
2025 年 11 月,ArchDaily 推出了首届 Student Project Awards。设立这项新奖项的初衷源于对新一代建筑师的期许,对他们才华与远见的表彰,以及对给予他们展示机会与认可的重要性的肯定。建筑学的未来正于当下在全球各地的教室、工作室和工坊中悄然塑造,向那些正在塑造未来的人提供支持至关重要。大奖反响极为热烈,来自各大洲学生的项目纷纷参评,展现了丰富多元的观点、解决方案与设计愿景。
在公开征集启动的五个月以来,ArchDaily 陆续公布了 104 个长名单入围项目和 20 个短名单入围项目,由建筑师和相关从业人员组成的评审团审阅了所有提案,最终评选出 ArchDaily Student Project Awards 的三名获奖者和四名荣誉提名者。评审团认真对待每个项目,不仅关注最终成果,更着重考察项目背后的理念、问题和立场。最终评选出的获奖项目既体现了奖项的精神,也反映了当今建筑领域不断变化的趋势。
获奖项目围绕“共栖的建筑”这一主题,从多个角度展开。从保护和改造美墨边境的一所历史悠久的校舍,到将资源开采区重新构想为再生系统,再到在人口密集的城市环境中融入关怀,这些项目探索了建筑如何调和人、生态和基础设施之间的关系。获奖项目由来自阿根廷(科尔多瓦国立大学)、西班牙(马德里理工大学)和美国(哈佛大学)的大学生设计,展现了思辨性理念如何与现实世界相契合;而荣誉提名项目则拓展了这一讨论,提出了在不同尺度和背景下居住、适应和连接的新方式。
祝贺获奖者们,他们的项目令人振奋!同时感谢所有参赛学生、尊敬的评审团成员(他们对入围项目进行了投票表决)以及 ArchDaily 团队(他们认真审阅了每一份参赛作品)。无论最终结果如何,所有参赛作品都为建筑领域的讨论做出了贡献,并在本届 ArchDaily Student Project Awards 中对共栖这一主题展开了深入探讨。
共栖的建筑
“首届 Student Project Awards 展现了对共栖建筑的一系列前卫诠释。在不同的背景下,获奖项目拓展了这一主题的定义,超越了纯粹的社会层面,将其定位为一种多层次的状态。
人、环境和空间相互交织,展现了建筑如何与现有条件互动,并作为构建更融合生活方式的框架。这些方案转向适应变化的演进系统,为持续协商建立结构,同时支持包容多元的日常生活。
这些项目共同将建筑定位为一种关怀的调解实践,它重新连接破碎的关系,并将共存构建为一种通过设计塑造的空间现实。”——Christele Harrouk,ArchDaily 主编
获奖者
洛奇尔小学 / Leslie Ponce-Diaz
哈佛大学,美国
位于美墨边境附近的圣拉斐尔山谷,洛奇尔小学(Escuelita Lochiel)是对美国仅存的几所单间土坯校舍之一的重新改造。该项目建立在社区长期主导的修复工作之上,将这处历史遗址重新构想为一个融合建筑、景观和生态的现代早期教育空间。通过一套能够适应气候和功能需求的适应性土坯系统,该方案将学习构建为一个体验式和场所式的过程,在促进文化传承的同时,也培养了新的环境意识。


“室内空间、流畅的自然景观和开阔的房间巧妙融合,令人叹为观止。通透感和趣味性与鲜艳的色彩和永无止境的探索感相得益彰。它让未来的世代能够以他们好奇的视角来审视建筑,并尊重周围的生态环境。开放而华丽。”——Balázs Bognár,隈研吾建筑事务所合伙人兼执行副总裁
盐沼景观再生 / Ezequiel Lopez, Maria Victoria Echegaray, Agustina Durandez
国立科尔多瓦大学,阿根廷
该项目位于胡胡伊省奥拉罗兹盐沼(Olaroz Salt Flat in Jujuy),旨在解决锂矿开采与环境脆弱性之间的矛盾。方案并非反对现有的工业流程,而是将其重新定义为变革的推动力,引入一系列融合修复、农业和能源生产的再生景观。项目通过一系列建筑手法构建了一个分布式基础设施,使生态系统与人类活动在此交汇,从而推动从单一资源开采型区域向多元化、集体管理型环境的转变。


“这是一项强有力且成熟的方案,它将资源开采区重新定义为再生与共存的空间。该项目以其多尺度方法脱颖而出,将环境过程、生产系统和社区生活整合到一个连贯的建筑框架中。 ” — Ivan Blasi,欧盟密斯奖总监,密斯·凡·德·罗基金会
ParkTEA: Architecture of Coexistence / Ignacio Martinez Pardo
Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
ParkTEA explores how architecture can support neurodiversity within the contemporary city. Located on the former Cuatro Caminos depots in Madrid, the project challenges the peripheralization of autism-related care by embedding it within a dense and active urban context. Conceived as an open infrastructure, it combines specialized programs with public uses, organized into distinct yet interconnected volumes. Through spatial clarity, sensory calibration, and programmatic hybridity, the proposal creates an environment that enables both autonomy and interaction, reframing inclusion as an integral component of urban life.


"The insistence of architecture of care to be inclusive and part of a city rather than a-part of it really stands out here. What shines through is a modern take on how we look after some of our most vulnerable, but also how architecture can be an active agent in such an effort." — Jeanne Autran-Edorh & Fabiola Büchele, Founders, Studio NEiDA
Honorable Mentions
Urban Continuity: A Systemic Park in Milan / Elena Eliseeva, Mariia Kovalenko, Laura Cappelli, Claudia Cipollone, Marta Colombi
Polytechnic Institute of Milan, Italy
Urban Continuity rethinks Milan's southern edge as a car-free, evolving landscape where historical traces and contemporary urban life intersect. Through a time-based design approach, the project reactivates forgotten infrastructures and reintroduces water as both a spatial and atmospheric element. Rather than proposing a fixed form, it establishes a flexible framework that accommodates changing rhythms, encouraging intergenerational use and new forms of collective experience.

"The proposal carefully and creatively uncovers Milan's layered historical urban structures through water infrastructure, creating sensorial and calm inclusive spaces centered on citizens' wellbeing. It is an act of resistance against the commodification of the contemporary city." — Anand Sonecha, Principal Architect, SEALAB
Parazoa Building: Hydroecological Reprogramming / Tiago Barros Aguiar
Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil
This project transforms an existing parking structure in downtown São Paulo into a hydroecological system that integrates water management with public programming. Through strategies such as aquaponics, biodigestion, and constructed wetlands, the building becomes a closed-loop infrastructure that supports both environmental performance and social activity. By repositioning water as a visible and active element, the proposal redefines its role within the urban landscape, linking ecological processes with everyday use.

"It possesses the intelligence with which public projects are approached in Brazil, providing citizens with quality of life. It is resourceful, and the way it creates ecosystems within the building and restores water systems is highly valued." – Marie Combette & Daniel Morena Flores, Founders, La Cabina de la Curiosidad
Geographism: Over the Landscape Impermanence / Daniel Eslava Tovar
Universidad de Los Andes, Colombia
Situated in Manaure, where desert, sea, and salt extraction converge, this project approaches architecture as a process of geological and cultural reconstruction. By reworking industrial paths into spatial and social frameworks, the proposal integrates productive activities with collective practices such as fishing, learning, and water management. The intervention operates across temporal layers, seeking to reconnect fragmented landscapes while enabling new forms of coexistence between infrastructure and lived experience.

"A conceptually dense and spatially ambitious project that addresses extractive landscapes through reintegration and care. Highly valuable is its ability to reconnect industrial traces with cultural and ecological rhythms." – Ivan Blasi, Director EUmies Awards, Fundació Mies van der Rohe
When Objects Become Architects / Zhang Zichun
The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Focusing on an informal residential building in central Bangkok, this project investigates how everyday objects shape spatial organization and social interaction. Through an object-based methodology, it maps patterns of appropriation, adaptation, and negotiation within a dense living environment. The design proposal builds on these observations, introducing new connections and shared spaces that support collective life while maintaining flexibility, framing architecture as an open-ended process shaped by its users.

"Lively and playful, with a great sense of DIY in the adaptive structures and wild use of color. This design exudes joy, and a celebratory sense of the everyday." – Balázs Bognár, Partner & Executive Vice President, Kengo Kuma & Associates
The Student Project Awards was made possible by a team of talented individuals. Thank you to:
- Concept Design of ArchDaily Student Project Awards: Christele Harrouk, Daniela Porto, Hana Abdel, Melodia Berzia, and Romullo Baratto.
- ArchDaily Jury: Agustina Iñiguez, Christele Harrouk, Hana Abdel, Jonathan Yeung, Romullo Baratto, Susanna Moreira, and Victor Delaqua.
- External Jury: Abdulrahman Gazzaz & Turki Gazzaz, Anand Sonecha, Balázs Bognar, Ivan Blasi, Jeanne Autran-Edorh & Fabiola Büchele, and Marie Combette & Daniel Moreno Flores.
- Graphic & Motion Design: Anne Pohlmann, Cecilia Suárez, Evghenia Goras, Jorge Miñano, and Javiera Contreras.
- Marketing Campaign: Carla Walpen, Dima Stouhi, Enrique Tovar, Gloria Cardona, Melodie Berzia, Moa Tengqvist, Sofio Rukhadze, Teresa Spini, and Victor Delaqua.
- Product and Development: Amina Patak, Carolina El Mankabadi, Clara Ott, Daniel Giraldo, Diego Acuña, Gonzalo Leiva, Luis Mancilla, Nicolás Araya, Yermain Araya, and Yony Briñez.




















