Buildner Unveils 2026 Unbuilt Award with €100K Prize and Celebrates 2025 Winners

















Buildner is once again at the forefront of architectural innovation, announcing the launch of the 2026 Unbuilt Award, a prestigious competition now in its third iteration. This year, the award boasts an impressive prize fund of €100,000, dedicated to celebrating forward-thinking and conceptual architectural designs. Simultaneously, Buildner has revealed the winners of the 2025 Unbuilt Award, recognizing outstanding projects that exemplify creativity and vision. This global platform empowers architects and designers to exhibit their unrealized works, fostering a dynamic environment for exploring architectural potential beyond conventional boundaries.
The competition extends an invitation to both seasoned professionals and emerging student talent worldwide, encouraging submissions that push the limits of design thinking. Projects are assessed across three distinct categories based on their scale: small, medium, and large. The Unbuilt Award emphasizes the importance of experimental and innovative design, addressing contemporary global challenges through speculative and research-driven proposals. It champions clarity of vision, strong conceptual narratives, and effective communication of architectural ideas. The substantial prize fund includes €20,000 for each category winner, along with monetary awards for honorable mentions and student winners, underscoring Buildner's commitment to nurturing architectural excellence and recognizing diverse contributions to the field.
Celebrating Unbuilt Vision: Winners and the Path Ahead
The 2025 Unbuilt Award celebrated a diverse array of innovative architectural concepts, highlighting projects that pushed boundaries in design and sustainability. Among the laureates was "Architecture as Resilient Machine," a small-scale, student-led endeavor recognized for its adaptable, climate-responsive framework for desert environments. This project showcased a modular, self-sufficient structure that integrates food production, water management, and sand stabilization, demonstrating a novel approach to permanence in dynamic landscapes. Its use of lightweight metal and local materials underscored a commitment to minimal environmental impact and reconfigurable functionality. Another notable winner, "The Wine Path," reimagined a vineyard as a continuous architectural experience, harmonizing circulation with the natural topography. This medium-scale project emphasized minimal intervention, creating shaded spaces and panoramic views while preserving the integrity of the agricultural land. These winning entries exemplify the competition's commitment to fostering designs that are both visionary and contextually aware, pushing the envelope of architectural thought. The 2026 edition of the Unbuilt Award continues this tradition, inviting participants to submit proposals across small, medium, and large project categories. It seeks to uncover innovative approaches to form, technology, and spatial strategies that tackle contemporary global challenges. The competition’s structured evaluation by an international panel of experts ensures a rigorous assessment of each submission, considering its creative exploration, relevance, and overall clarity of vision.
Further recognition was extended to "Theseus: A New Housing Typology," a large-scale and student-winning project that creatively repurposed decommissioned cargo ship holds into elevated residential units, addressing housing shortages and promoting material reuse in coastal cities. This adaptable modular system provides dense, cost-effective urban housing while maintaining flexible ground planes for future development. In the medium-scale student category, "Forestack" transformed an abandoned public bath into a vertical ecological landscape, integrating therapeutic gardens and social spaces to promote ecological and social healing through adaptive reuse. The "Best Presentation Award" went to "Tranquillizing the Void," an architectural intervention that created serene, reflective spaces within Kyoto's urban fabric, drawing inspiration from the Japanese concept of oku. These diverse projects, alongside highlighted entries such as the "GEM – Geological Museum and Scientific Research Center," "Batumi 08.10.2021" (a memorial and residential structure), "Unseen Museum" (a reflective museum in the Uyuni Salt Flats), "Data Center in the Age of 'Datafication'" (transforming industrial factories into public data spaces), "Huailai Wine Culture Center" (a landscape-integrated cultural complex), "Al-Ula Villa" (a residential design inspired by natural erosion), "Edible Infrastructure: Re-stitching Urban Fabrics" (freeway-divided neighborhoods into regenerative urban networks), and "Endless Library" (a public building with fluid architectural language), demonstrate the breadth of innovative thinking celebrated by the Buildner Unbuilt Award. Each project contributes to the ongoing architectural discourse, offering imaginative solutions to complex design challenges and exploring new typologies and spatial relationships.
Recognizing Excellence: Jury, Prizes, and Future Opportunities
The 2026 Unbuilt Award showcases a prestigious international jury, comprising leading figures from the architectural and academic worlds. This esteemed panel, featuring directors from Zaha Hadid Architects like Manuela Gatto and Melodie Leung, along with visionaries such as David Gianotten of OMA, Amanda Levete of AL_A, and Jürgen Mayer H., brings a wealth of experience and diverse perspectives to the evaluation process. Academics and researchers, including Michael Meredith from MOS Architects and Princeton University, Jennifer Newsom from Dream The Combine, Carlo Ratti from MIT Senseable City Lab, and Nader Tehrani from NADAAA, further enrich the jury's expertise. This balanced representation of professional practice, academic leadership, and experimental design research ensures a comprehensive and rigorous assessment of all submitted unbuilt architectural works. The jury's role is critical in identifying projects that not only demonstrate architectural brilliance but also contribute significantly to contemporary design discourse and address pressing global issues through innovative solutions. Their collective insight guarantees that the awards recognize true pioneers in the field.
Buildner's commitment to fostering architectural innovation is reflected in the substantial prize fund of €100,000, distributed across various categories. Each winner in the Small, Medium, and Large project categories receives €20,000, recognizing their exceptional contributions. Additionally, five honorable mentions in each category are awarded €1,000, acknowledging a broader spectrum of high-quality designs. Student winners across the three categories are also celebrated with €5,000 each, highlighting the competition's dedication to supporting emerging talent. A special Best Presentation Award, open to all categories, grants an additional €10,000, emphasizing the importance of clear and compelling communication of architectural ideas. Beyond monetary rewards, category winners receive the distinctive Continuum trophy, designed by Germans Ermičs. This trophy symbolizes the dynamic and evolving nature of architectural thought, celebrating creativity, transformation, and the enduring impact of unbuilt projects. The registration period for the 2026 award offers several deadlines, with advance registration closing on July 9, 2026, and a last-minute deadline on September 23, 2026. The final submission deadline is October 20, 2026, with winners to be announced on December 1, 2026. Architects and designers are encouraged to visit the official competition site for full details and registration.