1. ArchDaily
  2. Illustrations

Illustrations: The Latest Architecture and News

"The Frustration Became a Design Brief": Why an Architect Left 20 Years of Practice to Map the World

 | Sponsored Content

Karl van Es spent twenty years as a practicing architect before walking away to solve a problem every architect faces: the resources to travel like a professional simply do not exist. Mainstream guidebooks and travel apps rarely highlight the buildings that truly matter to the architectural community. Åvontuura was born from that frustration — an independent publisher of illustrated architecture guides created by an architect, for architects. Its latest release, Madrid, maps 70 of the city's most significant buildings, representing a mission to bridge the gap between architectural interest and travel logistics.

The Best Architectural Drawings of 2023

As another year draws to a close, ArchDaily's team of curators is pleased to present a selection of the best architectural drawings published throughout 2023, without which the projects' appreciation would certainly not be the same.

Architectural representation plays a fundamental role both in the design process - from the very first sketches to the finest construction details - and in its presentation to a wider audience. Thus, during the selection process, we were able to see a rich and varied set of designs that were part of the more than 4,000 project publications this year. We had the difficult task of coming up with the most representative and inspiring ones amongst them.

The Best Architectural Drawings of 2023 - Image 1 of 4The Best Architectural Drawings of 2023 - Image 2 of 4The Best Architectural Drawings of 2023 - Image 3 of 4The Best Architectural Drawings of 2023 - Image 4 of 4The Best Architectural Drawings of 2023 - More Images+ 78

Introducing ArchDaily Gallery: The Online Shop for Architectural Photography and Illustration

ArchDaily is thrilled to unveil its brand-new online shop: ArchDaily gallery, a platform designed to celebrate the captivating work of architectural photographers and illustrators while connecting them with our vibrant community. In this inaugural stage, we proudly feature 11 renowned artists, including Roland Halbe, Nico Saieh, and Sander Patelski.



The Best Architectural Drawings of 2022

Every year, ArchDaily honors the best architectural drawings of the year in an annual tradition that has now been going on for eight years. The 2022 edition is particularly special, as it showcases a wide range of techniques and representations in the field of architecture. From traditional painting to digital collages and axonometric drawings, this year's selection truly has something for everyone.

The History of the Penrose Stair and its Influence on Design

Stairs in architecture are oftentimes a design focal point- the heavyhandedness in creating something that moves us from one level to the next, up and down repeatedly, something so simple and familiar with a twist is what makes the experience of traversing a stair so unique. Our obsession with stairs and the level of illusion that they create in architecture perhaps stems from the way that they’re able to twist the optics and perceptions of space. We understand that they transport us in one direction or another, but can stairs ever be circular? Is it possible to go up and down for eternity? 

From Digital Collage to Hand Sketches: Find Inspiration for Your Next Architectural Visualizations

With an increasing amount of architectural visualizations being published on social media, it’s easy to get overwhelmed. Adding this to how the famous algorithm works, we end up always being exposed to social media publications that are, in many ways, similar to each other. But for us as architects, designers, and students, social media is not only a platform for networking and sharing our works. It also serves as a source of inspiration. If the algorithm isn’t helping us to discover new and different ideas, then it’s up to us to go out of our way and look for them.

From Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques

From Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques - Films & Architecture
© José Hevia

Graphics, even before language and writing, were the first means of communication and significance for humanity. Drawing is the act of replacing reality with representation, that is, replacing objects with images encoded in each of the graphic representation systems.

In architecture, graphics stimulate the imagination and are the basis of project thinking since they do not only constitute our code of communication but configure our ability to express ourselves in disciplinary terms. In fact, at first, the drawing is constructed in the mind of the architect, before it looks for support from any type of instrument.

From Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques - Films & ArchitectureFrom Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques - Films & ArchitectureFrom Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques - Films & ArchitectureFrom Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques - Films & ArchitectureFrom Representation to Reality: 19 Projects that Rethink Representation Techniques - More Images+ 35

Setting the Table: From the Ordinary Table to the Extraordinary Table

Subscriber Access | 

Setting the Table is an illustrated reflection by architects Florencia Köncke and Paula Olea Fonti. In the following paragraphs, the authors develop a first approach to the study of the table as "the centre of our notion of domesticity"(1). In the relationship between space, objects and people and as a social catalyst for gathering and exchange.

The Best Architectural Drawings of 2021

ArchDaily continues a seven-year-long tradition of celebrating the best architecture drawings of the year. From painting to collages to blueprints, the 2021 edition highlights a carefully-curated collection of architectural drawings and visualizations with a wide variety of techniques and representations.

Rendering Styles: Different Techniques and How to Achieve Them

Renders are representations that can convey the three-dimensional aspect of a design through two-dimensional media, i.e., an image, providing a preview of how the project will look in the future. However, unlike what people often imagine, rendering is not always a realistic visualization of architecture.

Since it is a tool for visual communication, renderings can have different styles depending not only on the project itself but also on the specific targeted audience and, above all, on the identity of the architect or architectural firm responsible for the design.

Rendering Styles: Different Techniques and How to Achieve Them - Image 3 of 4Rendering Styles: Different Techniques and How to Achieve Them - Image 5 of 4Rendering Styles: Different Techniques and How to Achieve Them - Image 8 of 4Rendering Styles: Different Techniques and How to Achieve Them - Image 9 of 4Rendering Styles: Different Techniques and How to Achieve Them - More Images+ 7

Historic Persian Minarets Reimagined in New Retrofuturism Series

Subscriber Access | 

In the past, minarets were considered an important architectural element serving several purposes. They were built adjacent to mosques for the call to prayer, as well as at the entrances of cities as a main focal point to guide travelers. Today, however, the need for minarets has decreased as they have become tokens of historic times. 

In the latest collection of his photo-series "Retrofuturism", Iranian architect and visual artist Mohammad Hassan Forouzanfar introduced a new function to historic Persian minarets through imaginary illustrations that compliment the aged brick structures with contemporary industrial archeology.

A Free Tool to Create Textures for Architectural Images

All too often, architects and designers spend hours searching for textures and materials to represent their visions. This struggle takes many forms: from scrolling through Google, Pinterest, and databases in search of the perfect texture, to manually creating one over the course of several hours, or even days. In either case, the result is frequently painful, and rarely perfect. A database organized, reliable, free and easy to use is not always a simple thing to find.

Architextures began in 2014 as a library of high-quality image files, with textures submitted by users or created by the platform itself. Over time, the platform’s creator Ryan Canning noticed that, in his professional work as an architect, the array of static image files available online did not meet the specific textures he was looking for in his design projects. Frustrated with the endless process of searching, editing and overlaying textures in Photoshop, Ryan reinvented Architextures in 2019 as an interactive tool where designers like himself could create specified, high-quality textures in seconds. And importantly, being free to use for personal and educational use, with professional accounts available for a small fee to support the tool’s development.

A Free Tool to Create Textures for Architectural Images - Image 1 of 4A Free Tool to Create Textures for Architectural Images - Image 2 of 4A Free Tool to Create Textures for Architectural Images - Image 3 of 4A Free Tool to Create Textures for Architectural Images - Image 4 of 4A Free Tool to Create Textures for Architectural Images - More Images+ 9

Nvard Yerkanian Brings Armenia's Modernist Architecture to Life

Armenian graphic designer and illustrator Nvard Yerkanian has created a new series exploring modernist architecture in Armenia. The illustration series aims to reveal the beauty and value of modernism to the public through the power of colors that accentuate the simple yet fantastic forms of these monuments. The series is an ode to the architectural heritage that has been lost and undervalued.

Nvard Yerkanian Brings Armenia's Modernist Architecture to Life - Image 1 of 4Nvard Yerkanian Brings Armenia's Modernist Architecture to Life - Image 2 of 4Nvard Yerkanian Brings Armenia's Modernist Architecture to Life - Image 3 of 4Nvard Yerkanian Brings Armenia's Modernist Architecture to Life - Image 4 of 4Nvard Yerkanian Brings Armenia's Modernist Architecture to Life - More Images+ 10

Frederico Babina Simplifies Architecture Through His New 'Ideograrch' Series

Subscriber Access | 

Frederico Babina is an Italian architect and graphic designer who creates artwork that focuses on the abstract replications of famous imagery and buildings. Through a strong focus on geometry and form his work represents a sense of innocence, inexperience and spontaneity throughout.

12 Steps to a Successful Critique

Subscriber Access | 

Juries, assessments, 15 minutes of hell... no matter what you call it, a critique is always agonizing. Regardless of how confident you are with your proposal and how much thought and effort you have put into every detail, at least one of the jury members will make sure to find something to complain about.

To prepare you for upcoming juries, artist Chanel Dehond has illustrated 12 steps to having a successful critique (or surviving one, at least).

The Petty Crimes of Architects

Subscriber Access | 

Everyone is blameworthy for at least one bad habit / behavior at his/her workplace: talking on the phone too loudly, stealing someone else's mug, walking around the office with a very odorous lunch...

After a little reunion with her friends who work in the architecture field, illustrator Chanel Dehond couldn't help but notice a few "crimes" that almost all architects are guilty of.

Take a look at Dehond's illustrations of the petty crimes done by architects and designers.

Federico Babina's "Planimal" Reimagines Architectural Plans as Animals

Subscriber Access | 

Italian artist Federico Babina has published the latest in his impressive portfolio of architectural illustrations. “Planimal” seeks to convey the close link between architecture and the natural world, translating animals into architectural plans. Through his set of drawings, Babina reimagines the architectural spaces as “narrative subjects that host us and lead us into a fantastic labyrinth of a dreamlike reality, architectures imagined as allusively zoomorphic sculptures.”

Houses, museums, and churches are conveyed as roaring lions, crawling snakes, and swimming whales, with dynamic spaces formed from cocktails of asymmetries and symmetries, curves and straight lines, solids and voids, sounds and silences, lights and shadows.

Federico Babina's "Planimal" Reimagines Architectural Plans as Animals - Image 1 of 4Federico Babina's "Planimal" Reimagines Architectural Plans as Animals - Image 2 of 4Federico Babina's "Planimal" Reimagines Architectural Plans as Animals - Image 3 of 4Federico Babina's "Planimal" Reimagines Architectural Plans as Animals - Image 4 of 4Federico Babina's Planimal Reimagines Architectural Plans as Animals - More Images+ 21

Easter Egg Hunt: Architecture Edition

Subscriber Access | 

Now that it's time for the Easter Holidays, kids (and young-at-heart adults) will be busy searching for colorful eggs hidden here and there. As for you architecture lovers, illustrator Chanel Dehond took egg hunts to the next level and found a way to make the activity a bit more relatable.

Take a look at Dehond's eggceptional collection of illustrations, inspired by some of your favorite structures from all over the world.

Easter Egg Hunt: Architecture Edition  - Image 1 of 4Easter Egg Hunt: Architecture Edition  - Image 2 of 4Easter Egg Hunt: Architecture Edition  - Image 3 of 4Easter Egg Hunt: Architecture Edition  - Image 4 of 4Easter Egg Hunt: Architecture Edition  - More Images+ 17