Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Architectural design competition

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Type of design competition

Anarchitectural competition is a type ofdesign competition, in which an entity that intends to build new work, or is just seeking ideas, invitesarchitects to submit design proposals. The winning proposal is usually chosen by an independent panel of design professionals, stakeholders (such as government and local representatives, the leadership of a cultural institution, etc.) orpublic opinion. The effect of architectural competitions varies with competition format.[1]

Public engagement

[edit]

Architectural design competitions are often used to generate new ideas for building and/or landscape design, stimulatepublic engagement, generate publicity for the project and the commissioning entity, and help emerging designers gain exposure (and potentially win commissions that might be out of reach to them otherwise). Architectural competitions are often, though not exclusively, used to award commissions for public buildings: In some countries,government procurement rules for tendering public building contracts stipulate some form of open architectural competition.[2]

History

[edit]

Architectural competitions have existed for more than 2,500 years. The design of theAcropolis, in Athens, resulted from an architectural competition in 448 B.C., as did several European cathedrals in the Middle Ages. During theRenaissance, many projects initiated by the papacy or other top religious bodies were decided through design competition. Examples are theSpanish Steps in Rome and, famously, the competition for the dome of theFlorence Cathedral, won byFilippo Brunelleschi in 1419. Open competitions emerged in the late 18th century in countries including the United States, Great Britain, Ireland, France, and Sweden.[3]

In 19th century England and Ireland, more than 2,500 competitions were held within five decades, with 362 in London alone. TheRoyal Institute of British Architects drafted its first set of rules in 1839 and its first formal regulations in 1872. German regulations had been introduced in 1867. In the same period, in the Netherlands, an association for the advancement of architecture (Maatschappij tot Bevordering van de Bouwkunst) started organizing conceptual competitions to stimulate creativity among architects.[4]

Competition for the design of thePeace Palace inThe Hague, 1905
Competition entry byOtto Wagner
Building by competition winnerLouis M. Cordonnier

Competition types

[edit]

Various competition paradigms exist, most prominently the following types or combinations of them:[5]

Open vs, Invited (or Otherwise Limited) Competitions:

  • Open Competitions: international, national, regional, or otherwise defined in scope, they typically have little or no restrictions on who may enter.
  • Invited, Limited, Pre-Qualified, or otherwise Non-Open Competitions restrict who may participate (and, in many cases, also provide stipends or honorariums to participants) Project vs. Ideas Competitions:
  • Project Competitions: seek schemes for specific building and/ or landscape projects that the commissioning entities intend to realize
  • Ideas Competitions: held for the purpose of generating new ideas (in some cases, particularly novel, provocative, or visionary ones) Single- vs. Multi-stage Competitions
  • Single-Stage Competitions:
  • Multi-Stage Competitions (two stages or more), many of which invite only short-listed participants, a limited group of chosen semi-finalists, to continue to the next stage(s), for which they might receive a stipend or honorarium to help cover costs Anonymous vs. Non-Anonymous Competitions:
  • Anonymous Competitions: judged or juried, for greater objectivity, with no knowledge of the names or identities of participating individuals and firms
  • Non-Anonymous (or Cooperative) Competitions: Competing architects and firms are openly identified from the start (competitors might even be invited to present their projects in person to the jury to explain design strategies and provide for project-specific dialogue) Recurrent vs. One-Time Competitions:
  • Seasonal or Annual Competitions: These recurrent competitions, includingEuropan, put out periodical calls for entries. They may, or may not, result in an actual constructed project, depending on the set-up.
  • One-Time Competitions, held for a specific project
  • Student Design Competitions

Rules and guidelines

[edit]

The rules of each competition are defined by the organizer; they often, however, follow the guidelines provided by theInternational Union of Architects[6] or the relevant national or regional architectural organization. Competition guidelines define roles, responsibilities, processes, and procedures within a competition[7] and provide guidance on possible competition types, eligibility criteria, jury composition, participation conditions, payments, prizes, publication of results, and other aspects.[8][9]

In France and Germany, design competitions are compulsory for all public buildings exceeding a certain cost.[2][10]

Winning first prize in a competition does not guarantee that the project will be realized. The commissioning body often has the right to veto the winning design, and both requirements and finances may change, thwarting the original intention. (Many competitions have been held and won before the financing was even in place.[11]) The2002 World Trade Center site design competition is an example of a highly publicized competition, in which only the basic elements of the winning design byDaniel Libeskind appeared in the finished project.

Major international architectural design competitions

[edit]
See also:List of Architectural design competitions
icon
This sectiondoes notcite anysources. Please helpimprove this section byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged andremoved.(August 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Most significant among architectural competitions are the ones which are internationally open, attract a large number of design submissions, and the winning design is built.

Competition NameLocationYearWinner(s)Design entries
Grand Egyptian MuseumEgypt Giza2002Heneghan Peng Architects1,557[12]
White HouseUnited States Washington D.C.1792James Hoban9
Walhalla memorialGermany Donaustauf1816Leo von Klenze
Houses of ParliamentUnited Kingdom London1835Charles Barry98
Vienna Ring RoadAustria Vienna1858Ludwig Förster -Friedrich August von Stache -Eduard van der Nüll andAugust Sicard von Sicardsburg85
HofoperAustria Vienna1860Eduard van der Nüll andAugust Sicard von Sicardsburg
Paris OperaFrance Paris1860Charles Garnier171
RijksmuseumNetherlands Amsterdam1863P.J.H. Cuypers
Law CourtsEngland London1866George Edmund Street11
ReichstagGermany Berlin1872Paul Wallot
BeursNetherlands Amsterdam1884Hendrik Petrus Berlage
World Exhibition towerFrance Paris1889Gustave Eiffel
Austrian Postal Savings BankAustria Vienna1903Otto Wagner
Stockholm City HallSweden Stockholm1903Ragnar Östberg
Helsinki Central railway stationFinland Helsinki1903Eliel Saarinen21
Peace PalaceNetherlands The Hague1905Louis Marie Cordonnier andJ.A.G. van der Steur
Tribune TowerUnited States Chicago1922John Mead Howells andRaymond Hood260
League of Nations BuildingSwitzerland Geneva1926Henri Paul Nénot & Julien Flegenheimer; Carlo Broggi; Camille Lefèvre; Giuseppe Vago377
Lenin LibraryRussia Moscow1928Vladimir Shchuko
ANZAC War MemorialAustralia Sydney1929Charles Bruce Dellit117
Termini StationItaly Rome1947Leo Calini, Eugenio Montuori, Massimo Castellazzi, Vasco Fadigati, Achille Pintonello and Annibale Vitellozzi
Town Hall andChurchFinland Seinäjoki1950Alvar Aalto
Sydney Opera HouseAustralia Sydney1955Jørn Utzon233
Toronto City HallCanada Toronto1956Viljo Revell500
Amsterdam City HallNetherlands Amsterdam1967Wilhelm Holzbauer, Cees Dam, B. Bijvoet and G.H.M. Holt804
Supreme CourtJapan Tokyo1968Shin-ichi Okada217
Centre Georges PompidouFrance Paris1971Renzo Piano andRichard Rogers681
San Cataldo CemeteryItaly Modena1971Aldo Rossi and Gianni Braghieri
Hong Kong and Shanghai BankHong Kong Hong Kong1979Foster Associates
Parliament House of AustraliaAustralia Canberra1979Romaldo Giurgola329
Cité des Sciences et de l'IndustrieFrance Paris1980Adrien Fainsilber and Sylvain Mercier
La Grande Arche de la DéfenseFrance Paris1982Johan Otto von Spreckelsen420
Parc de la VilletteFrance Paris1982Bernard Tschumi471
Opéra BastilleFrance Paris1983Carlos Ott750
Carré d'ArtFrance Nîmes1984Norman Foster12
Shonandai Cultural CentreJapan Fujisawa1985Itsuko Hasegawa215
New National TheatreJapan Tokyo1984Takahiko Yanagisawa and Tak Associates228
Tokyo International ForumJapan Tokyo1987Rafael Viñoly395
Kansai AirportJapan Osaka1988Renzo Piano Building Workshop48
Jewish MuseumGermany Berlin1989Daniel Libeskind165
Bibliotheca AlexandrinaEgypt Alexandria1989Snøhetta523
Bibliothèque Nationale de FranceFrance Paris1989Dominique Perrault244
Centre for Japanese CultureFrance Paris1989–1990Masayuki Yamanaka, Kenneth Armstrong & Jennifer Smith453
Guggenheim Museum BilbaoSpain Bilbao1991Frank Gehry
Kiasma Contemporary Art MuseumFinland Helsinki1992Steven Holl516
Austrian Cultural ForumUnited States New York1992Raimund Abraham226
Royal Danish LibraryDenmark Copenhagen1993Schmidt Hammer Lassen179
Osanbashi Yokohama International Passenger TerminalJapan Yokohama1995Foreign Office Architects660
Felix Nussbaum MuseumGermany Osnabrück1995Daniel Libeskind296
Millennium BridgeUnited Kingdom London1996Norman Foster,Sir Anthony Caro, andOve Arup200
Federation SquareAustralia Melbourne1997Lab Architecture Studio177
GeoCenter Møns KlintDenmark Møn Island2002PLH Architects292
Philharmonie de ParisFrance Paris2011Jean Nouvel98

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Davison, Gethin; Freestone, Robert (4 July 2023)."Architectural design competitions: the effects of competition format on design processes and outcomes".The Journal of Architecture.28 (5):825–846.doi:10.1080/13602365.2023.2257713.ISSN 1360-2365. Retrieved14 August 2025.
  2. ^abJacques Cabanieu:Competitions and Architectural Excellence, in Places 9:2, MIT, 1994, retrieved 2009-09-25
  3. ^130 Years of Finnish architectural competitions, retrieved 2009-09-23
  4. ^De Jong, Cees and Mattie, Erik:Architectural Competitions 1792-1949,Taschen, 1997,ISBN 3-8228-8599-1
  5. ^"Guidelines for Architectural Design Competitions"(PDF). Australian Institute of Architects. October 2003. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved12 September 2013.
  6. ^UIA competition guideArchived 14 July 2009 at theWayback Machine, retrieved 2009-10-10
  7. ^Canadian competition rulesArchived 9 October 2009 at theWayback Machine, retrieved 2009-10-10
  8. ^Finnish competition rulesArchived 13 March 2016 at theWayback Machine, retrieved 2009-10-10
  9. ^Indian competition guidelinesArchived 12 December 2009 at theWayback Machine, retrieved 2009-10-10
  10. ^German competition guidelinesArchived 25 September 2015 at theWayback Machine, retrieved 2015-09-24
  11. ^Scarpa, Lawrence (26 November 2019)."Fair Pay for Fair Work: Lawrence Scarpa on paid competitions".The Architect's Newspaper (November 2019).
  12. ^The Grand Museum of Egypt: International Architecture Competition. Zamalek, Cairo, Egypt: Egyptian Ministry of Culture. 2003.ISBN 978-977-305-471-7.

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toArchitectural competitions.
Disciplines
Communication
design
Environmental
design
Industrial
design
Interaction
design
Other
applied arts
Other
design
&engineering
Approaches
  • Tools
  • Intellectual property
  • Organizations
  • Awards
Tools
Intellectual
property
Organizations
Awards
Related topics
International
National
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Architectural_design_competition&oldid=1307207877"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp