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With 2016 back in the cultural conversation, it feels like a good moment to look at what architecture was doing then.
It was a peak era for starchitecture, shaped by parametric design tools and new fabrication methods that made bold forms easier to realize. At the same time, architecture was starting to look for something else. Many projects turned toward landscape, atmosphere and emotion, searching for meaning beyond spectacle. Optimism and experimentation still drove the conversation, and these A+Awards winners captured that energy.
A decade later, they reveal both what architects cared about at the time and what aged well.
When architecture became topography:
Messner Mountain Museum Corones
By Zaha Hadid Architects, South Tyrol, Italy
Popular Choice Winner, Museum, 2016 A+Awards
A sharp glass canopy pierces the rock like a shard of ice, marking entry without domesticating the site. Dedicated to mountaineering culture, the building treats landscape as both subject and structure. Its sculptural confidence and immersive spatial narrative capture a decade when architecture sought intensity through form, topography and physical experience.
When architecture chose restraint:
Grace Farms
By SANAA, New Canaan, Connecticut
Jury Winner, Architecture +Engineering, 2016 A+Awards
The building keeps attention on people and shared activity, allowing landscape and daily use to take precedence. Architecture here acts as a quiet framework, shaping encounters without demanding focus. Its clarity and understatement mark a moment when pulling back felt like a deliberate, confident choice.
When form meant feeling:
Harbin Opera House
By MAD Architects, Harbin, China
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Wood, 2016 A+Awards
The sculptural exterior contains two performance halls, with circulation treated as a slow procession that turns arrival into part of the event. Inside, large glass surfaces and a faceted roof pull daylight deep into public spaces, while the main auditorium is wrapped in warm Manchurian ash, shaped to support acoustics and atmosphere. The project reflects a 2010s confidence in expressive form, civic symbolism and architecture’s ability to stage emotion at an urban scale.
When technology meant optimism:
The Lowline Lab
By Raad Studio, New York City, New York
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Technology, 2016 A+Awards
Jury Winner, Architecture +Technology, 2016 A+Awards
Jury Winner, Architecture +Self Initiated Projects, 2016 A+Awards
Part exhibition, part laboratory, the space imagined a future where neglected infrastructure could be reclaimed through technical ingenuity. Its speculative tone, environmental ambition and belief in design-led transformation mark it as distinctly of its moment, when cities still looked to bold experiments to signal progress.
When ordinary buildings started turning expressive:
City View Garage
By LEONG LEONG, Miami, Florida
Jury Vote and Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Metal, 2016 A+Awards
From inside, the patterned apertures frame fragmented views of the city. The project reflects a 2010s impulse to elevate everyday infrastructure through bold material presence, turning utilitarian programs into landmarks with graphic clarity and instant recognizability.
When architecture told a city’s story:
Great Amber Concert Hall
By Volker Giencke & Company, Latvia
Popular Choice Winner, Hall/Theater, 2016 A+Awards
Inside, the main hall follows a terraced vineyard geometry, pairing spatial drama with acoustic precision, while mirrored light tubes pull daylight down into the performance space. The project captures a 2010s belief in architecture as a narrative object, where material, form and metaphor worked together to project cultural ambition at an urban scale.
When architecture turned introspective:
Sayama Forest Chapel
By Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP, Tokorozawa, Japan
Popular Choice Winner, Religious Buildings & Memorials, 2016 A+Awards
Rather than asserting presence, the building withdraws, allowing architecture to act as a quiet companion to grief and reflection. Its emphasis on bodily gesture, material sensitivity and shared spirituality captures a 2010s belief in architecture’s capacity to care through form.
When architecture made room for cultural exchange:
Thread Artist Residency
By Toshiko Mori Architect, Sinthian, Senegal
Jury Winner, Architecture +Humanitarianism, 2016 A+Awards
Jury Winner, Architecture +Community, 2016 A+Awards
As opposed to operating as a closed institution, Thread functions as a social framework, hosting workshops, performances and informal encounters between visiting artists and local residents. Its role extends beyond accommodation, acting as a physical platform for learning, making and dialogue. The project signals a moment when architecture increasingly positioned itself as an enabler of participation, collaboration and cultural continuity rather than an object of attention.
When cantilevers reached into the landscape:
Manshausen Island Resort
By Snorre Stinessen Architecture, Steigen, Nordland, Norway
Jury Vote and Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Cantilever, 2016 A+Awards
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Glass, 2016 A+Awards
Popular Choice Winner, Hotels & Resorts, 2016 A+Awards
Constructed from layered massive wood clad in larch, the cabins age quietly against the elements while interiors remain spare and protective. The project captures a moment when retreat architecture leaned into exposure, trusting glass to mediate between comfort and raw nature rather than separating the two.
When reflection became experience:
Mirrors
By bandesign, Gifu Prefecture, Japan
Jury Winner, Restaurants, 2016 A+Awards
Materials stay deliberately restrained — white steel surfaces, gravel underfoot, carefully placed color accents — so that seasonal change remains the focus. Blossoming camellias give way to cherry pinks, marking time through perception rather than signage. The project captures a moment when small-scale architecture leaned on perception, atmosphere and sensory play to transform everyday settings into fleeting, shared experiences.
When circulation shaped the building:
TERMEH Office – Retail Building
By Ahmad Bathaei and Farshad MehdiZadeh Design | FMZD, Hamadan, Iran
Jury Winner, Office – Low Rise (1 – 4 Floors), 2016 A+Awards
Light and planted space are drawn into the interior through a vertical void, softening the transition between levels. The exterior is wrapped in patterned local brick, filtering daylight while grounding the building in familiar construction language. The result is a compact urban structure shaped by access, circulation and layered public presence rather than formal display.
Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work by uploading projects to Architizer and sign up for our inspirational newsletters.