1. ArchDaily
  2. Archigram

Archigram: The Latest Architecture and News

Farewell to Masters: Remembering the Architects We Lost in 2025

Every year brings new ideas, projects, and shifts in architectural culture, but it also marks the loss of voices that have shaped the discipline across decades. Architecture moves forward, but it also advances through absence. When figures who helped articulate its language and its ambitions disappear, they leave behind more than completed works or influential texts. Their absence becomes a threshold, a moment in which the discipline pauses to understand what remains, what evolves, and what continues to guide us. These moments of loss remind us that architecture is a long, collective construction, carried not only by those shaping the present but also by those whose visions continue to orient how we think about cities and landscapes.

The architects and thinkers we lost in 2025 came from remarkably different worlds, yet the questions that shaped their work often intersected. Some approached the city through identity, symbolism, and historical continuity, seeking to ground the built environment in cultural memory. Others interpreted it through engineering precision, ecological systems, or radical experimentation, expanding what architecture could be and how it could be experienced. Their work spans contexts as diverse as postwar Britain, rapidly urbanizing China, Central European avant-gardes, and the evolving cultural institutions of Berlin and New York. Together, they form a spectrum of responses that defined, and continue to define, architectural culture over the last half-century, revealing the multiplicity of ways in which architecture can engage with society, technology, and the environment.

Farewell to Masters: Remembering the Architects We Lost in 2025 - Image 1 of 4Farewell to Masters: Remembering the Architects We Lost in 2025 - Image 2 of 4Farewell to Masters: Remembering the Architects We Lost in 2025 - Image 3 of 4Farewell to Masters: Remembering the Architects We Lost in 2025 - Image 4 of 4Farewell to Masters: Remembering the Architects We Lost in 2025 - More Images+ 33

“Even If You Want to Be a Gardener, Study Architecture”: Archigram Co-Founder Sir Peter Cook on Boldness, Creativity, and Architectural Education

Sir Peter Cook is an English architect, professor, and writer, and a founding member of the neo-futuristic design group Archigram, alongside Warren Chalk, Ron Herron, David Greene, and Michael Webb. Beyond the group's radical urban concepts and visionary imagery, he co-founded CRAB Studio (Cook Robotham Architectural Bureau) with David Robotham in 2006, where they have developed built, conceptual, and speculative projects. He recently designed the Play Pavilion, located next to Serpentine South in Kensington Gardens, which opened on World Play Day, June 11, 2025. He is also known for the BIX Light and Media Façade at MoMA and for his series of drawings and collages that explore spaces, building elements, and organic landscapes.

Returning for his second interview with ArchDaily, Sir Peter Cook sat with Editor in Chief, Christele Harrouk, at the World Architecture Festival 2025. While the first conversation focused on his advice for young architects, this one followed his presentation during WAF on the forthcoming book, Archigram Ten, an editorial project reviving the spirit of the original magazine with founding members and contemporary designers. Building on those themes, he reflects on artificial intelligence, the impact of COVID-19 on his own practice, and current architectural pedagogies.

“Even If You Want to Be a Gardener, Study Architecture”: Archigram Co-Founder Sir Peter Cook on Boldness, Creativity, and Architectural Education - 1 的图像 4“Even If You Want to Be a Gardener, Study Architecture”: Archigram Co-Founder Sir Peter Cook on Boldness, Creativity, and Architectural Education - 2 的图像 4“Even If You Want to Be a Gardener, Study Architecture”: Archigram Co-Founder Sir Peter Cook on Boldness, Creativity, and Architectural Education - 3 的图像 4“Even If You Want to Be a Gardener, Study Architecture”: Archigram Co-Founder Sir Peter Cook on Boldness, Creativity, and Architectural Education - 4 的图像 4“Even If You Want to Be a Gardener, Study Architecture”: Archigram Co-Founder Sir Peter Cook on Boldness, Creativity, and Architectural Education - More Images+ 2

Architect and Archigram Founding Member Dennis Crompton Passes Away at 90

Dennis Crompton, an influential figure in the field of architecture, passed away on January 21, 2025, at the age of 90. Born in Blackpool in 1935, Crompton's remarkable career spanned several decades and left an indelible mark on modern architecture. As a key member of the avant-garde architectural group Archigram, established in London in 1961, Crompton played a pivotal role in revolutionizing architectural practice, together with Warren Chalk, Peter Cook, Ron Herron, David Greene, and Michael Webb.

Architect and Archigram Founding Member Dennis Crompton Passes Away at 90 - Image 1 of 4Architect and Archigram Founding Member Dennis Crompton Passes Away at 90 - Image 2 of 4Architect and Archigram Founding Member Dennis Crompton Passes Away at 90 - Image 3 of 4Architect and Archigram Founding Member Dennis Crompton Passes Away at 90 - Image 4 of 4Architect and Archigram Founding Member Dennis Crompton Passes Away at 90 - More Images+ 2

Colin Fournier, Co-Founder of Archigram, Passes Away at 79

British architect and planner Colin Fournier, co-founder of conceptual architecture studio Archigram and Professor of Architecture and Urbanism at the Bartlett School of Architecture, has passed away at the age of 79. Fournier was best known for his co-design of the Kunsthaus Graz in Austria, also known as the "Friendly Alien." This project, completed together with Sir Peter Cook, is celebrated as one of the most distinctive cultural landmarks of its time. For his contributions to this work, Fournier was awarded Austria's Goldener Ehrenzeichen medal in 2005, a recognition of his impact on the architectural landscape.

Colin Fournier, Co-Founder of Archigram, Passes Away at 79 - Image 1 of 4Colin Fournier, Co-Founder of Archigram, Passes Away at 79 - Image 2 of 4Colin Fournier, Co-Founder of Archigram, Passes Away at 79 - Image 3 of 4Colin Fournier, Co-Founder of Archigram, Passes Away at 79 - Image 4 of 4Colin Fournier, Co-Founder of Archigram, Passes Away at 79 - More Images

Can Architectural Journalism Shape the Future of the Profession?

Koolhaas' journalism work won him fame in architecture before he completed a single building. The switch from storyteller to architect was more a change in the script than a professional shift. He pointed out that "[architecture] is a form of scriptwriting that implicitly describes human and spatial relationships." Restating the role of architecture in defining daily life beyond buildings and cities' construction, architecture is also a written and spoken tool capable of explaining daily worldwide events, giving voices to unspoken projects, and actively shaping the future of the architect's role. 

Can Architectural Journalism Shape the Future of the Profession? - Image 1 of 4Can Architectural Journalism Shape the Future of the Profession? - Image 2 of 4Can Architectural Journalism Shape the Future of the Profession? - Image 3 of 4Can Architectural Journalism Shape the Future of the Profession? - Image 4 of 4Can Architectural Journalism Shape the Future of the Profession? - More Images+ 1

Who Was Günther Domenig, the Unknown Deconstructivist?

Subscriber Access | 

Domenig was one of Austria’s most radical architects and a major influence on many of architecture’s leading lights but remains widely unknown. A new exhibition aims to change that.

Who Was Günther Domenig, the Unknown Deconstructivist? - Image 1 of 4Who Was Günther Domenig, the Unknown Deconstructivist? - Image 2 of 4Who Was Günther Domenig, the Unknown Deconstructivist? - Image 3 of 4Who Was Günther Domenig, the Unknown Deconstructivist? - Image 4 of 4Who Was Günther Domenig, the Unknown Deconstructivist? - More Images+ 4

What Can Metaverse Planners Learn from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities

Subscriber Access | 

We are still at the dawn of the Metaverse, the next wave of the Internet. The current “mainstream” Metaverse platforms serve as experimental containers to host the wildest dreams of virtual worlds where we are supposed to unleash the imagination. However, from a spatial design perspective, they have so far been lame and ordinary. Without the constraints in the physical world, how do we draft the urban blueprints in the metaverse? I believe metaverse planners can find inspiration from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, in which he revealed a poetic and mathematical approach to “urban planning” in the imaginary worlds.

What Can Metaverse Planners Learn from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities - Image 1 of 4What Can Metaverse Planners Learn from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities - Image 2 of 4What Can Metaverse Planners Learn from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities - Image 3 of 4What Can Metaverse Planners Learn from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities - Image 4 of 4What Can Metaverse Planners Learn from Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities - More Images+ 8

New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook

New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook - Featured Image
Courtesy of Louisiana Museum of Modern Art

In its new exhibition Peter Cook: City Landscapes, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art showcases drawings by the influential architect, best known for his architectural theories and visionary concepts. Curated by Kjeld Kjeldsen and Mette Marie Kallehauge, the event is part of the exhibition series Louisiana on Paper, which presented the work of various artists over the years and is now debuting its first show featuring drawings by an architect.

New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook - Image 1 of 4New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook - Image 2 of 4New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook - Image 3 of 4New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook - Image 4 of 4New Louisiana Museum Exhibition Showcases Drawings by Peter Cook - More Images