The judging process for Architizer's 14th A+Awards is now underway. Subscribe to our Awards Newsletter to receive updates about Public Voting, and stay tuned — winners will be announced later this spring.
In contemporary architecture, the boundary between “inside” and “outside” has evolved beyond the rigid binary of solid walls and open air. Modern designers are increasingly exploring semi-transparency to cultivate a “third space” — a sensory threshold that filters light, air and sightlines. By manipulating the tectonics of timber, woven branches, and skeletal frames, these structures disassemble the traditional concept of a building as a static enclosure.
This approach balances high-performance engineering with an evocative atmosphere, also reflecting the shift away from the “glass box” modernism of the last century. Technically, these “breathable envelopes” are sophisticated bioclimatic tools that utilize material porosity for passive thermal regulation and natural ventilation. But also, emotionally, they dissolve the interior’s isolation, encouraging a profound connection to the site.
From Costa Rica to Iran, these winning projects of the 13th A+ Awards show that transparency is not just about visibility, but also about how architecture can become a mediator rather than a barrier, where wind, sun and the landscape kind of invite and are part of the experience.
No Footprint Wood House
By A-01, Uvita, Costa Rica
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Prefab and Modular, 13th Architizer A+Awards
By balancing industrial efficiency with the tactile warmth of locally harvested wood, the house achieves a peaceful existence that feels like a structured extension of the jungle canopy rather than an intrusion upon it.
Diffuse Mirror
By António Costa Lima Arquitectos, Portugal
Jury Winner, Architecture +Light, 13th Architizer A+Awards
The timber’s density creates a sacred, shaded refuge, acting as a sensory resonance chamber where the smell of the water bank and the moving reflections of the dam are filtered through a rough, tactile wooden veil. Architects also mention that the place relates to the healing harbors of Galilee, where the large surface of the water reminds us that, “For now we see a reflection as in a diffused mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known. So faith, hope, love remain, these three; but the greatest of these is love.” (St. Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians, Chapter 13). So the third column of the tripod building, the thicker one, the cross, is subtly carved with the name “Agape” (“love” translated from Greek).
The Arghavan (Cercis) Commercial Project
By 13 Degrees Architecture Studio, Yazd, Iran
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Innovation, 13th Architizer A+Awards
By evolving an indigenous craft into a contemporary tectonic solution, the project creates a “living” texture that is both rooted in the local landscape and functionally responsive to the region’s environmental needs through its porous, hand-crafted weave.
Sky Concert Hall
By Yike Architects, Zhejiang, China
Jury Winner, Architecture +Wood, 13th Architizer A+Awards
The “hollowed” design of the timber ribs has a dual purpose; the strategic gaps between the glulam members significantly reduce wind pressure and snow loads at high altitudes while creating a permeable envelope. This allows visitors on the lower deck to feel sheltered by the warmth of the wood.
Sandstone Wood Pavilion
By LUO studio, Longyou County, China
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Wood, 13th Architizer A+Awards
The pavilion’s semi-transparency is a direct result of its skeletal frame, which allows light and wind to flow into the interior. This “breathing” quality ensures that the heavy red sandstone site is balanced by a light, permeable installation, keeping visitors intimately connected to the surrounding sea of fields and the shifting patterns of rural daylight through a repetitive, open-grid timber logic.
The judging process for Architizer's 14th A+Awards is now underway. Subscribe to our Awards Newsletter to receive updates about Public Voting, and stay tuned — winners will be announced later this spring.