by Sophia Baraket

Photo by Sophia Baraket

Located in the historic heart of the city, the renovation and the extension of Dar Mim demanded the addition of a new volume containing living areas for guests, adjacent to the existing traditional courtyard house used by the client. Adopting the traditional courtyard house layout, the living areas were distributed around the two existing courtyards, weaved together through a set of spatial and visual connections, both horizontal and vertical. Relying on local building materials and craftsmanship, the traditional building techniques and the use of lime paint and plaster on all exterior walls allowed the extension to fit with its context and adapt to the weather conditions and turned the walls into canvases that reflected lights and shadows.

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Reference

Rafael Viñoly Dies Aged 78: A Look at Some of His Most Iconic Architectural Projects
CategoriesArchitecture

Rafael Viñoly Dies Aged 78: A Look at Some of His Most Iconic Architectural Projects

The University of California, San Francisco, Ray and Dagmar Dolby Regeneration Medicine Building

Completed in 2011, this cutting-edge laboratory for the University of California, San Francisco was designed to maximize the functional space within a compact urban site. The building’s horizontal organization promotes greater connectivity across departments, helps to unify the campus and creates the opportunity for abundant terraces and green roofs. The building structure is supported by space trusses resting on concrete piers, minimizing site excavation and incorporating seismic base isolation to absorb earthquake forces.


Laguna Garzon Bridge

In 2015, the Uruguayan architect returned to his home country with the completion of the Laguna Garzon Bridge, a road connecting two coastal cities that forms a ring when viewed from above. Viñoly was tasked with creating a bridge that would form a direct route between the cities of Rocha and Maldonado, crossing a scenic stretch of water known as a haven for birds and other wildlife. It was imperative that vehicle speeds be reduced within this sensitive environment, and Viñoly’s design naturally slows cars down while also providing drivers and pedestrians with ever-changing views across the surrounding landscape.


Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts

The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts, home of the Philadelphia Orchestra, evokes the image of two jewels in a glass case. Verizon Hall and the Perelman Theater, the center’s principal programmatic components, are treated as freestanding buildings on a vast indoor public plaza, Commonwealth Plaza, enclosed by a brick, steel and concrete perimeter building. From the perimeter emerges an immense steel and glass barrel vault roof that
floods the interior with natural light.


20 Fenchurch Street

Nicknamed the “Walkie Talkie”, the concept for Viñoly’s distinctive London skyscraper departs from conventional architectural expression by enlarging the floor plates at the top of the building, creating additional floor area to the valuable upper stories. Vertical façade louvers provide sun shading on the east and west elevations and follow the fanning form and organic curves of the building as they open out and wrap over the roof. The tower is crowned by a three-level Sky Garden, London’s first free, public green space and observation deck at the top of a building.


Carrasco International Airport

Rafael Viñoly was tapped to expand and modernize Carrasco International Airport with a spacious new passenger terminal to spur commercial growth and tourism in the region. The design gives prominence to the public zones, including the secure runway-side concourse as well as the fully accessible roadside departure hall and terrace, by providing amenities such as open space, natural light, restaurants, retail, and landscaping, all housed beneath a gently curved roof 1200 feet (365 meters) in length. Carrasco International Airport won a double A+Award in 2013 in the Transport – Airports category.

Learn more about Rafael Viñoly Architects through their firm profile on Architizer.

Reference

Interactive LED Media facade
CategoriesArchitecture

Shine On or Lights Out? Architects Are Turning Exterior Walls into Digital Façades

Judging for the 11th A+Awards is now underway! While awaiting the Winners, prepare for the upcoming Architizer Vision Awards, honoring the best architectural photography, film, visualizations, drawings, models and the talented creators behind them. Learn more and register >

Light-emitting diode (LED) video displays take architectural design to a new level of brilliance, transforming the city streets and skylines into spectacular sights. Technology meets design and art to cover entire building façades for a high-impact passerby engagement.

Unfortunately, as mesmerizing as this visual spectacle can be, these luminous building skins add to the high amounts of human light pollution. This effect increases the brightness of the sky at an alarming pace.

Building Skins

Digital façades redefine how we think of architecture and, more specifically, building skins. Entire walls become giant canvases with lighting as an artistic form of visual communication. LED technology has reached the point where screens of digitally controlled nodes emitting vivid colors can form an integral part of the architectural expression, adapting to various planes and configurations. The outcome achieves extraordinary visual effects, blending light, media and art. Never have buildings been brighter and more scintillating.

Interactive LED Media facade

Interactive LED Media façade for La Vitrine Culturelle in Montreal’s Cultural district. Photo by Moment Factory via Architizer

Dynamic and Expressive

With free-flowing and vivid colors, buildings become more dynamic and expressive. At dusk, architecture becomes secondary, and the light installations that cover entire building surfaces take centerstage. Then, the urban landscape, as experienced during the daytime, gives way to a transformed setting where light and media become the main attraction. Expansive installations fill the streets with a futuristic flair blending the real and virtual worlds. This fantastic atmosphere captures passersby’s and drivers’ attention, heightening their senses and triggering feelings. The ambient sound intensifies the experience, unsettling yet captivating.

Aura, Toronto, Canada. Photo by Victor Rodriguez on Unsplash

Burj Khalifa, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Burj Khalifa, Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Photo by Shot by Cerqueira on Unsplash

Design for the Senses

This sensory architecture affects how passersby interact with their immediate surroundings. It influences feelings such as mood, energy levels and appetite. Based on all of these attributes, digital façades serve as powerful marketing tools to attract customers for retail establishments, enhance the fan experience for sports venues and create brand identities for corporate businesses. Digital façades have become an effective communication vehicle that transforms urban centers into a new media form, like print (newspapers), broadcast (television) or the internet (social media). This luminous communication technology allows passersby to interact with the displayed content, whether it is news, advertising, weather forecasts or social media activity.

Interactive digital screens

Interactive digital screens deliver information in real-time. Photo by Cheung Yin via Unsplash

Pros and Cons

Technological advances continuously make LED lighting more affordable and energy-efficient. Light quality is continuously improved. LEDs have a very long life compared to other types of lighting, such as high-pressure sodium lamps traditionally used in street lighting and require virtually no maintenance or replacement. Yet, concerns are growing about the impact of blue emission excess on the one hand and light pollution causing the “skyglow” phenomenon on the other hand. Digital façades put off an incredible amount of light which, to some degree, contributes to light pollution generated by electric lights’ nighttime glow. This effect appears to be intensifying, especially in dense urban areas, with the artificial brightening of the night sky.

Lugard Road, Hong Kong

Sky glow over Hong Kong due to lighting pollution. Photo by Patrick on Unsplash

New Lighting Strategies

Also, environmental studies show that LED lights emit relatively high levels of blue light, a wavelength that negatively impacts human health and wildlife. While new light strategies are explored to mitigate the impact on human well-being and ecological systems, LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) promotes the minimization of light pollution by reducing light emissions, especially up to the sky. Perhaps a period of complete night darkness would be beneficial but unrealistic, so finding the most efficient and safe lighting system seems to be a priority. LED technology has the potential for improvement, and city authorities can regulate the amount of light emission per building, a compromise worth exploring.

Digital façades undoubtedly add to the character of buildings while becoming part of the urban landscape, creating exciting environments, attracting visitors and spurring business. Cities like New York, Hong Kong and Dubai exemplify the striking development of buildings incorporating digital façades. These eye-catching buildings shape the skylines of these cities, captivating the mind, rewarding the eye, enhancing the atmosphere and evoking powerful emotions.

Judging for the 11th A+Awards is now underway! While awaiting the Winners, prepare for the upcoming Architizer Vision Awards, honoring the best architectural photography, film, visualizations, drawings, models and the talented creators behind them. Learn more and register >

Reference

© Benthem Crouwel Architects
CategoriesArchitecture

30 Best Architecture Firms in the Netherlands

The Dutch have long been at the vanguard of architectural discourse. From functionalism and neoplasticism to structuralism and deconstructivism, to the “international” character of the contemporary global context, designers from the Netherlands have been realizing daringly dynamic constructions for over a century. The culture of experimentation that fuses bold aesthetic detail with even bolder engineering feats comes as no surprise in a country that has, for centuries, relied on engineering to make their land liveable by draining water and relying on polders.

Cities across the Netherlands are bursting with innovative design, and in this respect, Rotterdam particularly stands out as a hotbed for experimentation. From the moment visitors arrive through its sleek train station, the city acts as a museum for cutting-edge contemporary design: from Huis Sonneveld and Kubuswoningen to the Erasmusbrug and Markthal, and the recently completed Boijmans Depot. Many of the architectural firms on this list are rooted in this city. They are in good company with those who aren’t.

Contemporary architectural discourse could not be cited without referencing the plethora of Dutch thinkers. Think of Rem Koolhaas, Wiel Arets, Jacob Van Rijs: these innovative and intelligent spirits have founded some of the biggest global firms, proving time and again that Dutch centrality in global design discourse is shatterproof.

With so many architecture firms to choose from, it’s challenging for clients to identify the industry leaders that will be an ideal fit for their project needs. Fortunately, Architizer is able to provide guidance on the top design firms in Netherlands based on more than a decade of data and industry knowledge.

How are these architecture firms ranked?

The following ranking has been created according to key statistics that demonstrate each firm’s level of architectural excellence. The following metrics have been accumulated to establish each architecture firm’s ranking, in order of priority:

  • The number of A+Awards won (2013 to 2023)
  • The number of A+Awards finalists (2013 to 2023)
  • The number of projects selected as “Project of the Day” (2009 to 2023)
  • The number of projects selected as “Featured Project” (2009 to 2023)
  • The number of projects uploaded to Architizer (2009 to 2023)

Each of these metrics is explained in more detail at the foot of this article. This ranking list will be updated annually, taking into account new achievements of Netherlands architecture firms throughout the year.

Without further ado, here are the 30 best architecture firms in Netherlands:

30. Benthem Crouwel Architects

© Benthem Crouwel Architects

© Benthem Crouwel Architects

For almost four decades, Benthem Crouwel Architects has been creating innovative, flexible and efficient designs in a variety of scales: from universities, museums, bridges, railway stations, metro lines, offices, housing, malls and urban plans to bicycle racks, tiny houses and crossover projects with designers. In all designs, Benthem Crouwel seeks a balance between economic, social and ecological interests, with a particular focus on innovation and sustainability.

Some of Benthem Crouwel Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Bella Donna, Amstelveen, The Netherlands
  • Ziggo Dome, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • Car Park RAI Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Cuyperspassage, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Stedelijk Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Amsterdam, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Benthem Crouwel Architects achieve 30th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 10

29. Kraaijvanger Architects

© Ronald Tilleman Photography

© Ronald Tilleman Photography

Creating places to explore. Kraaijvanger strives to create healthy environments for people to work, learn, and enjoy themselves in. Such as public spaces, public buildings, and urban districts, where unique encounters occur, where memories are made, and where important decisions are taken. We take our inspiration from socially relevant themes. And we look ahead as building is a slow process in a rapidly changing world.

Some of Kraaijvanger Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • City Hall Venlo, Venlo, Netherlands
  • Early Childhood Center, Wassenaar, Wassenaar, Netherlands
  • City Hall Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
  • Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar, Netherlands
  • Brede School Snijdelwijk, Boskoop, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Kraaijvanger Architects achieve 29th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 2
Featured Projects 4
Total Projects 14

28. cepezed

© cepezed

© cepezed

cepezed is a medium sized, award-winning spatial design specialist. Assignments address the challenges of town-planning, industry, interiors and particularly architecture. cepezed represents knowledge, skill and a stimulating no-nonsense mentality. Combining conceptual skills, contemporary solutions for contemporary problems and ingenious creativity, results are disarmingly sober and inimitably intelligible.

Aesthetics and functionality are logically linked. At cepezed, projects are designed as monuments of function for people, not monuments of thanks to an architect.
cepezed is skilled at managing the complexity behind simplicity. It uses an integral design method with multiple material use in which various aspects such as spatial design, construction and installation techniques are forged into an indivisible whole.

Some of cepezed’s most prominent projects include:

  • Temporary Courthouse Amsterdam , Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • International student house, Delft, Netherlands
  • State Office De Knoop, Utrecht, Netherlands
  • Graafschap college, Doetinchem, Netherlands
  • Town hall Woerden, Woerden, Netherlands

The following statistics helped cepezed achieve 28th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 18

27. derksen|windt architecten

© derksen|windt architecten

© derksen|windt architecten

derksen|windt architecten is a young and distinctive ambitious architecture studio with its own signature, founded in 2008 by Jeroen Derksen and David Windt. ‘We started our office because we want our vision on architecture translated into projects. We make our designs thinking from the optimal future experience for the users. From the inside as well as from the outside.

This creates a beautiful, often original, sharply detailled design. For every assignment we look for a clear and ideal starting point, a question that needs to be answered for that specific assignment.

Some of derksen|windt architecten’s most prominent projects include:

  • Cafeteria van Ruyven, Maassluis, The Netherlands
  • Contemporary extension to a house as an indispensable connection between the inside and outside., De Zilk, Netherlands
  • EXTENSION AND REFURBISHMENT HOUSE IN AMSTERDAM, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Extension and internal overhaul ’30s house, Heemstede, Netherlands
  • Concrete split-level house, Capelle aan den IJssel, Netherlands

The following statistics helped derksen|windt architecten achieve 27th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 11

26. Personal Architecture

© Personal Architecture

© Personal Architecture

Personal Architecture is a Rotterdam based architectural firm. P·A works for individual and corporate clients. The expertise is broad: in addition to new construction projects, P·A is involved in the redevelopment and renovation of residential and commercial buildings. The partners of the firm, Maarten and Sander, stand for personal contact with the client, an integrated approach to the project and a transparent but highly organized process.

P·A is strong in taking care of the client, from the initiation phase to construction and management. The love for good design and a passion for building result in projects with high utility value and good architectural quality.

Some of Personal Architecture’s most prominent projects include:

  • A bold intervention, The Hague, The Netherlands
  • A second chance, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  • Back to nature, Bergen op Zoom, Netherlands
  • Not a box in an empty field, Zevenhuizen, Netherlands
  • A garden connection, Rotterdam, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Personal Architecture achieve 26th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 10

25. Bloot Architecture

© Bloot Architecture

© Bloot Architecture

BLOOT is a concept driven architectural studio located in The Hague, The Netherlands. Founded in October 2010 by Tjeerd Bloothoofd. With much pleasure and great dedication we are constantly searching through design for the concept and shape that unites the function, context, actuality and the wishes of the client in an integral sustainable design that appeals to the development of self-awareness and the liberty of choice in life.

Some of Bloot Architecture’s most prominent projects include:

  • Garden Studio, Voorburg, Netherlands
  • Transformation Forest House, Hengelo, Netherlands
  • Pavilion The Hague Beach Stadium, 4, Strandweg, Scheveningen, Den Haag, Netherlands
  • Patio House, Velp, Netherlands
  • Fig Tree House, The Hague, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Bloot Architecture achieve 25th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 8

24. Hilberink Bosch Architecten

© Hilberink Bosch Architecten

© Hilberink Bosch Architecten

The various projects of HILBERINKBOSCH architects — ranging from private and project-based housing, offices, renovations and large-scale urban studies — are characterized by a conceptual approach. The base of all concepts is formed by a precise analysis of the history, the urban lot, function, requirements and potentials.

Form, material and colour arises from this concept, representing the poetry of life. The different aspects of study slowly grow into an actual building. The building becomes part of the poetry, part of the memory, it becomes meaningful. We are passionately seeking for the smartest solution for complex cases.

Some of Hilberink Bosch Architecten’s most prominent projects include:

  • House at the Edge of a Forest, Heesch, Netherlands
  • Four Houses at Oud-Empel, Oud-Empel, Netherlands
  • Farm on Wamberg, Berlicum, Netherlands
  • Huize Vreeburg, Rosmalen, ‘s-Hertogenbosch, NB, The Netherlands
  • Dune Villa, Utrecht, The Netherlands

The following statistics helped Hilberink Bosch Architecten achieve 24th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 6

23. studio PROTOTYPE

© Jeroen musch

© Jeroen musch

studio PROTOTYPE is an Amsterdam-based architecture, urbanism and research firm. Founded in 2008, the studio believes in breaking from existing trends in order to create structures that withstand the test of time.

Some of studio PROTOTYPE’s most prominent projects include:

  • Villa Schoorl, Schoorl, Netherlands
  • Tiny pavilion in Vught, Vught, NB, Netherlands
  • Ortho Wijchen, Wijchen, Netherlands
  • Water Villa, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • House W, Duiven, The Netherlands

The following statistics helped studio PROTOTYPE achieve 23rd place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 2
A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 5
Total Projects 10

22. design Erick van Egeraat

© J Collingridge Photography

© J Collingridge Photography

Design Erick van Egeraat works on projects ranging from entirely new buildings and masterplans to interventions within historic structures. Common denominator in this diverse portfolio is our expertise which lies in striking visionary balances between the intended identity, level of ambition and overall quality of the projects.

Known for formulating unique architectural solutions, Erick van Egeraat creates iconic identities which optimize property values while acknowledging the social, emotional and intellectual impacts on both their environment and users. We provide both public and private clients with architectural and masterplanning services; interior and product design.

Some of design Erick van Egeraat’s most prominent projects include:

  • Waste to Energy Plant, Roskilde, Denmark
  • Erick van Egeraat Office Tower Amsterdam, Claude Debussylaan, Amsterdam-Zuid, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Vershina Trade and Entertainment Center, Surgut, Russia
  • Chess Club, Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia
  • Drents Museum, Assen, Netherlands

The following statistics helped design Erick van Egeraat achieve 22nd place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 1
Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 32

21. Mei architects and planners

Mei architects and planners realises leading projects in the Netherlands and abroad. Our work is founded on respect for the environment: for the history of the location, the current context and future living environment. Based on our expertise in the field of adaptive re-use of architectural heritage, new build projects and urban development strategies, we work on designs that put the user first.

Our distinct designs tell their own story, which increases the involvement with the building and the connection between its users. With creativity, expertise and courage, we introduce innovative technical applications and user concepts that contribute to social and ecological sustainability.

Some of Mei architects and planners’s most prominent projects include:

  • SAWA, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  • residential tower De Verkenner, Kanaleneiland, Netherlands
  • Schiecentrale 4B, Lloydstraat, Delfshaven, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  • The Four Worlds
  • Cheese Warehouse, Gouda, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Mei architects and planners achieve 21st place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 6
Total Projects 18

20. Barcode Architects

© Barcode Architects

© Barcode Architects

Barcode Architects is an international office for architecture, urbanism and contemporary design. The office is led by Dirk Peters and Caro van de Venne, along with a creative team of 70 professionals including architects, urban designers, and technologists. We have building experience in both the Netherlands and abroad.

Our work ranges from urban masterplans to mixed-use public buildings, from high-end residential and office towers to exclusive villas. Our projects are driven by the ambition to realize buildings that revitalize and transform their surroundings, offer a moving experience, awaken an aesthetic awareness and that users can identify with.

Some of Barcode Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Bibliothèque Alexis de Tocqueville, Normandy, France
  • Villa X, NB, Netherlands
  • Hyde Park, Hoofddorp, Netherlands
  • Bijlmer Bajes, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • The Robin Bajeskwartier, Amsterdam, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Barcode Architects achieve 20th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 16

19. NEXT architects

© Julien Lanoo

© Julien Lanoo

NEXT architects is an architecture practice that covers the full spectrum of the architectural field. Since its earliest projects, ‘Holland – Layer by Layer’ and ‘The Image of Metropolis’, NEXT has explored the boundaries of its own discipline, and searched for areas that overlap with other disciplines. This exploratory attitude has resulted in a highly diverse portfolio that ranges from design products to urban plans.

Some of NEXT architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Lianjiang Butterfly Bay, Lianjiang, Fuzhou, China
  • Bloemendaal Town Hall, Bloemendaal, Netherlands
  • Fuzhou Shouxi Building, Fuzhou, China
  • Lucky Knot, Changsha, China
  • House M&M, Amsterdam, Netherlands

The following statistics helped NEXT architects achieve 19th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 13

18. René van Zuuk Architects bv

copyright Luuk Kramer - © René van Zuuk Architects bv

copyright Luuk Kramer – © René van Zuuk Architects bv

René van Zuuk Architects is an Almere-based practice founded in 1992 by René van Zuuk. Despite the diversity in the designs of René van Zuuk Architects, there are a few constant themes that run throughout. Above all is the desire of both clients and architect alike to create ‘something special.

The office strives to create architecture that challenges conventions. Underlying all of the designs is the continued search for methods to create a building as interesting as possible with minimal cost.

Some of René van Zuuk Architects bv’s most prominent projects include:

  • Belvedere Tower, Hilversum, Netherlands
  • ACRAM
  • De Verbeelding, 25, De Verbeelding, Zeewolde, Netherlands
  • Project X, 8, De Fantasie, Almere Stad, Almere, Netherlands
  • Pavilion Roosendaal, Nieuwe Markt, Roosendaal, Netherlands

The following statistics helped René van Zuuk Architects bv achieve 18th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 10

17. GROUP A

© GROUP A

© GROUP A

We are GROUP A, a Dutch studio for architecture, interior and urban design founded in 1996. Led by the founders Maarten van Bremen, Folkert van Hagen and Adam Visser. In the past twenty-five years we have realized a wide range of projects. From offices to housing and from mobility assignments to transformations.

In our work, the disciplines urban planning, architecture and interior design are inextricably linked. This way we create sustainable environments where people live, work and reside comfortably. As a full service agency, we are responsible for the entire process, from design to completion.

Some of GROUP A’s most prominent projects include:

  • Central Park , Utrecht, Netherlands
  • Workshop Steigereiland
  • Blok 1 Presikhaaf, Zoomstraat, Arnhem, Netherlands
  • Cultural Educational Centre ‘Het Lichtruim’, De Bilt, Netherlands
  • Office Building De Schelde, 65, Glacisstraat, Vlissingen, Netherlands

The following statistics helped GROUP A achieve 17th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 21

16. Shift A+U

© René de Wit

© René de Wit

Shift is a Rotterdam-based design office that focuses on the fields of architecture, urbanism and spatial planning. The office combines a broad engagement in space production with precise and project-specific design interventions.

Some of Shift A+U’s most prominent projects include:

  • Faculty Club, 2, Warandelaan, West Tilburg, Tilburg, Netherlands
  • Museumplein Limburg, Kerkrade, Netherlands
  • Vertical Loft, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • CMY Pavilion, Groningen, Netherlands
  • Dentist with a view, Best, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Shift A+U achieve 16th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 8
Total Projects 8

15. LIAG architects + engineers

© Hannah Anthonysz - fotograaf

© Hannah Anthonysz – fotograaf

Together with our clients, we create powerful properties with a positive attitude towards the environment and its users. LIAG has strong affinity with the realization of integrated sustainable housing solutions that also take into account the total life of a building.

Functionality, the use of the building including the building operation and the user take the centre stage. Happiness of the user is central.

Some of LIAG architects + engineers’s most prominent projects include:

  • Rapenburg 65, Rapenburg, Leiden, Netherlands
  • Niekée Facility Centre, 300, Oranjelaan, Roermond, Netherlands
  • ROC Rijn IJssel, 2, Middachtensingel, Arnhem, Netherlands
  • Fire Station and Ambulance Post, Petroleumhaven, Waldorpstraat, Laak, Den Haag, Netherlands
  • NBHW ALKMAAR

The following statistics helped LIAG architects + engineers achieve 15th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 30

14. Atelier Kempe Thill

© Ulrich Schwarz

© Ulrich Schwarz

Since the nineties, contemporary architecture has increasingly been confronted by two contradicting developments, which can be seen on all levels and working fields. On one hand, architects are requested to design neutral and anonymous buildings that can easily be changed for other uses; these buildings have to be able to respond to changing economic situations and have to be adaptable to different programs.

On the other hand, architects are asked to create very specific buildings that are easy to identify; this kind of architecture has to appeal to the user through a unique use of form and space. Atelier Kempe Thill consciously takes this modern paradox as the point of departure for their work.

Some of Atelier Kempe Thill’s most prominent projects include:

The following statistics helped Atelier Kempe Thill achieve 14th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 12

13. MoederscheimMoonen Architects

© MoederscheimMoonen Architects

© MoederscheimMoonen Architects

We are a team of strategic creatives who want to make the world a better place. For us, the big idea plays an important role in how we look at the world, our team and our collaborations.

We think carefully, make informed decisions and make the right connections. We create calm and overview in complex situations. We do what is needed at the right times while always staying focused on the bigger picture.

Some of MoederscheimMoonen Architects’s most prominent projects include:

The following statistics helped MoederscheimMoonen Architects achieve 13th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 8
Total Projects 19

12. De Zwarte Hond

© De Zwarte Hond

© De Zwarte Hond

De Zwarte Hond was established in 1985 in Groningen and has offices in Rotterdam and Cologne. It has a staff of more than fifty people with differing backgrounds, competencies and skills. The integral design and realization of architecture and urban assignments is carried out in multi-disciplinary teams. De Zwarte Hond’s portfolio spans the entire spectrum of residential, working and recreational environments, in rural and urban contexts: from villas to row housing, from offices to schools, from cultural facilities to recreational landscape.

Some of De Zwarte Hond’s most prominent projects include:

The following statistics helped De Zwarte Hond achieve 12th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 7
Total Projects 14

11. Neutelings Riedijk Architects

© Neutelings Riedijk Architects

© Neutelings Riedijk Architects

Neutelings Riedijk Architects was established in Rotterdam in 1987. We offer a strong commitment to design excellence: realizing high quality architecture through the development of powerful and innovative concepts into clear built form. Over the last thirty years Neutelings Riedijk Architects has established itself as a leading international practice, specializing in the design of complex projects for public, commercial and cultural buildings.

The office has great experience in balancing the complex challenges of these projects to meet the ambitions of our client. For our international projects our design force is complemented by technical force through the association with local partners that specialize in architectural engineering, cost calculation and site supervision.

Some of Neutelings Riedijk Architects’s most prominent projects include:

The following statistics helped Neutelings Riedijk Architects achieve 11th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 9
Total Projects 11

10. Paul de Ruiter Architects

© Paul de Ruiter Architects

© Paul de Ruiter Architects

The keywords innovation, sustainability, identity and interaction characterize the vision of Paul de Ruiter Architects. We believe in the future. Since the foundation of our practice in 1994 we work on sustainable, innovative architecture that focuses on the health and happiness of people.

Sustainable technology and aesthetics go hand in hand. After all, appreciating the beauty of buildings is just as important as energy efficiency or the health of an indoor climate.

Some of Paul de Ruiter Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Villa Kogelhof, Zeeland, Netherlands
  • Villa K, Thuringia, Germany
  • Sigmax, Enschede, The Netherlands
  • Polak Building / Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  • The 4th Gymnasium, Amsterdam, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Paul de Ruiter Architects achieve 10th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 2
A+Awards Finalist 1
Featured Projects 8
Total Projects 12

9. Borren Staalenhoef Architects

© Borren Staalenhoef Architects

© Borren Staalenhoef Architects

Jacob Borren and André Staalenhoef are modern masters of architecture. Passionate and persevering. Borren Staalenhoef are determined to tackle every aspect of the spatial task; to oversee a large degree of complexity and to reduce it to clear, layered structures. Their ultimate objective is the act of building: the creation of a tangible object that speaks through the details.

Their solutions are the result of a long series of consistent decisions and elaborations: diagrams and matrixes, sketches and artist’s impressions, ground plans and sections, construction models and working drawings. It is in this method of working that the mastery and strength of this architecture lies.

Some of Borren Staalenhoef Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • woonhuis Marssum, Marssum, Netherlands
  • Het Bushok, Kortenhoef, The Netherlands
  • Villa Juliana, Leeuwarden, The Netherlands
  • Archem Estate, Archem, Netherlands
  • House Boogert, Epe, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Borren Staalenhoef Architects achieve 9th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 9
Total Projects 13

8. LEVS architecten

© LEVS architecten

© LEVS architecten

LEVS architecten works from the notion that architecture and urban planning have quite a significant impact on our surroundings, on people and society as a whole, as well as the environment. We incorporate this responsibility when detailing our assignments and in our approach to running our enterprise. We welcome the challenge of complex projects in which our aim lies in finding surprising solutions which deliver a result beyond prior expectations.

Our goal is to design buildings and areas where residents will eventually articulate a passion about the places they work, live and inhabit; spaces which express an optimal interweaving of functionality, aesthetics and sustainability. LEVS architecten was established in 1989 as Loof & van Stigt Architecten.

Some of LEVS architecten’s most prominent projects include:

The following statistics helped LEVS architecten achieve 8th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Finalist 2
Featured Projects 10
Total Projects 20

7. atelier PRO architekten

© atelier PRO architekten

© atelier PRO architekten

Atelier PRO is an architectural office in The Hague in the Netherlands that continues to innovate in the field of architecture, urban planning, interior design, building management and building cost management. For more than 35 years we create with the greatest of pleasure well-considered designs for challenging locations, often with extraordinary programmes.

Some of atelier PRO architekten’s most prominent projects include:

  • Graafschap college, Doetinchem, Netherlands
  • ROC Graafschap College, Doetinchem, Netherlands
  • Multifunctional community school Krimpen aan de Lek, Krimpen aan de Lek, Netherlands
  • School, Child and Community Centre O3, The Hague, Netherlands
  • MFC De Statie, Sas van Gent, Sas van Gent, Netherlands

The following statistics helped atelier PRO architekten achieve 7th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 15
Total Projects 98

6. Wiel Arets Architects

© atelier PRO architekten

© atelier PRO architekten

Wiel Arets Architects (WAA) is a globally active architecture and design firm, whose work extends to education and publishing, with studios located in the Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland. Comprised of an international team of architects, designers, thinkers and administrators, the firm is currently involved in large number of projects throughout Europe, North America, Asia and Africa.

The firm’s architecture and design emerges from research and a balance of hybrid-programming solutions, which adapt to and anticipate future contextual change. The output of WAA is acclaimed for both its craftsmanship and tactility.

Some of Wiel Arets Architects’s most prominent projects include:

  • Jellyfish House, Marbella, Spain
  • The Hoge Heren, Zalmhaven, Centrum, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  • Four Towers Osdorp, Jan van Zutphenstraat, Amsterdam Nieuw-West, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • V’ Tower, 565, Flight Forum, Strijp, Eindhoven, Netherlands
  • University Library Utrecht, 3, Heidelberglaan, Oost, Utrecht, Netherlands

The following statistics helped Wiel Arets Architects achieve 6th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

Featured Projects 15
Total Projects 22

5. i29

© i29

© i29

We are i29, an award winning office for interior and architecture projects. In a world that becomes more and more digital, we shape the physical experiences around us; clear, effective, surprising. We deliver work that stands out for its simplicity. The great diversity in our portfolio gives the possibility to think “out of the box” and to work inclusive for all kinds of clients and users.

We do not provide standard solutions, but we do apply standardized working methods to guarantee quality, efficiency and creativity. We innovate by design, and make work that inspires a better future. We are constantly changing to make relevant work.

Some of i29’s most prominent projects include:

  • Culture 01, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Felix Meritis Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Floating Home, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Home 10, Paris, France
  • Museum Princessehof, Leeuwarden, Netherlands

The following statistics helped i29 achieve 5th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Finalist 5
Featured Projects 18
Total Projects 28

4. UNStudio

© i29

© i29

UNStudio is an international architectural practice, situated in Amsterdam since 1988, with extensive experience in the fields of urbanism, infrastructure, public, private and utility buildings on different scale levels. At the basis of UNStudio are a number of long-term goals, which are intended to define and guide the quality of our performance in the architectural field.

We strive to make a significant contribution to the discipline of architecture, to continue to develop our qualities with respect to design, technology, knowledge and management and to be a specialist in public network projects. We see as mutually sustaining the environment, market demands and client wishes that enable our work, and we aim for results in which our goals and our client’s goals overlap.

Some of UNStudio’s most prominent projects include:

  • Canaletto, London, United Kingdom
  • P.C. Hooftstraat 138, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Arnhem Central, Arnhem, Netherlands
  • Burnham Pavilion, Chicago, IL, United States
  • Le Toison d’Or, Brussels, Belgium

The following statistics helped UNStudio achieve 4th place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 3
Featured Projects 23
Total Projects 29

3. OMA

© Bloomimages, Courtesy of OMA

© Bloomimages, Courtesy of OMA

OMA is a leading international partnership practicing architecture, urbanism, and cultural analysis. OMA’s buildings and masterplans around the world insist on intelligent forms while inventing new possibilities for content and everyday use.

Some of OMA’s most prominent projects include:

  • Milstein Hall, Ithaca, NY, United States
  • 11th Street Bridge Park, Washington, DC, United States
  • Rebuild by Design
  • Faena District, Miami, FL, United States
  • MPavilion 2017, Melbourne, Australia

The following statistics helped OMA achieve 3rd place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 4
A+Awards Finalist 4
Featured Projects 45
Total Projects 61

2. MVRDV

© © Juliusz Sokołowski

© © Juliusz Sokołowski

MVRDV is based in Rotterdam and works in the fields of architecture, urbanism and city planning. Founded by Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries, the firm has a global scope and approaches each project with a collaborative spirit and through a research-based design method.

Some of MVRDV’s most prominent projects include:

  • Tianjin Binhai Library, Tianjin, China
  • Tainan Spring, Tainan, Taiwan
  • Depot Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  • WERK12, Munich, Germany
  • Crystal Houses, Amsterdam, Netherlands

The following statistics helped MVRDV achieve 2nd place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 8
Featured Projects 62
Total Projects 75

1. Mecanoo

© Mecanoo

© Mecanoo

Mecanoo, officially founded in Delft in 1984, is made up of a highly multidisciplinary staff of creative professionals from 25 countries. The team includes architects, interior designers, urban planners, landscape architects as well as architectural technicians and support staff.

Led by Francine Houben (Creative Director & Founding Partner), Mecanoo has extensive experience designing and realizing exceptional buildings which serve client ambitions while creating vibrant end-user spaces.

Some of Mecanoo’s most prominent projects include:

  • National Kaohsiung Centre for the Arts (Wei-Wu-Ying), Kaohsiung, Taiwan
  • HUBB – Learning Environments, Eindhoven, Netherlands
  • Delft City Hall and Train Station, Delft, Netherlands
  • Palace of Justice, Córdoba, Spain
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library, Washington, DC, United States

The following statistics helped Mecanoo achieve 1st place in the 30 Best Architecture Firms in Netherlands:

A+Awards Winner 9
A+Awards Finalist 10
Featured Projects 71
Total Projects 109

Why Should I Trust Architizer’s Ranking?

With more than 30,000 architecture firms and over 130,000 projects within its database, Architizer is proud to host the world’s largest online community of architects and building product manufacturers. Its celebrated A+Awards program is also the largest celebration of architecture and building products, with more than 400 jurors and hundreds of thousands of public votes helping to recognize the world’s best architecture each year.

Architizer also powers firm directories for a number of AIA (American Institute of Architects) Chapters nationwide, including the official directory of architecture firms for AIA New York.

An example of a project page on Architizer with Project Award Badges highlighted

A Guide to Project Awards

The blue “”+”” badge denotes that a project has won a prestigious A+Award as described above. Hovering over the badge reveals details of the award, including award category, year, and whether the project won the jury or popular choice award.

The orange Project of the Day and yellow Featured Project badges are awarded by Architizer’s Editorial team, and are selected based on a number of factors. The following factors increase a project’s likelihood of being featured or awarded Project of the Day status:

  • Project completed within the last 3 years
  • A well written, concise project description of at least 3 paragraphs
  • Architectural design with a high level of both functional and aesthetic value
  • High quality, in focus photographs
  • At least 8 photographs of both the interior and exterior of the building
  • Inclusion of architectural drawings and renderings
  • Inclusion of construction photographs

There are 7 Projects of the Day each week and a further 31 Featured Projects. Each Project of the Day is published on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram Stories, while each Featured Project is published on Facebook. Each Project of the Day also features in Architizer’s Weekly Projects Newsletter and shared with 170,000 subscribers.

 


 

We’re constantly look for the world’s best architects to join our community. If you would like to understand more about this ranking list and learn how your firm can achieve a presence on it, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us at editorial@architizer.com.

Reference

Buckle Up: 5 Architects and Firms Are Taking the Driver’s Seat in Vehicular Design
CategoriesArchitecture

Buckle Up: 5 Architects and Firms Are Taking the Driver’s Seat in Vehicular Design

Browse the Architizer Jobs Board and apply for architecture and design positions at some of the world’s best firms. Click here to sign up for our Jobs Newsletter.

Building design is rarely the sole focus of architecture. Being an architect involves exploring the depths of innovation and pushing the boundaries of human experience. For architects, delving into alternative design fields often promises new challenges, the expansion of knowledge and the further development of an array of skills. There are many fields architects have historically branched into (the first that comes to mind is product design). Yet, in the past decade or so, architects have increasingly turned their attention toward a new field of inquiry. Drawing on a long, symbiotic relationship between architecture and engineering, more and more contemporary architects are dipping their toes into transportation design. 

From the seas to the skies, architects have brought their unique perspectives and innovative ideas to the table, creating iconic transportation designs that will be remembered for years to come. This collection celebrates the art of transportation design by showcasing five firms that have tackled the unique design challenges of vehicles. From Norman Foster and his slight obsession with all things motorcar to Zaha Hadid Architects’ mesmerizing braided exoskeletons, the level of creativity, innovation and technical skills on display is nothing short of inspirational. So buckle up and enjoy these incredible feats of design and engineering. 


McLaren Production Centre by Foster + Partners, Woking, United Kingdom

Foster + Partners have an illustrious relationship with transportation design, having collaborated on many incredible vehicles and vessels over the years, their portfolio is stacked with not only vehicles but airports and stations alike. It’s no surprise really that the team at Foster + Partners has regularly dipped into the motor industry, as founder Norman Foster is well-known for his enthusiasm for cars. Recently the renowned architect put his self-proclaimed obsession on display when curating ‘Motion. Autos, Art, Architecture’ for the Guggenheim Bilbao’s epic exhibition, which linked the history of the automobile with the evolution of modern art.

While the practice have been involved in the design of many yachts, The Alen Yacht in particular is one of Foster + Partners most recent designs. At 68-foot the boat is perhaps not the biggest yacht you’ll ever see but that doesn’t mean it isn’t incredibly lavish, featuring elegant social spaces, a comfortable primary suite, and ample entertaining areas in an open-plan layout allows the luxury vessel to accommodate up to twelve guests. The fast and agile yacht boasts a beautiful interior with a refined palette of materials that emphasize the sense of motion and adventure at the heart of the yacht’s design. The furniture is artfully arranged to follow the curves of the white leather walls making clever use of the space available. It is apparent that throughout the yacht’s design, every detail has been thoughtfully considered and impeccably detailed.


Zaha Hadid Architects have always been known for their relationship with breathtakingly organic forms, and their foray into yacht design is no exception. Before her death, the late Dame Commander, Zaha Hadid, partnered with German shipbuilder Blohm+Vohs for three years, creating a family of seafaring vessels featuring mesmerizing braided exoskeletons. Now, Italian maker Rossinavi is set to celebrate ZHA’s next dive into the industry with its introduction of the electrifying Oneiric.

Oneiric is a 145-foot (44-meter) electric catamaran that is powered through artificial intelligence. Its cutting-edge design, inspired by the rolling waves of the ocean, features a single continuous line that rises from the aluminum hull, spirals up and around three photovoltaic-integrated levels, and undulates into the other hull. The ship’s exterior boasts branching curves that merge and diverge in the hull while the stern slopes down like a giant swimming platform, creating a seamless connection between the water and the yacht edge.

The yacht’s interior is just as fluid, with integrated furnishings blending into adjacent planes and walls, meeting ceilings through uninterrupted coved surfaces. The main cabin offers breathtaking 180-degree views and sunlight is prevalent through the addition of skylights. The interiors are finished with lightweight, eco-friendly materials to reduce drag, and the yacht is powered by photovoltaics during daylight hours. The onboard AI monitors energy consumption and provides navigation recommendations based on environmental impact, allowing Oneiric to complete a day trip on electric power alone with minimal carbon and noise emissions. Rossinavi has calculated that Oneiric can handle over two-thirds of a transatlantic voyage with solar power. The yacht can even charge land-based appliances while docked.


The Moving Kitchen by J.C. Architecture, Taiwan | Photographs by Kuo-Min Lee
Popular Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Transport Interiors

The Moving Kitchen is an excellent example of what we can do with our existing or outdated transportation inventory. Designed by the talented architecture firm J C Architects, the restaurant is housed in a semi-retired 70-year-old train that has been salvaged from retirement and transformed into a moving luxury resturant. The dynamic dining experience seats 54 people and takes its guests on a culinary journey both through the culinary delights and through the scenic beauty of Taiwan.

The concept behind the Moving Kitchen was to merge the flavors of traditional Taiwanese cuisine with the breathtaking views of the island. A multidisciplinary team of designers, chefs, and restaurant operations experts worked tirelessly to bring the vision to life and the result is an unforgettable dining experience that seamlessly blends the taste of Taiwan with the scenic beauty of the island.


Bjarke Ingles Group is renowned for their innovative designs and boundary-pushing ideas. From creating the iconic headquarters of Google to the thought-provoking Danish Refugee Museum, the adept team of architects and designers have proven time and time again that they are not afraid to tackle challenging projects in their own unique way.

Often entering the realm of transportation, BIG have brought their skills to bear on several new and exciting modes of transportation. Yet, unlike many of their peers who opt for superyachts and luxury vehicles, the unpredictable BIG took aim at the electric bicycle. The Biomega OKO is a stylish e-bike made up of clean lines and an efficiency to be envied. Designed and developed by KiBiSi, under the leadership of Bjarke Ingles the bike flipped the often over complicated electric bike model and stripped it back to bare essentials, without compromising on function or aesthetics. 

The perfectly balanced, sleek cycle is fitted with a battery in the middle bar and a motor in the front wheel hub. The Biomega OKO is made of carbon fiber and weighs in at a mere 44 pounds, making it one of the lightest electric bicycles on the market at the time. With its energy-efficient operation, the Biomega OKO is not only regarded as a joy to ride, but its eco-friendly design is admirable. The Biomega OKO may be utilitarian in it’s looks but it is truly a seamless example of transportation design.


Germane Barnes

Germane Barnes is an architect and academic whose work explores the intersection of design alongside technology. The groundbreaking architect recently collaborated with motor giant Lexus on a unique project for Design Miami/ that aimed to encapsulate and present the next generation of the automaker’s evolution. The installation, titled “ON/,” is inspired by Lexus’s LF-Z Electrified Concept car and embodies the human-centered, future-oriented approach to design and craftsmanship that the brand and Barnes share.

The immersive installation features a precisely scaled three-dimensional sculptural rendition of the concept car suspended just above the ground and illuminated with embedded LED lighting. The display also includes furniture designed by Barnes and his team specifically for the installation, providing areas for rest and reflection. The entire installation is unified by a unique lighting scheme that allows for engagement from users around the world through an online, interactive virtual model. Participants created their own lighting designs for the display, and Barnes and his team selected a number of the user-generated designs to showcase onsite, encouraging interaction and collaboration while highlighting the creative vision of entries from around the world.

Browse the Architizer Jobs Board and apply for architecture and design positions at some of the world’s best firms. Click here to sign up for our Jobs Newsletter.



Reference

World’s Best Design Details: Bendheim’s Bespoke Glass Façades
CategoriesArchitecture

World’s Best Design Details: Bendheim’s Bespoke Glass Façades

Architizer’s A+Awards Best Firm categories allow design firms of all sizes to showcase their practice and vie for the title of “World’s Best Architecture Firm”. Start an A+Firm Award Application today. 

Architecture is shaped by form, transparency and light. Today, glass is one of the key materials specified to control what we experience inside a building, from views and daylight to heating and cooling. Glass has been used for thousands of years, holding both practical uses and cultural meaning. A major turning point came with the advent of the float glass process,  invented by Sir Alastair Pilkington in 1952, which used a molten tin bath to produce a continuous ribbon of glass. Now, architects are working with manufacturers to rethink conventional building envelopes and construction techniques.

Bendheim is one of the world’s foremost resources for specialty architectural glass. Founded in New York City in 1927, the family-owned company offers in-stock and custom glass varieties for interior and exterior building applications. In the early 1980s, Bendheim began its Architectural Glass division with new tempering and lamination processes to transform hundreds of decorative glass varieties into safety architectural glass products. Bendheim now maintains production facilities in New Jersey and a Design Lab in New York City. The following projects showcase Bendheim’s products in architecture across the United States, from residential to cultural projects.


Devon Energy Center

By Pickard Chilton, Oklahoma City, OK, United States

The Devon Energy Center was designed to create a focal point for the company and the city by integrating civic-scaled spaces. The headquarters consolidates Devon’s Oklahoma City-based workforce into a single facility. Rising fifty floors, the tower’s unique three-sided footprint allows it to be viewed from all of greater Oklahoma City. The curtain wall is composed of state-of-the-art continuous floor-to-ceiling glazing and a highly articulated mullion system.

Defining an urban edge between business and arts districts, the auditorium is a prominent, multi-use venue designed to support private and public events. Bendheim was brought on with double-glazed, solar channel glass to create feature exterior walls with angle cuts at the entrance. The SF-60 framing system was utilized for setting the glass.


Shaw Center for the Arts

By Schwartz/Silver Architects, Baton Rouge, LA, United States

Made to house Louisiana State University’s Museum of Art, this project also included studio art facilities, a regional performing arts facility with a 320 seat main stage, a hundred-seat black box theater, and a dance recital theater. An historic older building, the “Auto Hotel,” houses classrooms, offices, curatorial spaces, and a gallery for the LSU School of Art. The innovative Bendheim channel glass rainscreen creates a highly recognizable façade, while protecting the building and the works of art it houses from the elements.

The façade features approximately 40,000 square feet of the channel glass. Most of the flanges face outward, adding texture to the building. There are 2-inch gaps between the channels, and the glass rainscreen sits approximately 6 inches off a layer of waterproof aluminum. The resulting varied texture emulates the shimmering surface of the nearby Mississippi River. The unique flange-outward design adds visual complexity, while preventing wind and rain from accessing the metal panels behind the channel glass.


Swiss Embassy Residence

By Rüssli Architects AG, Washington, DC, United States

Looking out with a view to the Washington Monument, this residence was made as a multifunctional microcosm of living and working space as well as rooms for official receptions and for the staff. The strictly geometrical structure of the Swiss Embassy is a cross-shaped volume on a massive, rectangular base. The outer sides of the cross, which are part of the base too, and the the resulting exterior spaces are allocated to adjacent areas.

Bendheim’s U-profile channel glass, contrasting with slate-trimmed grey concrete, produces a crisp, clean effect in this cross-shaped design. The complex features 10,000 square feet of tempered, low-iron, sandblasted, solar textured channel glass. The Swiss Embassy residence operates at high levels of efficiency, consuming half as much energy as a typical building structure. The project also conforms to the LEED Silver green building standard.


Institute of Contemporary Art

By Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Boston, MA, United States

The ICA was the first museum to be built in Boston in 100 years. The 65,000 square foot building includes temporary and permanent galleries, a 330 seat multi-purpose theater, a restaurant, bookstore, education/workshop facilities, and administrative offices. The site is bound on two sides by the Harbor Walk, a 47-mile public walkway at the water¹s edge reclaimed from Boston’s industrial past. The ICA offers the city some of its ground floor footprint in exchange for rights to cantilever over city property with a 18,000-square-foot gallery illuminated by an uninterrupted skylight.

A 504 Rough Cast channel glass façade envelopes the upper level of the Institute of Contemporary Art on three sides. The glass rainscreen is functional, protecting the building from harmful moisture damage, as well as being aesthetically pleasing. The glass is illuminated from the top, allowing the entire upper level to glow at night and to act as a beacon over the harbor.


C-Glass House

By deegan day design, Marin County, CA, United States

The C-Glass House is an elegant retreat in northern California. Set on a spectacular site, the residence opens to a panoramic view of Tomales Bay and the open ocean, while bracing against winds from multiple directions. C-Glass House brokers between the Leica-like precision of high modern glass houses and the cinematic wireframe of the Case Study generation. The home was also inspired by artists’ explorations of glazed enclosures as much as it is to the precedents of Johnson and Mies.

The C-Glass House opens up to a panoramic vista but also modulates and reflects back on architecture’s evolving role in the American landscape. Affixed in Bendheim’s SF-60 framing system, solar textured channel glass defines the house’s exterior, creates privacy, and diffuses the strong Californian sunlight. Captured at the top and bottom, the tempered channel glass spans the height of the house, seamlessly turning corners without the need for extra metal supports.


Visual Arts Building, University of Iowa

By Steven Holl Architects and BNIM, Iowa City, IA, United States

SHA and BNIM designed the new Visual Arts Building for the University of Iowa’s School of Art and Art History. It provides 126,000 square feet of loft-like space for all visual arts media, from ancient metal-smithing techniques to the most advanced virtual reality technologies. The building replaces an original arts building from 1936, which was heavily damaged during the 2008 flood of the University of Iowa campus. Seven vertical “centers of light” are carved out of the building’s volume filling the interior with natural light and ventilation.

Channel glass by Bendheim soars at 20 foot heights throughout the project. The combination of Bendheim’s 504 Rough Cast™ channel glass texture with translucent insulation inserts delivers ideal daylight, as if filtered through a translucent cloud. With no glare requiring shades or other window treatments to block it, classrooms, studios, and lounge spaces are flooded with natural light that appears to have no direct source. The idea was to create evenly dispersed light that would make the best possible atmosphere in which to work and create.

Architizer’s A+Awards Best Firm categories allow design firms of all sizes to showcase their practice and vie for the title of “World’s Best Architecture Firm”. Start an A+Firm Award Application today. 

Reference

Out of This World: 7 Lunar Style Habitats Architects Are Mooning Over
CategoriesArchitecture

Out of This World: 7 Lunar Style Habitats Architects Are Mooning Over

Browse the Architizer Jobs Board and apply for architecture and design positions at some of the world’s best firms. Click here to sign up for our Jobs Newsletter.

Oscar Wilde famously wrote, “We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.” Since the beginning of time, human beings have been fascinated by outer space — the stars, the sun, the moon and everything else in between. For tens of thousands of years, scientists, philosophers, innovators and billions of others have collectively and continuously craned their necks with curiosity and ambition to understand the existence beyond ours that surrounds us.

Space has always invoked an enormous sense of fascination for us mere planet dwellers, and despite the renewed ambition after nearly 50 years to return to our moon’s surface, many architects have channeled their lunar fascinations a little closer to home. The following eight architectural beauties might not hold up under the unrelenting and harsh conditions of space habitation, but they would certainly look the part.


Self-Assembly Geodesic Domes

By FDome, Poland

Popular Choice Winner, 9th Annual A+Awards, Architecture +Small Living

Self-Assembly Geodesic Domes by FDome, Poland Photographs by Steven D’Avignon

Domes have far and away been the structural representation of choice when film directors depict our eventual habitation of other planets, and Poland-based FDomes self-assembly Geodesic Glamping domes show us how cozy such a home could be. Versatile and portable, the tented structures blend perfectly into the surrounding landscape and boast spacious interiors. Fully-fitted bathrooms, kitchenettes and a functional loft bed, with an option to connect one or more domes, mean that while these domes might not be suitable for space habitation, they’d be an excellent addition to the back garden.


Residential House in Kaunas

By Architectural bureau G.Natkevicius and partners, Kaunas, Lithuania

Unless I’ve missed something vitally important, I think we can all agree that wherever the planet that humankind eventually relocates to, trees and timber could be challenging to come by. It’s therefore easy to imagine that stone and concrete-like conglomerates will more likely be available and, therefore, favored in such an environment. 

With a distinct familiarity with Kisho Kurokawa’s Metabolist Icon this two-story family home in Kaunas is a modernist dream, circular windows included. The reinforced concrete structure is robust and industrial in design yet retains a pure form, while its unfussy facade and muted pallet inside and out give a sense that the monolithic building would be right at home on the surface of Luna. 


Casa de los Milagros (House of Miracles)

By Naser Nader Ibrahim, Coatepec, Mexico 

Casa de los Milagros (House of Miracles) By Danilo Veras Godoy, Coatepec, Mexico Photographys by Naser Nader Ibrahim

Casa de los Milagros (House of Miracles) has, according to the owner of the unique dwelling, been referred to as a mushroom, an octopus, a bat cave, a flower, a snail shell, and even a meringue. The bizarre shape gives the building an organic yet otherworldly appearance.

Built in stages and without a traditional blueprint, the low-cost family home is the product of long conversations between owner and architect alongside a build-as-you-go strategy. “What are your wildest dreams?” was the starting point, and answers involved slides, fire station poles, a salamander-like creature creeping toward the fireplace on the ceiling, wombs with a view, meaning elevated nest-like sleeping quarters with windows for stargazing at night and sun-greeting in the morning and on a more traditional note — a light-filled kitchen.


Niki-H

By Seisho Takashi Architect’s Studio, Hokkaido, Japan

If we were to take timber to Earth’s Moon or even Mars, we’re probably going to have to be pretty frugal with its use. Niki-H by Seisho Takashi is an excellent example of exemplary woodworking on a microarchitecture level that shows how the potentially luxury commodity could be adopted for structure building economically.

The petite yet robust structure was designed for wine-making settlers in the notoriously wintery Hokkaido. The recessed building sits below the 23 inch (60 centimeter) freezing depth of the ground. At the same time, the 60-degree pitch of the roof helps the minimal home withstand any heavy snowfall. An open-plan interior bookended by two huge windows allows the cozy space to be filled with light and, most importantly, warmth when the sun shines.


Desert House

By AyEh, Qeshm Island, Iran

Desert House by AyEh, Qeshm Island, Iran Images by AyEh

So let’s say we’ve sorted out the whole “doesn’t have an atmosphere problem” on Mars, or maybe we’ve found our very own Arrakis (minus the giant killer worms)— the unusually formed Desert House by AyEh looks to be the perfect home for such a warm, dry climate.

Located on Qeshm Island, the series of buildings concentrate on providing thermally comfortable indoor and outdoor environments adopting many traditional thermal strategies to work harmoniously with the landscape and location, not against it. Each of the three buildings contains individual features of the dwelling but is arranged according to wind circulation, sun direction and cross ventilation. These clever decisions create areas indoor and out which can be enjoyed at all times while continuing to support the abundant plant life proposed for the property.


Sedona Moongate

By SWABACK pllc, Sedona, AZ, United States

Sedona Moongate by SWABACK pllc, Sedona, AZ, United States Photographs by Dino Tonn

Unfortunately, just because we made it out to the stars, it’s doubtful that we would abandon capitalism altogether, and the aptly named Sedona Moongate gives us a glimpse of what a Mars mansion for the exceptionally wealthy space dweller might look like.

Actually located firmly on Earth in Arizona, Moongate residence seemingly rises out of the red rocks. The house—two half circle wings joined by a rectangular glass box entryway and gallery—includes sweeping and graceful roof overhangs, canted just so to shade windows and balconies during the summer while allowing winter sun to saturate the interior. At the entryway, the massive stacked sandstone base—invisibly mortared—gives the effect that the structure was built into an escarpment. Extensive oversized, cascading stonework and cabinetry enrich the interior, but the foyer’s glass staircase, suspended by steel rods, is the home’s pièce de résistance.


The Almanac

By Sweco Architects, Denmark

Lastly, what would space colonization be without community and a healthy sense of togetherness? My guess: Pretty short-lived and unsuccessful. That’s why the Almanac concept by Danish Architects Sweco might be the answer to our interplanetary future dreams.

By adopting community as the focal point for the housing of the future, the architects drew inspiration from the traditional location-based calendar – an almanac. In the project, housing communities are arranged in housing clusters around a common courtyard. The housing clusters are then bound together by larger surrounding urban landscape spaces, where communities of varying sizes utilize the surrounding landscape and connect themselves with the surrounding housing clusters.

Speaking on the unusual design architects and innovation manager at Sweco Architects, Karl-Martin Buch Frederiksen said, “Communities are often at their best if they are tangible and manageable. If they become too large, we easily lose the sense of togetherness and responsibility that is the prerequisite for us to share a universe. In addition, it is our experience that the community thrives best when it is not something that is expected of others, but instead stands as an enticing daily alternative. It is the awareness that has been our starting point in the work on the project.”

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Reader’s Choice: Top 10 Architecture Projects on Architizer in January 2023
CategoriesArchitecture

Reader’s Choice: Top 10 Architecture Projects on Architizer in January 2023

Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work through Architizer and sign up for our inspirational newsletter. 

Architizer’s journal is fueled by the creative energy of the thousands of architects from around the world who upload and showcase their incredible work. From conceptual designs to projects under construction to completed buildings, we are proud to serve as a platform for showcasing global architectural talent and the brilliance of visualizers, engineers, manufacturers, and photographers who are crucial members of the industry. A stellar drawing, rendering or photo, as well as a detailed project description, can go a long way in making a project stand out, as does indicate the stellar contributors on a project.

Firms who upload to Architizer share their work with professionals and design enthusiasts through our Firm Directory and Projects database. They also gain exposure by having their projects shared on our FacebookInstagram, and Twitter pages, as well as in our Journal feature articles. Indeed, through these various channels, hundreds of thousands of people in the global design community have come to rely on Architizer as their architectural reference and source of inspiration. In 2022, we’re rounding up our database’s top 10 most-viewed, user-uploaded architecture projects at the end of each month.


By CEBRA, Kolding, Denmark

Skamlingsbanken has long been a point for gather: the protective shelter of the rolling hills seemingly invited gatherings. Now, this natural landscape’s remarkable history as a civic landscape — one that hosted debates about women’s suffrage, democracy and more — is home to an architectural landmark that will continue this legacy, with little impact on the natural landscape. Indeed, The visitor centre is an architectural interpretation of the local topography and a representation of the local history; it is seeded with native species, selected in collaboration with biologies Mette Keseler, which shows optimal conditions for the local herbs and biodiversity.


By The One (Hong Kong) Design, Guangzhou, China

Moody lighting, textured walls and interlocking linear elements all come together to create a dynamically flowing space. Four principal moving lines are used to connect the apartment’s various zones, ensuring that the open space feels connected while its functions are differentiated. This tension between who and parts, static volumes and dynamic movement, amount a significant challenge to more traditional private homes. Based on the “unconventional” living space needs of the two owners, designers want to create a sense of privacy and closure that can break the traditional private house space for the owners.


By Signum Architecture, Paso Robles, California

Set on a 100 acre site in Paso Robles, this the architects of this project were faced with a complex task: to design a building with a unique identity that would invite visitors without detracting from the picturesque landscape — a contention at the heart of winemaker Eric Jensen’s minimalist philosophy of interfering with the land as little as possible. Thius the architects began with a typology familiar to the place: a trellis and terrace. Next, the visible fractures in the area’s chalky limestone soil helped to make out the buildings’ walls, in direct relation to the land and views.


By AB design studio, inc., Montecito, California

Popular Choice, 10th Annual A+Awards, Private House (M 2000 – 4000 sq ft)

Mies van der Rohe seems a likely inspiration for this modernization project in the foothills of Santa Barbara; however, this modernize project is deeply rooted in its source material — a simple 1950s wood cabin set in a rock quarry. The single-story residence takes into account the surrounding boulders and oak forest; the design sought to maintain original elements and to reuse stone found onsite.


By Myrto Kiourti, Athens, Greece

Many cities can claim hybrid identities as contemporary metropolises with ancient, historic pasts; however, Athens is one of those cities where this duality is ever-present, and the city’s legacy continues to inform designs of the present. Epitomizing this relationship to the past are those homes that Greek families literally build on top of their older residences. Known as “panosikoma,” these “upper-level extensions” are rooted in a traditional building practice that implicitly negotiates these identities. The Flying Box exemplifies this approach.


By Mario Cucinella Architects, Mormanno, Italy

Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Religious Buildings & Memorials

One first glance, the flowing lines of this iconic floor plan is unlike any other ecclesiastical structure (actually, it’s safe to say they’re quite distinct from any other structure, period). Yet, the organic footprint of this monumental building was inspired by the curvilinear geometries of Baroque churches in Rome. Natural light — long an important element and symbol of Christian places of worship — floods the interior space, and is filtered through a memorable canopy of translucent veils.


By Beef Architekti, Balearic Islands, Ibiza

Mallorca is famous for its sapphire blue beaches and picturesque craggy cliffs; however, architects would be interested to learn more about the vernacular techniques long used in local construction on this mediterranean island. Using stones sourced from a nearby quarry, Beef Architekti pay homage to the traditional dry construction technique known as ‘pedra en sec’ used to express a typical design that can be found all over the island — one that was named an intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO in 2018.


By bkp GmbH, Düsseldorf, Germany

The future of office culture hangs by a thread, and architects are increasingly seen as the heroes capable of coaxing a reluctant workforce out of their homes. Charged with strengthening employee’s identification with their employer, this multispace strives to integrate their patron’s long company history and state-of-the-art production techniques with the comforts of home offices, which allow employees to retreat when needed, and therefore to be fully present when needed in the work community.


By Feldman Architecture, Los Altos Hills, California

Photos by Adam Rouse

California’s leading place in avant-garde architecture of the 1960s is well established; however, homes with circular floor plans, which were experimented with during this period, remain absent from the canon of modern. Though challenging from a layout perspective, the many benefits and intrigues of designing homes with soft edges remain under explored. Feldman Architects were given the change to reconsider this residential layout in a recent commission to reimagine and modernize just such a home — and the result is truly mesmerizing.


By TYRANT Inc., Koizuka, Kumagaya, Japan

How to elevate a suburban box store into an intriguing and enjoyable space? This Japanese firm complicates the typical elongated rectangular in plan in several key way. First, the building appears to float thanks to a level difference, which helps it to stand out. Next, a small patio is carved into the front center of the building, not only enhancing the appearance from the outside, but also providing greenery on the interior, since the planted tree is visible from all sides of the commercial space. In this way a simple architectural design provides a rich presence for visitors.

Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work through Architizer and sign up for our inspirational newsletter. 



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