Architecture

Gallery: World Architecture Festival names the best buildings of 2017

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The Future Project of the Year Winner was a design for the Sydney Fish Markets by Allen Jack+Cottier Architects and NH Architecture
Allen Jack+Cottier
World Building of the Year 2017 supported by GROHE: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Post-earthquake reconstruction/demonstration project of Guangming Village, Zhaotong, China
World Architecture Festival
World Building of the Year 2017 supported by GROHE: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Post-earthquake reconstruction/demonstration project of Guangming Village, Zhaotong, China
World Architecture Festival
World Building of the Year 2017 supported by GROHE: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Post-earthquake reconstruction/demonstration project of Guangming Village, Zhaotong, China
World Architecture Festival
The Director's Special Award (or essentially the runner up prize) went to Marc Koehler Architects' Superlofts Southaven, in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Marc Koehler Architects
The Director's Special Award (or essentially the runner up prize) went to Marc Koehler Architects' Superlofts Southaven, in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Marc Koehler Architects
The Director's Special Award (or essentially the runner up prize) went to Marc Koehler Architects' Superlofts Southaven, in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Marc Koehler Architects
The World Interior of the Year Prize went to Produce.Workshop, Fabricwood, Singapore
Produce.Workshop
The World Interior of the Year Prize went to Produce.Workshop, Fabricwood, Singapore
Produce.Workshop
The Future Project of the Year Winner was a design for the Sydney Fish Markets by Allen Jack+Cottier Architects and NH Architecture
Allen Jack+Cottier
The Future Project of the Year Winner was a design for the Sydney Fish Markets by Allen Jack+Cottier Architects and NH Architecture
Allen Jack+Cottier
The Landscape of the Year went to Turenscape for its work call Peasants and their Land: The Recovered Archaeological Landscape of Chengtoushan in Lixian County, China
WAF
The Small Project of the Year Winner was a design from Eriksson Furunes + Leandro V. Locsin Partners + Jago Boase called Streetlight Tagpuro, found in Tacloban, Philippines
Alexander Eriksson Furunes
The Small Project of the Year Winner was a design from Eriksson Furunes + Leandro V. Locsin Partners + Jago Boase called Streetlight Tagpuro, found in Tacloban, Philippines
Alexander Eriksson Furunes
A highly commended runner-up in the Best Small Project category was  DSDHA by the Alex Monroe Workshop in London, United Kingdom
Alex Monroe Workshop
A highly commended runner-up in the Best Small Project category was  DSDHA by the Alex Monroe Workshop in London, United Kingdom
Alex Monroe Workshop
The winner of Best Use of Color went to the Fitzroy Crossing Renal Hostel in outback Australia, designed by Iredale Pedersen Hook Architects
Iredale Pedersen Hook Architects
The winner of Best Use of Color went to the Fitzroy Crossing Renal Hostel in outback Australia, designed by Iredale Pedersen Hook Architects
Iredale Pedersen Hook Architects
The Iran Special Prize Winner went to the New Wave Architecture design for Pars Hospital in Tehran, Iran
Parham Taghioff
The Iran Special Prize Winner went to the New Wave Architecture design for Pars Hospital in Tehran, Iran
Parham Taghioff
The Arcaid Images Architectural Photography Award Winner was given to Terrence Zhang for this image of a swimming pool at the New Campus of Tianjin University, China
Terrence Zhang
The winner in the best completed house category was Vo Trong Nghia Architects for Binh House in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
 Vo Trong Nghia
Runner up in the best completed house category was Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP for Finding Rainbows in Tokyo, Japan
Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP
Winner of the Best Production, Energy & Recycling Building was The Farm of 38-30 in Afyonkarahisar, Turkey by Slash Architects and Arkizon Architects
Slash Architects and Arkizon Architects
Winner of the Best Production, Energy & Recycling Building was The Farm of 38-30 in Afyonkarahisar, Turkey by Slash Architects and Arkizon Architects
Slash Architects and Arkizon Architects
Best Sports Stadium went to the U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, designed by HKS
HKS
Best Sports Stadium went to the U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, designed by HKS
HKS
The award for Best School went to this East Sydney Early Learning Centre in Sydney, Australia designed by Andrew Burges Architects
Andrew Burges Architects
The award for Best School went to this East Sydney Early Learning Centre in Sydney, Australia designed by Andrew Burges Architects
Andrew Burges Architects
Winner of Best Future Project went to Pilbrow & Partners for the New Cyprus Archaeological Museum in Nicosia, Cyprus 
 Pilbrow & Partners
The best Culture focused building prize went to Heneghan Peng Architects for The Palestinian Museum in Birzeit, Palestine
Heneghan Peng Architects
The best Culture focused building prize went to Heneghan Peng Architects for The Palestinian Museum in Birzeit, Palestine
Heneghan Peng Architects
Best Office Future Project went to Vo Trong Nghia Architects for the Viettel offsite studio in Hanoi, Vietnam
Vo Trong Nghia
Best Civic Future Project went to edgeARCH for its Consulate Building, Staff Housing & School Complex in Karachi, Pakistan
edgeARCH
Best Completed Office Building went to Nikken Sekkei for the Co Op Kyosai Plaza in Tokyo, Japan
Nikken Sekkei
Best Completed Office Building went to Nikken Sekkei for the Co Op Kyosai Plaza in Tokyo, Japan
Nikken Sekkei
Alison Brooks’ The Smile won the best Completed Display design award
Alison Brooks
Alison Brooks’ The Smile won the best Completed Display design award
Alison Brooks
Alison Brooks’ The Smile won the best Completed Display design award
Alison Brooks
The proposed Sharjah Observatory in Mleiha National Park in United Arab Emirates won the best Experimental Future Project award
3deluxe Transdisciplinary Design
The Leisure Led Development - Future Projects Winner was Tabanlioglu Architects with Bodrum Loft, Bodrum, Turkey
Tabanlioglu Architects
The best Future Project House award went to Monk Mackenzie Architects for the Queenstown House, Queenstown, New Zealand
Monk Mackenzie Architects
The best Future Project House award went to Monk Mackenzie Architects for the Queenstown House, Queenstown, New Zealand
Monk Mackenzie Architects
The best Future Project House award went to Monk Mackenzie Architects for the Queenstown House, Queenstown, New Zealand
Monk Mackenzie Architects
Best Villa went to Irving Smith Architects for Bach with Two Roofs, Golden Bay, New Zealand
Irving Smith Architects
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Celebrating its 10th anniversary, the World Architecture Festival (WAF) has just awarded this year's prizes to a truly global selection of projects. The winners were selected from a pretty long shortlist comprising 434 projects across 68 different countries, and featured everything from a hospital in Iran to a small earthquake-proof prototype house in China.

"These are big-picture initiatives which concern architects both individually and collectively, and we want WAF to play a part in promoting initiatives which are aimed at making life better," says WAF Programme Director Paul Finch.

To this end, WAF also proposed a manifesto directing architects to the key challenges the world faces over the next decade, including climate, energy and carbon; water; ethics and values; and cultural identity.

The award for World Building of the Year certainly hit the manifesto targets. The Post-Earthquake Reconstruction Project in Guangming Village took the main prize for its novel technique for cheap rammed earth construction. It was a surprisingly modest choice for a big prize winner but as Finch says, "this building is a demonstration that architecture is just as relevant in the poorest of communities as it is in the richest."

World Building of the Year 2017 supported by GROHE: The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Post-earthquake reconstruction/demonstration project of Guangming Village, Zhaotong, China
World Architecture Festival

Take a look through our gallery to see all the big winners, from spectacular concepts to excitingly realized buildings.

Source: World Architecture Festival

View gallery - 44 images
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