1. ArchDaily
  2. BIG

BIG: The Latest Architecture and News

A New Centre Pompidou in Seoul and the UN House of No Waste (HØW) Competition Winners: This Week’s Review

Observed annually on April 22, International Mother Earth Day frames this week's architectural discourse through an urgent call to rethink the relationship between the built environment and natural systems, foregrounding themes such as urban rewilding, the restoration of aquatic ecosystems, and the integration of ancestral knowledge into contemporary design practices. On another note, the opening of Salone del Mobile.Milano 2026 and Milan Design Week 2026 seek to reinforce the global relevance of design as a platform for exchange and experimentation, activating the city of Milan through a network of exhibitions and installations that engage both industry and public audiences. Among the announcements of award-winning architectural projects this week, the United Nations' House of No Waste (HØW) Competition highlights emerging architectural responses to climate and resource challenges. The awarded projects demonstrate scalable strategies for reducing material waste and embodied carbon while promoting adaptable, socially responsive, and resource-conscious public infrastructure.

A New Centre Pompidou in Seoul and the UN House of No Waste (HØW) Competition Winners: This Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4A New Centre Pompidou in Seoul and the UN House of No Waste (HØW) Competition Winners: This Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4A New Centre Pompidou in Seoul and the UN House of No Waste (HØW) Competition Winners: This Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4A New Centre Pompidou in Seoul and the UN House of No Waste (HØW) Competition Winners: This Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4A New Centre Pompidou in Seoul and the UN House of No Waste (HØW) Competition Winners: This Week’s Review - More Images+ 36

BIG Reveals Design for Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville, United States

BIG – Bjarke Ingels Group, in collaboration with William Rawn Associates (WRA) and HASTINGS Architecture, has revealed the design for the new Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC), a 307,000-square-foot cultural complex planned for Nashville's East Bank, with construction expected to begin in 2027 and completion anticipated in 2030. Located along the Cumberland River, adjacent to Cumberland Park and Nissan Stadium, the project brings together four performance venues within a unified architectural framework, establishing a new civic anchor that extends the cultural life of downtown across the waterfront.

BIG Reveals Design for Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville, United States - 1 的图像 4BIG Reveals Design for Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville, United States - 2 的图像 4BIG Reveals Design for Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville, United States - 3 的图像 4BIG Reveals Design for Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville, United States - 4 的图像 4BIG Reveals Design for Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville, United States - More Images+ 27

14 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World

Throughout 2025 and early 2026, numerous museum projects were announced, advanced, or broke ground across multiple regions, with completion timelines largely extending from 2026 to 2030. Located across Asia, Europe, North America, and Central Asia, these developments reflect ongoing shifts in the role of cultural institutions within contemporary cities. Increasingly, museums are conceived not only as exhibition venues but as public-facing environments that accommodate education, research, and civic engagement. This expanded programmatic scope is often accompanied by architectural strategies that respond to urban conditions, spatial continuity, and the integration of cultural infrastructure into broader city-making processes.

14 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 1 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 2 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 3 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 4 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - More Images+ 8

Pop Star Architecture: BIG Designs Multi-Use Stadium for Shakira’s World Tour in Madrid, Spain

Kanye West turning a Tadao Ando Malibu beach house into a ruin, Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi purchasing and re-selling the 1955 Richard Neutra-designed Brown-Sidney House, and fashion designer Marc Jacobs renovating a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house near New York City are just a few examples of pop stars' affair with historically significant architecture. Celebrities, like soccer players, form an elite group characterized by a high concentration of wealth and significant social status. They are not only buyers of high-end architecture as authored property and cultural capital, but also agents of its preservation and promotion. This year, we are seeing new examples of this agency at work from a more abstract yet also more popular perspective: from the stage design for Bad Bunny's Super Bowl performance to a newly designed stadium for Shakira by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group, architecture is used as a vehicle for promoting Latin American identity.

Pop Star Architecture: BIG Designs Multi-Use Stadium for Shakira’s World Tour in Madrid, Spain - Image 1 of 4Pop Star Architecture: BIG Designs Multi-Use Stadium for Shakira’s World Tour in Madrid, Spain - Image 2 of 4Pop Star Architecture: BIG Designs Multi-Use Stadium for Shakira’s World Tour in Madrid, Spain - Image 3 of 4Pop Star Architecture: BIG Designs Multi-Use Stadium for Shakira’s World Tour in Madrid, Spain - Image 4 of 4Pop Star Architecture: BIG Designs Multi-Use Stadium for Shakira’s World Tour in Madrid, Spain - More Images+ 8

Rotterdam’s Sustainability Landmark and Brisbane’s 2032 Olympic Stadium: This Week’s Review

Architecture this week reflects the intersections of legacy, authorship, and social responsibility, as practices navigate questions of identity, recognition, and public engagement. Legal rulings, major competition shortlists, and large-scale urban proposals illustrate how architecture continues to operate across cultural, institutional, and environmental arenas. From sustainability-driven landmarks and transformative waterfront developments to iconic commercial towers, projects demonstrate approaches to ecological strategies and public programming. At the same time, global observances such as World Hearing Day highlight how spatial design shapes inclusion and accessibility, reminding the profession that the built environment can influence participation, learning, and well-being for diverse communities.

Rotterdam’s Sustainability Landmark and Brisbane’s 2032 Olympic Stadium: This Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4Rotterdam’s Sustainability Landmark and Brisbane’s 2032 Olympic Stadium: This Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4Rotterdam’s Sustainability Landmark and Brisbane’s 2032 Olympic Stadium: This Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4Rotterdam’s Sustainability Landmark and Brisbane’s 2032 Olympic Stadium: This Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4Rotterdam’s Sustainability Landmark and Brisbane’s 2032 Olympic Stadium: This Week’s Review - More Images+ 11

SCAPE and BIG Unveil Final Plans for Manresa Wilds on Former Power Plant Site in Norwalk, US

Manresa Island Corp. has unveiled the final vision for Manresa Wilds, a 125-acre waterfront park planned on a former power plant peninsula along Long Island Sound in Norwalk, United States. Developed in collaboration with landscape architecture firm SCAPE and architecture studio BIG, the proposal outlines the transformation of a polluted and long-inaccessible industrial shoreline into a publicly accessible coastal landscape. Following the receipt of a stewardship permit from Connecticut's Department of Energy and Environmental Protection in December 2025, the project will move forward in phases, beginning with the opening of the 28-acre Northern Forest in spring 2027. Subsequent phases, extending into the early 2030s, will deliver the majority of the restored landscape and the adaptive reuse of the 1960s-era power plant as a year-round civic and educational hub, opening nearly two miles of coastline that have been closed to the public for decades.

SCAPE and BIG Unveil Final Plans for Manresa Wilds on Former Power Plant Site in Norwalk, US - 1 的图像 4SCAPE and BIG Unveil Final Plans for Manresa Wilds on Former Power Plant Site in Norwalk, US - 2 的图像 4SCAPE and BIG Unveil Final Plans for Manresa Wilds on Former Power Plant Site in Norwalk, US - 3 的图像 4SCAPE and BIG Unveil Final Plans for Manresa Wilds on Former Power Plant Site in Norwalk, US - 4 的图像 4SCAPE and BIG Unveil Final Plans for Manresa Wilds on Former Power Plant Site in Norwalk, US - More Images+ 21

Urban Regeneration in Greece: The Ellinikon Master Plan and Beyond

Greece's built environment is shaped by the coexistence of multiple architectural layers, where historic structures, modern interventions, and evolving urban systems intersect. Classical landmarks and their surrounding urban fabrics continue to inform the spatial character of cities, while postwar developments, infrastructural upgrades, and contemporary projects add new dimensions to the country's architectural landscape. This continuity between past and present provides the foundation for current design approaches, which increasingly focus on balancing heritage, environmental considerations, and contemporary urban needs.

Urban Regeneration in Greece: The Ellinikon Master Plan and Beyond - Imagem 1 de 4Urban Regeneration in Greece: The Ellinikon Master Plan and Beyond - Imagem 2 de 4Urban Regeneration in Greece: The Ellinikon Master Plan and Beyond - Imagem 3 de 4Urban Regeneration in Greece: The Ellinikon Master Plan and Beyond - Imagem 4 de 4Urban Regeneration in Greece: The Ellinikon Master Plan and Beyond - More Images+ 6

Dallas City Hall Debate and ZHA’s Symphony Tower in Dubai: This Week’s Review

Across cultural districts and civic centers, this week's architectural developments highlight how institutions and city governments are reshaping their futures amid shifting environmental, social, and economic pressures. New museum and opera projects signal ongoing commitments to expanding public cultural infrastructure, while the debate surrounding Dallas' modernist City Hall illustrates the tensions that arise when questions of heritage meet rising maintenance demands and redevelopment pressures. At the same time, municipalities are advancing new regulatory tools to confront climate challenges, from electrification standards in Sydney and Boston to mobility restrictions and emerging forms of urban diplomacy. These developments reflect an increasingly complex landscape in which architectural environments evolve through a combination of cultural ambition, environmental targets, and shifting models of public decision-making.

Dallas City Hall Debate and ZHA’s Symphony Tower in Dubai: This Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4Dallas City Hall Debate and ZHA’s Symphony Tower in Dubai: This Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4Dallas City Hall Debate and ZHA’s Symphony Tower in Dubai: This Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4Dallas City Hall Debate and ZHA’s Symphony Tower in Dubai: This Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4Dallas City Hall Debate and ZHA’s Symphony Tower in Dubai: This Week’s Review - More Images+ 3

World Building of The Year and Interior of The Year revealed at World Architecture Festival 2025

Subscriber Access | 

The Holy Redeemer Church and Community Centre of Las Chumberas by Fernando Menis in La Laguna, Spain has been declared the World Building of the Year at the 2025 World Architecture Festival (WAF).

The ultimate accolades of World Building of the Year supported by GROHE, World Interior of the Year, Future Project of the Year and Landscape of the Year were announced today as hundreds of architects from across the world convened at a grand finale Gala Dinner at Miami Beach Convention Center in Florida. A host of Special Prizes, including the American Beauty Prize supported by the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust, were also announced at the closing event to celebrate the eighteenth edition of the festival. The announcement follows the final day of WAF, in which prize winners across all 43 categories have been competing for the winning titles.

BIG Wins International Competition to Design the New Hamburg State Opera on HafenCity’s Waterfront

BIG – Bjarke Ingels Group has been selected as the winner of the international competition to design the new Hamburg State Opera, a major cultural project planned for the Baakenhöft peninsula in HafenCity, Hamburg, Germany. The building will consolidate the city's opera and ballet companies under one roof, introducing new performance spaces, production facilities, and public amenities along the Elbe. The project replaces the mid-20th-century opera house on Dammtorstraße, responding to the city's call for a venue that reflects contemporary standards in acoustics, stagecraft, and audience experience.

BIG Wins International Competition to Design the New Hamburg State Opera on HafenCity’s Waterfront - Image 1 of 4BIG Wins International Competition to Design the New Hamburg State Opera on HafenCity’s Waterfront - Image 2 of 4BIG Wins International Competition to Design the New Hamburg State Opera on HafenCity’s Waterfront - Image 3 of 4BIG Wins International Competition to Design the New Hamburg State Opera on HafenCity’s Waterfront - Image 4 of 4BIG Wins International Competition to Design the New Hamburg State Opera on HafenCity’s Waterfront - More Images+ 2