The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.
Cubism first disrupted the artistic landscape in the early 20th century, upending the status quo and offering a bold rebuttal to realism. Through the lens of this subversive movement, formative figures, including Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, reimagined the world as a series of simplified, geometric fragments pieced back together to create abstract images that play with traditional notions of perspective.
This avant-garde outlook went on to revolutionize the built environment. Architects like Le Corbusier utilized Cubist values to defy conventional typologies of what buildings should look like. From angular shapes, sharp lines and multi-faceted forms to grid-like façades and ambiguous intersections of space, the stylized approach gave rise to some of the most iconic buildings across our global skylines today.
These winning projects from the 10th Annual A+Awards continue that legacy with dynamic and nuanced iterations of this radical philosophy. From residential housing to high-rise offices and cultural centers, here’s how architects are channeling the spirit of Cubism in exciting new ways…
1235 Vine Street
By Hawkins\Brown, Los Angeles, California
Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Unbuilt Commercial
Despite its ground-breaking approach, the project has reverence for the surrounding built landscape too. A colonnade framed by arched openings encircles the base of the structure, paying homage to the neighboring classical architecture while balancing out the rigidity of the project’s upper stories. Meanwhile, the stepped arrangement of the structure acts as a visual staircase, softening the transition from the residential bungalows to the west of the site.
Ministry of Taxes
By FXCollaborative, Baku, Azerbaijan
Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, High Rise (16+ Floors)
Each section cantilevers off from a central core, rotating 1.2 degrees as the cubes rise. As well as its visual impact, this spiraling orientation maximizes solar gains, while thermally efficient glazing helps to regulate the building’s internal temperature. Green sky gardens punctuate the voids between the modules, offering welcome pockets of nature amongst the urban topography.
Piiri wooden housing block
By Tommila Architects & Kaleidoscope, Kerava, Finland
Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Multi-Unit Housing (S <10 Floors)
The buildings’ bold aesthetic is befitting of their pioneering construction. Vibrant red exteriors are offset to dramatic effect by light pine cladding across the inward-facing aspects and enclosed balconies. The result is a horizon of bright, angular forms rising up from amongst the trees. Inside, the living spaces echo subtle geometric references. Staggered volumes of pine frame the open stairwell, creating unique spaces of intersection as the staircase rises.
Mason
By Vaslab Architecture, Na Jomtien, Thailand
Popular Choice Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Hotels & Resorts
With their angular lines and boxy gray forms and overhangs, the concrete units were conceived as a series of modern, architectural caves. Crowned with green roofs, the staggered development sensitively blends into the organic hues of the environment, while offering breathtaking ocean views from each residence. Inside the villas, granite washbasins and artwork shaped from local resources further blur the natural landscape with the domestic. Historically, Cubism rejected the realist principle that art should reflect nature. However, this ground-breaking project demonstrates the value of exchange between these contrasting approaches.
Ice cubes
By Zone of Utopia + Mathieu Forest Architecte, Xinxiang, China
Popular Choice Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Cultural & Expo Centers
The treatment of the façade contributes to its visual liminality. Glazed panels laced with translucent ice crystals are suspended from stainless steel cables. The exterior oscillates between opacity and clarity, concealing and revealing across its many facets. After nightfall, the supersized ice cubes transform into glistening lanterns as light filters out through the crystalline skin.
Tony Fruit Office
By TAA DESIGN, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Low Rise (1-4 Floors)
The solution was this remarkable wooden framework, which sets the building back from the street and creates shade for the internal workspaces. The geometric boxes function as intermediary zones where nature can flourish in the sunshine, while the perforated construction allows air to circulate. Here, the graphic skeleton becomes a biophilic playground with aesthetic value and impressive functionality.
FH Office
By TA-CHA Design, Bangkok, Thailand
Jury Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Mixed Use (S <25,000 sq ft)
While the project is distinct in its design, it responds to its residential locale. The grid alignment of the frontage mirrors the silhouettes of the neighboring housing blocks, their cubic designs translated into the contemporary development. Inside, some of the common spaces look out onto the row houses, offering fresh perspectives and a sense of unity with the existing built environment.
The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.