Explore a further 25 extraordinary architectural drawings, each one a Finalist in the 2022 One Drawing Challenge. Let us know which are your favorites on Instagram and Twitter with the hashtag #OneDrawingChallenge!
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“Living Lemon Life” by Siyang CHENZiyue Zhou
The University of Melbourne
Living Lemon Life is a communication center that combines industrial communication, incubation, culture experience, and product transaction. The hub will utilize the potential of the local lemon industry, fill in the gap in relevant comprehensive communication places, and attract industrial immigrants, so as to activate the local community and improve the population structure. Rather than relying solely on agriculture and tourism, the island will see a better lemon life and community atmosphere when combined with new industries and immgrants.”
“Up” by Thomas Schaller
Schaller Architectural Fine Arts
“Lift Cabins” by Stéphane Bolduc
MGA | Michael Green Architecture
“Mirror” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox
University of Houston
Ordinary and unindoctrinated, K-67 is a modular kiosk mass-produced in 1970s to be dispersed around urban centers as small shops. Due to this ability to adapt to the user’s daily life regardless of who they are, K-67 remained a timeless invention which people of Yugoslavia held dear in their memories through the days where the country no longer exist.”
“Destroyed Unity” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox
University of Houston
Today, they are the embodiment of war and violence.”
“Star-Crossed: Urban Sijelo the Movie!” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox
University of Houston
This is the story of interstellar lovers who reunited in the embrace of Urban Sijelo. Together, the two explored endless possibilities brought by the assembly’s versatile functions and forms.”
“Urban Sijelo: Defining Space!” by Kim Sao and Blake Wilcox
University of Houston
“This Is Ecological” by Shawn Teo
DP Architects Pte Ltd
Our design manifesto:
1. By stacking and compacting the facilities, we intensify the land to benefit Man and nature.
2. To be ecological is to understand and accommodate the needs of various habitats and communities.
3. Hsinta Ecological Power Plant brings together the needs of Man and nature for a better future.
This is an imagery, of what is perceived by society and what is imagined by dreamers. It lyricises, or chastises; revolving around what we know and not, what we see or not.”
“Sun-seeking” by Hamid Akhtarkavan
Iowa State University
With the speed that our cities rise, their pollution increases, and we are increasingly missing nature; we are losing it. There will come a time when our children (our future) are searching for the sun (as a symbol of nature) amongst our tall buildings and polluted cities.”
“Unearthing Nostalgia” by bruno xavier and Michelle Ovanessians
University of Houston
Despite all plans of unification, a long-lost Yugoslav relic designed by architect Sasa Machtig became the natural unpartisan symbol manifesting a sense of community through its modularity, multifunctionality and temporal nature. The K-67 capsule adopted by all Yugoslavs as an integral part of daily life, naturally brings all walks of life together. Unearthing what was once a monument in its own right and reinventing a method of unification through the rediscovery of the historical K-67.”
“Great Room” by steve marchetti
Studio Marchetti Architecture PLLC
“Hiroshima Hacchobori-no-zu” by Tomoaki Hamano
NIKKEN
It creates a new landscape while preserving the traditional landscape.”
“Wheels of Exploitation” by Salmaan Mohamed
Overwork culture makes one think of long hours and constant exhaustion as a marker of success. Unpaid overtime work has increased substantially in the present times and people on top of the corporate ladder glamourize the hustle culture. Employees are taught to sacrifice their personal time and sleep to achieve success but in reality their efforts only keep the wheels of exploitation moving.
This scenario is compared to a giant wheel inside a warehouse which is powered by exploited labor. The warehouse being a metaphor to how mechanical the work culture is in the modern times and the workers are constantly reminded to keep the “wheel” moving. Harder they work, more is their depletion of mental and physical well being, with burnout as their only badge of honor.”
“Monsters in Architecture” by Naomi Vallis
Babbage Consultants
The name of this drawing “Monsters in Architecture” attempts to shed light on the architectural hybridity that exists in Aotearoa (New Zealand), which had been previously suppressed in the nation’s historical, architectural narrative.
The drawing aims to showcase some of these culturally hybrid architectures, such as the Indo-Gothic style and the Bungalow style, but also allude to how these had been conceived – primarily from the global migration and transportation of people and cultures.
Digital collage helps to capture this migration of people, particularly from South Asia, who brought with them architectural styles and culture – that have come to merge and influence the environment these were transported to. The result of these movements is the formation of the “Architectural Monster” – a representation of the diversity that exists in New Zealand today.”
“The Woven City” by Shaun Jenkins
J2 Corporation
The built environment is a definition of a city; a statement about its history, ambition or how it wants to be seen. This can affect how people feel about there city and how they identify with the space and place they occupy. The Woven City is an abstract exploration of the possible ways that the built environment can better intertwine with its culture and heritage taking inspiration from the cities of Salford and Manchester and its strong ties to the textile industry.”
“A Glimpse into Mercato” by Polen Guzelocak
Cornell University
“The Gardener’s Diary” by Glory Kuk
KPF
I recently rummaged through my old diaries and found melancholic entries.
Located in Renwick Ruins of Welfare Island, an island that housed the undesirables of the city, much like our rejection of mental health problems.
The drawing diary is informed by small details in life and on site, which is spatially translated. It grows as more details are noticed, the drawing itself as a growing diary where it is reconditioned daily by me, tending, caring and maintaining the space. There is a visitor within me who might create chaos within the garden based on their emotions, the other side of my psyche. We shall leave traces for each other as we will never meet.
The drawing is where the garden is architecturised, and the architecture is gardenised.
It is a safe haven to defuse my worries, through this drawing I shall find my peace…
Yours Truly, The Gardener”
“A Conversation of Residential Modernism” by Scott Lafferty
University of Nebraska – Lincoln
“A Garden Reconsidered” by Zeb Lund
BVH Architecture
It asks questions of real and imaginary when occupying the same space; of dualities amongst groupings of threes. This piece is composed of pieces recalling futures that never came to be and pasts that never quite existed.
It is a visual study of seduction and liberties existing alone and partnered.”
“Trumpopolis” by Victor Enrich
“Emotional Structure” by Ying Chang
Ilinois Institute of Technology, Sheehan Nagle Hartray Architects
With the rapid development of AI, buildings after hundreds of years will become a “machine for living in”. Buildings will have their own personalities under continuous renovation. In the future, buildings will live in buildings and will express their feelings. They will be happy, upset, and angry… They will express their emotions through their “mood channels”(the colorful pipes). It is a language that humans can easily read to feel their state and improve the “living environment of the building.” No matter which building humans live in, change will occur where humans and buildings live and work together.
Without a human reading of their language, they would die. Helping others to help themselves, human beings will be in this form of beautiful symbiosis with buildings, together with the future environment and resources.”
“un_bound” by Grace Gruverman
California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo
I decided to explore this complex topic of transportation in relation to my studio site this quarter beside the iconic Mariachi Plaza. I analyzed the various methods of transport to our site to highlight major barriers but also countless connectors as well. While my drawing is primarily black and white, I recognize that this urban fabric of Boyle Heights simply stands as several shades of gray and reiterates that not all borders are merely black and white.”
“BODY // ARCHITECTURE” by Katherine White
University of Kentucky
What if our architecture was made from our bodies? Would we approach building differently or not? Where is the line between “man-made” and “nature” – is “human” not natural? Here the participants walk through the dreamscape- a sublime horror and beauty created with “somatic” architecture. Is this a design of the human hand and mind, or are we just experiencing it? All of these questions are either answered or left unanswered by the one who walks the path.”
“Cathedral crossroads” by Brian Varano
Silver Petrucelli
The cathedral depicted shortly after a storm reminds one of the cathedral serving as a beacon even during the worst of times. As the image is dream like, the cathedral takes all who enter into another realm of awe and beauty, even for a fleeting moment. It forever remains present in one’s mind even after one departs. It is continuously cloaked and unveiled with the light and darkness of each day and night and amazes one with it’s monumentality and yet delicate details.”
“Vista Fragmentado” by Malia Marantan
California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo