Antonia Piñeiro

BROWSE ALL FROM THIS AUTHOR HERE

The European AHI Award 2025 Celebrates Six Public Heritage Interventions Across Europe

The European AHI Award recognizes architectural heritage interventions across Europe, highlighting their role as a forward-looking model for 21st-century architecture with tangible social, environmental, and economic benefits. In its seventh edition, the award honored six projects, four first prizes and two special mentions, during a ceremony held in early June at the Paranimf Ceremonial Hall of the Escola Industrial in Barcelona. A total of 238 projects from architecture studios in 24 European countries were submitted. The selected winners are located in Antwerp, Kortrijk, Olot, Ancient Corinth, and Milan.

The European AHI Award 2025 Celebrates Six Public Heritage Interventions Across Europe - More Images+ 24

BIG Wins Competition to Transform Three Urban Plazas into an Interconnected 'City Stage' in Copenhagen, Denmark

BIG, artist Doug Aitken Workshop, NIRAS, Volcano, and RWDI have won a competition to redesign three public spaces surrounding major music venues in Ørestad, Copenhagen. The initiative, titled Byens Scene ("The City's Stage"), aims to revitalize the areas around DR Koncerthuset, Bella Arena, and Royal Arena, transforming them into an interconnected landscape for everyday use and public performances.

BIG Wins Competition to Transform Three Urban Plazas into an Interconnected 'City Stage' in Copenhagen, Denmark - Imagen 1 de 4BIG Wins Competition to Transform Three Urban Plazas into an Interconnected 'City Stage' in Copenhagen, Denmark - Imagen 2 de 4BIG Wins Competition to Transform Three Urban Plazas into an Interconnected 'City Stage' in Copenhagen, Denmark - Imagen 3 de 4BIG Wins Competition to Transform Three Urban Plazas into an Interconnected 'City Stage' in Copenhagen, Denmark - Imagen 4 de 4BIG Wins Competition to Transform Three Urban Plazas into an Interconnected 'City Stage' in Copenhagen, Denmark - More Images+ 19

The Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism 2025 Addresses the Challenges of Hyperconnectivity

The seventeenth edition of the Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism (BEAU) will take place in December 2025. The event consists of an exhibition hosted in a former thermal power station repurposed as a cultural center in Ponferrada, in northeastern Spain. This edition will be curated by architects Ander Bados Sesma, from Atelier Ander Bados, and Miguel Ramón López, a Ponferrada native and architect at Estudio Lamela, under the curatorial proposal titled flujos comun.es ("common flows"). Their curatorial proposal responds to the theme of the open call: Architecture as a Policy for Change, an invitation to reflect on the role of the discipline in processes of social, economic, and environmental transformation. Within this framework, flujos comun.es presents a critical perspective on the challenges associated with hyperconnectivity. The call for proposals and project submissions is currently open, and will be until the end of July, depending on the category.

The Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism 2025 Addresses the Challenges of Hyperconnectivity - Imagen 4 de 4The Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism 2025 Addresses the Challenges of Hyperconnectivity - Featured ImageThe Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism 2025 Addresses the Challenges of Hyperconnectivity - Imagen 1 de 4The Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism 2025 Addresses the Challenges of Hyperconnectivity - Imagen 2 de 4The Spanish Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism 2025 Addresses the Challenges of Hyperconnectivity - More Images

10 Pavilion Highlights from the London Design Biennale 2025

The fifth edition of the London Design Biennale is taking place at Somerset House from 5 to 29 June 2025. The theme of this year's edition is "Surface Reflections," an invitation to explore "the dynamic interplay between internal experience and external influence." The curatorial proposal, set by British artist and designer Samuel Ross, encourages a focus on the underlying layers of the objects, systems, and spaces that shape our daily lives. The Biennale exhibition is a journey through 35 pavilions by countries, institutional design teams, and curators, presenting soundscapes, immersive experiences, and performances, as well as sculptural and evocative objects. To confront contemporary global challenges, topics include identity, memory, innovation, technology, craftsmanship, ecology, and belonging.

10 Pavilion Highlights from the London Design Biennale 2025 - Imagen 1 de 410 Pavilion Highlights from the London Design Biennale 2025 - Imagen 2 de 410 Pavilion Highlights from the London Design Biennale 2025 - Imagen 3 de 410 Pavilion Highlights from the London Design Biennale 2025 - Imagen 4 de 410 Pavilion Highlights from the London Design Biennale 2025 - More Images+ 42

Discover the World's Best Universities to Study Architecture in 2025, Based on QS Rankings

Every year, the QS World University Rankings by Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) releases an updated list of best university programs worldwide. In the field of Architecture and the Built Environment, the list includes 250 institutions. The ranking evaluates institutions across all continents. This year, The Bartlett School of Architecture (part of UCL) maintains its position in first place, as the top 10 list sees a reorganization of the selected universities, with no new entrants. Tsinghua University is the only one among them to improve its position since last year, rising from eighth to joint seventh.

Discover the World's Best Universities to Study Architecture in 2025, Based on QS Rankings - Featured ImageDiscover the World's Best Universities to Study Architecture in 2025, Based on QS Rankings - Image 1 of 4Discover the World's Best Universities to Study Architecture in 2025, Based on QS Rankings - Image 2 of 4Discover the World's Best Universities to Study Architecture in 2025, Based on QS Rankings - Image 3 of 4Discover the World's Best Universities to Study Architecture in 2025, Based on QS Rankings - More Images+ 3

Winners of the EUmies Awards for Young Talent 2025 Highlight Reuse and Collective Resilience

During the EUmies Awards Day in Venice, representatives from the Creative Europe program and the Fundació Mies van der Rohe revealed the four student project winners of the EUmies Awards Young Talent 2025. The award recognizes architecture projects for their capacity to respond to contemporary social, urban, and environmental challenges. The event was held within the context of the 19th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, inviting winners, jury members, and institutional representatives to engage in dialogue around four key themes, aligned with the Biennale's curatorial proposal: Artificial, Natural, Collective, and Intelligens.

Winners of the EUmies Awards for Young Talent 2025 Highlight Reuse and Collective Resilience - Image 1 of 4Winners of the EUmies Awards for Young Talent 2025 Highlight Reuse and Collective Resilience - Image 2 of 4Winners of the EUmies Awards for Young Talent 2025 Highlight Reuse and Collective Resilience - Image 3 of 4Winners of the EUmies Awards for Young Talent 2025 Highlight Reuse and Collective Resilience - Image 4 of 4Winners of the EUmies Awards for Young Talent 2025 Highlight Reuse and Collective Resilience - More Images+ 38

CCA Releases Documentary on Carla Juaçaba’s Work to Support Forest Conservation in Brazil's Coffee Region

The Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) launched a documentary and exhibition, "With an Acre", the third and final chapter of the series Groundwork, which explores how contemporary architects cultivate alternative modes of practice to address the ecological crisis. The documentary follows the work of architect Carla Juaçaba in Minas Gerais, Brazil, where she is developing pavilions in a coffee field where collectives resist extractive industrial agriculture. The narrative examines the role of architects in extractivist contexts facing land regeneration challenges and unstable climatic conditions, as well as the tools smallholder farmers can use to cope with the environmental and social consequences of colonial settlement, urbanization, and industrialization.

CCA Releases Documentary on Carla Juaçaba’s Work to Support Forest Conservation in Brazil's Coffee Region - Image 6 of 4CCA Releases Documentary on Carla Juaçaba’s Work to Support Forest Conservation in Brazil's Coffee Region - Image 5 of 4CCA Releases Documentary on Carla Juaçaba’s Work to Support Forest Conservation in Brazil's Coffee Region - Image 1 of 4CCA Releases Documentary on Carla Juaçaba’s Work to Support Forest Conservation in Brazil's Coffee Region - Image 2 of 4CCA Releases Documentary on Carla Juaçaba’s Work to Support Forest Conservation in Brazil's Coffee Region - More Images+ 9

HWKN Develops AI-Planned Commercial District in Central Sharjah, UAE

Architecture firm HWKN has been commissioned by Al Marwan Real Estate Development to design eleven distinct buildings for a new commercial neighborhood in central Sharjah, the third most populous city in the United Arab Emirates. The district, featuring offices, retail spaces, cafés, childcare and healthcare facilities, specialized institutes, and a mosque, has been fully researched, conceptualized, and planned using Artificial Intelligence (AI).

HWKN Develops AI-Planned Commercial District in Central Sharjah, UAE - Imagem 1 de 4HWKN Develops AI-Planned Commercial District in Central Sharjah, UAE - Imagem 2 de 4HWKN Develops AI-Planned Commercial District in Central Sharjah, UAE - Imagem 3 de 4HWKN Develops AI-Planned Commercial District in Central Sharjah, UAE - Imagem 4 de 4HWKN Develops AI-Planned Commercial District in Central Sharjah, UAE - More Images+ 1

Lesley Lokko Launches Nomadic African Studio to Lead Architecture Workshops Across Africa

Lesley Lokko, the Scottish-Ghanaian architect, curator of the 18th Venice Architecture Biennale, and the first Black woman to receive the RIBA Royal Gold Medal, has recently launched Nomadic African Studio, an educational program for young architects. The initiative is organized by Lokko's African Futures Institute (AFI) and is inspired by her experience establishing the Biennale College Architettura in 2023, a program for graduate students, recent graduates, early-career academics, and emerging practitioners to explore new possibilities for architectural education, which has also been continued for the 2025 edition. Nomadic African Studio consists of a series of fully funded, month-long studios across the African continent, "basing locations on themes, rather than places." The first edition is set to begin in July 2025, in Fez, Morocco.

Lesley Lokko Launches Nomadic African Studio to Lead Architecture Workshops Across Africa - Image 1 of 4Lesley Lokko Launches Nomadic African Studio to Lead Architecture Workshops Across Africa - Image 2 of 4Lesley Lokko Launches Nomadic African Studio to Lead Architecture Workshops Across Africa - Image 3 of 4Lesley Lokko Launches Nomadic African Studio to Lead Architecture Workshops Across Africa - Image 4 of 4Lesley Lokko Launches Nomadic African Studio to Lead Architecture Workshops Across Africa - More Images+ 2

TAC! 2025 Urban Architecture Festival: Winning Pavilions Celebrate Local Materials and Coastal Culture in Spain

The TAC! Urban Architecture Festival is held annually in Spain with the aim of bringing contemporary architecture closer to the public through installations in various cities, including Granada, San Sebastián, Valencia, Vigo, and San Fernando. Organized by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Agenda in collaboration with Fundación Arquia, the festival seeks to promote experimentation in architecture by constructing temporary pavilions for cultural events and gatherings. The 2025 edition of the festival will take place in two locations: Casa Mediterráneo in Alicante and Plaza Stagno in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. The pavilions are selected each year through an open call for young architects up to 45 years old. This year's winners have already been announced: the ESPARTAL project by ELE Arkitektura, GA Estudio, Florencia Galecio, and Juan Gubbins; and DE ROCA MADRE by Alejandro Carrasco Hidalgo, Eduardo Cilleruelo Terán, Alberto Martínez García, and Andrea Molina Cuadro.

TAC! 2025 Urban Architecture Festival: Winning Pavilions Celebrate Local Materials and Coastal Culture in Spain - Image 1 of 4TAC! 2025 Urban Architecture Festival: Winning Pavilions Celebrate Local Materials and Coastal Culture in Spain - Image 2 of 4TAC! 2025 Urban Architecture Festival: Winning Pavilions Celebrate Local Materials and Coastal Culture in Spain - Image 3 of 4TAC! 2025 Urban Architecture Festival: Winning Pavilions Celebrate Local Materials and Coastal Culture in Spain - Image 4 of 4TAC! 2025 Urban Architecture Festival: Winning Pavilions Celebrate Local Materials and Coastal Culture in Spain - More Images+ 14

Copenhagen Architecture Biennial 2025 Reveals 'Slow Pavilion' Designs Built from Reused Materials

The first edition of the Copenhagen Architecture Biennial will take place from 18 September to 19 October 2025. Organized by CAFx (Copenhagen Architecture Forum), the event marks a transition from the previous annual Copenhagen Architecture Festival to a more expansive platform for architectural exploration. The theme of the inaugural edition, "Slow Down," invites participants to reflect on how the rapid pace of modern life affects the built environment. According to the organizers, this thematic shift encourages the envisioning of spaces that promote sustainability, longevity, and mindful engagement with our surroundings. In line with this vision, the organization launched an open call earlier this year for pavilion proposals that embody principles of circular design while serving as hubs for public programming during the event. Two winning proposals, modular structures by Slaatto Morsbøl and Tom Svilans x THISS Studio, were selected, each offering an approach to architectural deceleration.

Copenhagen Architecture Biennial 2025 Reveals 'Slow Pavilion' Designs Built from Reused Materials - Image 1 of 4Copenhagen Architecture Biennial 2025 Reveals 'Slow Pavilion' Designs Built from Reused Materials - Image 2 of 4Copenhagen Architecture Biennial 2025 Reveals 'Slow Pavilion' Designs Built from Reused Materials - Image 3 of 4Copenhagen Architecture Biennial 2025 Reveals 'Slow Pavilion' Designs Built from Reused Materials - Image 4 of 4Copenhagen Architecture Biennial 2025 Reveals 'Slow Pavilion' Designs Built from Reused Materials - More Images+ 5

Ernesto Neto’s Textile Art Installation at Paris’ Grand Palais Captured by Paul Clemence

The exhibition "Nosso Barco Tambor Terra" by Brazilian artist Ernesto Neto, held at the recently renovated Grand Palais in Paris from June 6 to July 25, 2025, is a large-scale, immersive installation that invites visitors to reconnect with nature and community through sensory experience. Drawing inspiration from Brazilian and Indigenous cultures, Neto uses textiles, scents, and organic materials to create a space for reflection and interaction. The textile installation was recently captured by photographer Paul Clemence, who sought to portray its architectural qualities.

Ernesto Neto’s Textile Art Installation at Paris’ Grand Palais Captured by Paul Clemence - Image 1 of 4Ernesto Neto’s Textile Art Installation at Paris’ Grand Palais Captured by Paul Clemence - Image 2 of 4Ernesto Neto’s Textile Art Installation at Paris’ Grand Palais Captured by Paul Clemence - Image 3 of 4Ernesto Neto’s Textile Art Installation at Paris’ Grand Palais Captured by Paul Clemence - Image 4 of 4Ernesto Neto’s Textile Art Installation at Paris’ Grand Palais Captured by Paul Clemence - More Images+ 61