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9 Architectural Illustration Styles That Prove Drawing Isn’t Dead

A collection of some rich images that architects have shared with us, taking us behind the scenes of the projects.

Alex Garkavenko

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Out in the everyday professional reality of architectural practice, “drawing” is often used as a euphemism of either a construction document or a sales ploy to court and dazzle clients. There is no doubt that digital culture has changed the way that projects have been designed and represented, and according to Perry Kulper, author of “The Labor of Architectural Drawing,” the result is a “shift from what architecture looks like to how it behaves—a movement from the configuration and image dominance to parametric and performance logics.”

However, despite their waning appearance in the business-as-usual side of architecture, drawing and illustration are still inescapable components of the practice that filter into multiple stages of the process (after all, there has to be something in all those moleskins…). A bit of a “chicken or egg” story, there is no prescribed sequence to separate drawing and design from one another, and sketches and illustration are still prevalent is stages anywhere from conceptualizing to redrawing the complete project. Oh, and of course, paper architecture will never die.

Conveying a glimpse into process, illustrations can provide intimate windows into the thinking behind a project. Although presentations are typically seen as a display of squeaky-clean final images, why are architects often hesitant to show their thoughts? Below is a collection of some rich images that architects have shared with us, taking us behind the scenes of the projects.

1. The Conceptual Scrawl

© Asymptote Architecture

ARC- River Culture Multimedia Theater Pavilion by Asymptote Architecture, Daegu, Daegu, Republic of Korea

© Bassam El Okeily

© Bassam El Okeily

The Narrow House by Bassam El Okeily, Bilzen, Belgium

2. The Gestural Explanation

© Renzo Piano Building Workshop

© Renzo Piano Building Workshop

© Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The Ex-Michelin Area – The “Le Albere” District, Trento by Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Trento, Trentino-Alto Adige, Italy

3. The Diagrammatic Visualization

© OFIS architects

© OFIS architects

Tetris Apartments by OFIS architects, Ljubljana, Slovenia

4. The Axonometric Obsession

© Peter Barber Architects

© Peter Barber Architects

Donnybrook Quarter by Peter Barber Architects, London, UK

© Taller Venticuatro

Indie Rocks! by Taller Venticuatro, Mexico City, The Federal District, Mexico

5. The Atmospheric Illustration

© Rudy Ricciotti Architecte

© Rudy Ricciotti Architecte

MuCEM by Rudy Ricciotti Architecte, Marseille, France

6. The Rendered Technical Drawing

© Renzo Piano Building Workshop

© Renzo Piano Building Workshop

The Ex-Michelin Area – The “Le Albere” District, Trento by Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Trento, Trentino-Alto Adige, Italy

7. The Hand Rendering

Villa Hult by Chahrour Huhtilainen A+D, Höganäs, Sweden

Elverket by Chahrour Huhtilainen A+D, Industrigatan 70, Landskrona, Sweden

8. The Sketch of a Completed Project

© Original Vision

© Original Vision

Villa Amanzi by Original Vision, Phuket, Thailand

9. Architecture as Illustration in and of Itself…

Architectonik by Michael Samula

Illustrations, Mark Magazine by Sarah Dunbar and Sarah Hirschman

Elbvenedig by Grit Koalick, Dresden, Germany

Have you completed a project that captures the essence of its locale while addressing global concerns? If so, Architizer's A+Awards is your platform. Enter now for a chance to have your work featured in print and online.

 
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