1. ArchDaily
  2. Lina Ghotmeh

Lina Ghotmeh: The Latest Architecture and News

Global Design Forum Istanbul Concludes First Edition With City-Wide Programme of Installations and Talks

Global Design Forum Istanbul concluded its inaugural edition between May 13 and 16, 2026, bringing together architects, designers, urbanists, and cultural practitioners through a city-wide programme of installations, talks, screenings, and public events. Presented by London Design Festival in collaboration with People Places Ideas, the forum was developed and curated by Artistic Director Melek Zeynep Bulut and Forum Content Advisor Beatrice Galilee. Organized around the theme "Worlds in Contact," the programme featured contributions from figures including Lina Ghotmeh, Marina Tabassum, Liam Young, Tom Dixon, Lesley Lokko, Ma Yansong, Andrew Waugh, and Olaf Grawer, positioning Istanbul as a platform for interdisciplinary discussions on design and the built environment.

Global Design Forum Istanbul Concludes First Edition With City-Wide Programme of Installations and Talks - Image 1 of 4Global Design Forum Istanbul Concludes First Edition With City-Wide Programme of Installations and Talks - Image 2 of 4Global Design Forum Istanbul Concludes First Edition With City-Wide Programme of Installations and Talks - Image 3 of 4Global Design Forum Istanbul Concludes First Edition With City-Wide Programme of Installations and Talks - Image 4 of 4Global Design Forum Istanbul Concludes First Edition With City-Wide Programme of Installations and Talks - More Images+ 2

ArchDaily’s Selection: 15 Installations and Exhibitions from Milan Design Week 2026

Bringing together a week of exhibitions, installations, and industry exchange, Milan Design Week 2026 and the 64th edition of Salone del Mobile.Milano concluded on April 26, following six days of programming across the fairgrounds and the city. Held from April 20 to 26, this year's events reaffirmed Milan's central role within the global design calendar. The Salone itself drew over 316,000 visitors from 167 countries. With 1,900 brands represented and a strong international presence, the week once again operated as both a cultural platform and an economic engine, navigating a context marked by market uncertainty while maintaining its capacity to convene designers, institutions, and industry leaders at a global scale.

ArchDaily’s Selection: 15 Installations and Exhibitions from Milan Design Week 2026 - Image 1 of 4ArchDaily’s Selection: 15 Installations and Exhibitions from Milan Design Week 2026 - Image 2 of 4ArchDaily’s Selection: 15 Installations and Exhibitions from Milan Design Week 2026 - Image 3 of 4ArchDaily’s Selection: 15 Installations and Exhibitions from Milan Design Week 2026 - Image 4 of 4ArchDaily’s Selection: 15 Installations and Exhibitions from Milan Design Week 2026 - More Images+ 26

Milan Design Week 2026: Must-See Installations, Exhibitions, and Events

From April 20 to 26, Milan Design Week 2026 returns as a citywide platform where design operates as both a cultural practice and a form of exploration. Framed by the Fuorisalone theme "Be the Project," this year's edition shifts the focus from outcome to process, positioning design as a dynamic, human-centered act shaped by intuition, responsibility, and transformation. Installations and exhibitions across the city foreground making as an open-ended condition, one that embraces error, temporality, and experimentation as integral to creative production. Within this context, design becomes a space of exchange between disciplines, materials, and intelligences, reflecting broader conversations around sustainability, emerging technologies, and the evolving relationship between the physical and the digital.

Milan Design Week 2026: Must-See Installations, Exhibitions, and Events - Image 1 of 4Milan Design Week 2026: Must-See Installations, Exhibitions, and Events - Image 2 of 4Milan Design Week 2026: Must-See Installations, Exhibitions, and Events - Image 3 of 4Milan Design Week 2026: Must-See Installations, Exhibitions, and Events - Image 4 of 4Milan Design Week 2026: Must-See Installations, Exhibitions, and Events - More Images+ 14

14 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World

Throughout 2025 and early 2026, numerous museum projects were announced, advanced, or broke ground across multiple regions, with completion timelines largely extending from 2026 to 2030. Located across Asia, Europe, North America, and Central Asia, these developments reflect ongoing shifts in the role of cultural institutions within contemporary cities. Increasingly, museums are conceived not only as exhibition venues but as public-facing environments that accommodate education, research, and civic engagement. This expanded programmatic scope is often accompanied by architectural strategies that respond to urban conditions, spatial continuity, and the integration of cultural infrastructure into broader city-making processes.

14 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 1 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 2 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 3 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - Image 4 of 414 Major Museum Projects Currently in Progress Around the World - More Images+ 8

Meet the 15 Winning Projects of the 2026 ArchDaily Building of the Year Awards

A revitalized canning factory in a coastal Portuguese city, a memorial park in Ethiopia, a small-town Brazilian home, a wooden pavilion evoking Bahrain's heritage, and 11 other visionary projects comprise the winners of the 2026 ArchDaily Building of the Year Awards. Chosen over three weeks of public voting, the winners are representative of the current architectural landscape, reflecting a diversity of approaches, materialities and aesthetics, while also showcasing common threads across cultures.

In its 17th edition, this year's Building of the Year Awards received more than 120,000 votes from over 100 countries, marking a record-breaking year for the world's largest community-driven architecture award. The winners represent 14 different countries, cultures and perspectives, coming from Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Ethiopia, Germany, India, Indonesia, Japan, Portugal, South Korea, United States and Vietnam.

Frida Escobedo and Ma Yansong Among 11 International Architects Named 2026 AIA Honorary Fellows

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has elevated 78 architects to its College of Fellows, recognizing members whose work has demonstrated a sustained impact on the discipline and on society. Fellowship is described as one of the Institute's highest honors and is conferred upon architects who have advanced design excellence, strengthened professional practice, expanded architectural education, or contributed to public service. Selected by a nine-member Jury of Fellows chaired by Sanford Garner of RG Collaborative, this year's cohort reflects a wide range of geographic and professional backgrounds, with honorees representing firms, public agencies, and academic institutions across the United States.

Frida Escobedo and Ma Yansong Among 11 International Architects Named 2026 AIA Honorary Fellows - Image 1 of 4Frida Escobedo and Ma Yansong Among 11 International Architects Named 2026 AIA Honorary Fellows - Image 2 of 4Frida Escobedo and Ma Yansong Among 11 International Architects Named 2026 AIA Honorary Fellows - Image 3 of 4Frida Escobedo and Ma Yansong Among 11 International Architects Named 2026 AIA Honorary Fellows - Image 4 of 4Frida Escobedo and Ma Yansong Among 11 International Architects Named 2026 AIA Honorary Fellows - More Images+ 9

Serpentine Pavilion 2026 and Lina Ghotmeh’s House of Performing Arts: This Week’s Review

Architecture's public role emerges as a central theme across recent announcements, institutional projects, and professional programs. The selection of the 2026 Serpentine Pavilion designer foregrounds architecture as a space for public encounter and material inquiry, while major civic and cultural projects point to renewed investment in institutions that support education, exchange, and urban continuity. Alongside these developments, international award programs and policy-aligned initiatives continue to situate architecture within broader conversations on sustainability, social responsibility, and long-term impact, highlighting how design decisions at both intimate and monumental scales respond to shared environmental and civic challenges.

Serpentine Pavilion 2026 and Lina Ghotmeh’s House of Performing Arts: This Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4Serpentine Pavilion 2026 and Lina Ghotmeh’s House of Performing Arts: This Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4Serpentine Pavilion 2026 and Lina Ghotmeh’s House of Performing Arts: This Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4Serpentine Pavilion 2026 and Lina Ghotmeh’s House of Performing Arts: This Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4Serpentine Pavilion 2026 and Lina Ghotmeh’s House of Performing Arts: This Week’s Review - More Images+ 8

Architects of the Global South: 10 Pavilions and Installations That Shaped 2025

In a global landscape marked by accelerated change, 2025 emerged as a decisive year for architecture—not only because of the major events that animated the international circuit, but above all because of the voices that stood out within them. From the Venice Architecture Biennale to Expo Osaka, pavilions and installations from the Global South ceased to function as mere exhibition gestures and instead asserted themselves as territories of memory, resistance, and imagination, articulating narratives that expand the horizons of contemporary architectural debate.

Across these works, tradition and future move side by side: ancestral materials reappear in reimagined forms, historical wounds are given sensitive expression, and social urgency is translated into proposals that challenge established ways of building and inhabiting the world.

Architects of the Global South: 10 Pavilions and Installations That Shaped 2025 - Image 3 of 4Architects of the Global South: 10 Pavilions and Installations That Shaped 2025 - Image 1 of 4Architects of the Global South: 10 Pavilions and Installations That Shaped 2025 - Image 2 of 4Architects of the Global South: 10 Pavilions and Installations That Shaped 2025 - Image 14 of 4Architects of the Global South: 10 Pavilions and Installations That Shaped 2025 - More Images+ 13

London’s National Gallery Expansion and Lina Ghotmeh’s Mathaf Campus Project: This Week’s Review

This week's architectural news reflects a broad engagement with how institutions, practitioners, and cultural platforms are positioning themselves in relation to both legacy and long-term change. Across museums, galleries, and major cultural events, architecture is being framed as an evolving public infrastructure, one that must respond to expanding collections, shifting curatorial models, and growing expectations around accessibility, sustainability, and civic presence. Alongside these institutional developments, professional recognitions and appointments have foregrounded practices rooted in site specificity, conservation, and critical research, highlighting architecture's role in mediating between historical contexts and contemporary needs.

London’s National Gallery Expansion and Lina Ghotmeh’s Mathaf Campus Project: This Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4London’s National Gallery Expansion and Lina Ghotmeh’s Mathaf Campus Project: This Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4London’s National Gallery Expansion and Lina Ghotmeh’s Mathaf Campus Project: This Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4London’s National Gallery Expansion and Lina Ghotmeh’s Mathaf Campus Project: This Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4London’s National Gallery Expansion and Lina Ghotmeh’s Mathaf Campus Project: This Week’s Review - More Images+ 7

The 20 Most Anticipated Projects of 2026

As 2025 concludes, we look ahead to 2026, a year scheduled to deliver a diverse range of significant architectural projects across the world. The year is particularly notable for the completion of new infrastructure and cultural buildings, including long-term projects. Europe will be in the spotlight of the new year with the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. This event will feature projects such as the Olympic Village by SOM and the Winter Olympics Arena by David Chipperfield Architects. Also in Milan, BIG is set to complete construction of the City Wave project as part of a new business district in the city. At the same time, after more than 140 years of its establishment, the architects around the world will also be watching for the long-awaited completion of Antoni Gaudí's La Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, announced for 2026.

The 20 Most Anticipated Projects of 2026 - Image 2 of 4The 20 Most Anticipated Projects of 2026 - Image 8 of 4The 20 Most Anticipated Projects of 2026 - Image 10 of 4The 20 Most Anticipated Projects of 2026 - Image 11 of 4The 20 Most Anticipated Projects of 2026 - More Images+ 18

ArchDaily's Best Architectural Projects of 2025

As the year culminates, it's once again time for the ArchDaily team of curators to reflect on the best-performing projects of 2025 and consider what readers were most interested in. Through this diverse overview, we assess the cross-continental similarities and differences in trends and construction development. This year brought us many grand cultural and public spaces by Lina Ghotmeh, BIG, Zaha Hadid Architects, DnA, and Serie Architects, who populated events like Expo Osaka and the Venice Biennale, as well as a surprising number of museums and public or landscape works in China and the rest of the Asian continent. However, while these were sought-after projects, the leading works remained, unsurprisingly, residential projects.

More specifically, the houses that were most viewed on the ArchDaily global site were concrete houses that bore considerable injections of greenery and landscape focus. They propose layouts highlighting voids and double heights, as well as inner courtyards or large openings to the exterior. While some references did suggest traditional or vernacular elements, modernist revivals were still predominant. Material trends are much more tame, with a recurrence of raw concrete use, as wood and stone were common accent elements. Still, the more interesting thing about the works this year is the efforts brought by architects in situating and setting the projects within their surroundings, bringing special attention to landscape and how projects merged with nature.

ArchDaily's Best Architectural Projects of 2025 - SustainabilityArchDaily's Best Architectural Projects of 2025 - SustainabilityArchDaily's Best Architectural Projects of 2025 - SustainabilityArchDaily's Best Architectural Projects of 2025 - SustainabilityArchDaily's Best Architectural Projects of 2025 - More Images+ 96

Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction Reveals 20 Winning Projects of the 2025 Holcim Awards

The Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction has announced the 20 winning projects of the 2025 Holcim Foundation Awards, recognizing contributions to sustainable design and construction across five regions: Asia Pacific, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa, and North America. This year's selection spans a broad range of scales, from a 200-square-meter semi-permanent school in a Kenyan forest to major urban regeneration initiatives in Madrid, Dhaka, and Shenzhen, reflecting the diversity and reach of sustainable architecture today. This year introduces a new Grand Prize format, replacing the traditional Gold, Silver, and Bronze rankings. Each region will now honor one Grand Prize winner, emphasizing excellence without comparison and acknowledging the diverse approaches to sustainability.

Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction Reveals 20 Winning Projects of the 2025 Holcim Awards - Image 1 of 4Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction Reveals 20 Winning Projects of the 2025 Holcim Awards - Image 2 of 4Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction Reveals 20 Winning Projects of the 2025 Holcim Awards - Image 3 of 4Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction Reveals 20 Winning Projects of the 2025 Holcim Awards - Image 4 of 4Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction Reveals 20 Winning Projects of the 2025 Holcim Awards - More Images+ 17

Climate, Craft, and Continuity: Behind the Global Recognition of Bahrain’s Architecture

Bahrain's architectural participations in the international exhibitions have gained increasing global recognition, marked most recently by major awards at Expo 2025 Osaka and the Venice Architecture Biennale. These milestones reflect a broader trajectory in which the country's design culture, rooted in climatic intelligence and cultural continuity, has become a prominent voice in international conversations on context-driven architecture.

This growing visibility builds upon a deep architectural lineage. Bahrain's identity has long been shaped by its position as a maritime crossroads of the Arabian Gulf, where the legacy of pearling settlements and the compact urban fabric of Muharraq and Manama reveal a dialogue between local traditions and global exchange. Today, that dialogue evolves through practices that merge preservation with experimentation, translating heritage into a contemporary architectural language that is both place-specific and forward-looking.

Climate, Craft, and Continuity:  Behind the Global Recognition of Bahrain’s Architecture - Image 1 of 4Climate, Craft, and Continuity:  Behind the Global Recognition of Bahrain’s Architecture - Image 2 of 4Climate, Craft, and Continuity:  Behind the Global Recognition of Bahrain’s Architecture - Image 3 of 4Climate, Craft, and Continuity:  Behind the Global Recognition of Bahrain’s Architecture - Image 4 of 4Climate, Craft, and Continuity:  Behind the Global Recognition of Bahrain’s Architecture - More Images+ 4

Lina Ghotmeh’s Bahrain Pavilion Wins Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape at Expo 2025 Osaka

The Kingdom of Bahrain's Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka, designed by Lina Ghotmeh – Architecture, titled "Connecting Seas," has been awarded the Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape in the self-built pavilions under 1,500 square meters category. Presented by the Bureau International des Expositions (BIE), the award recognizes architectural excellence in spatial design, creativity, and sustainability. The announcement was made at an official award ceremony in Osaka, Japan, attended by commissioners general and representatives from participating nations. Commissioned by the Bahrain Authority for Culture and Antiquities (BACA), this marks the country's fourth participation in a World Expo and reflects an ongoing commitment to expressing national identity through architecture and cultural dialogue.

Lina Ghotmeh’s Bahrain Pavilion Wins Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape at Expo 2025 Osaka - Image 1 of 4Lina Ghotmeh’s Bahrain Pavilion Wins Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape at Expo 2025 Osaka - Image 2 of 4Lina Ghotmeh’s Bahrain Pavilion Wins Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape at Expo 2025 Osaka - Image 3 of 4Lina Ghotmeh’s Bahrain Pavilion Wins Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape at Expo 2025 Osaka - Image 4 of 4Lina Ghotmeh’s Bahrain Pavilion Wins Gold Award for Best Architecture and Landscape at Expo 2025 Osaka - More Images+ 4

Beyond Private Dining: Exploring the Communal Table as Public Space Infrastructure

The habit of sitting at the table and sharing a specific moment with other people has been present for centuries in the most diverse cultures. The Greek Symposium, Roman Convivium, Medieval Feasts and Banquets, and Parisian Salons are just a few examples of how this custom was historically built and has been relevant in social and political negotiations, intellectual discussions, and philosophical debates.

Commensality often serves as a ritual for bonding, negotiation, and celebrating important events. In many Spanish-speaking cultures, the stretch of time after the meal when the entire family stays seated and talks is so present that there is a word for it: sobremesa — literally translated as "upon the table" (though in Spanish it more accurately means "dessert" or "after-meal conversation"). But, despite often being associated with sharing a meal, the table can be considered a flexible platform open to many possibilities for appropriation and interaction.

Beyond Private Dining: Exploring the Communal Table as Public Space Infrastructure - Image 1 of 4Beyond Private Dining: Exploring the Communal Table as Public Space Infrastructure - Image 2 of 4Beyond Private Dining: Exploring the Communal Table as Public Space Infrastructure - Image 3 of 4Beyond Private Dining: Exploring the Communal Table as Public Space Infrastructure - Image 4 of 4Beyond Private Dining: Exploring the Communal Table as Public Space Infrastructure - More Images+ 9

Lina Ghotmeh on Memory, Museums, and the Archaeology of the Future

Subscriber Access | 

Known today for her poetic yet rigorous approach to architecture, Lina Ghotmeh has become one of the most compelling voices in contemporary design. Her work spans continents, from the British Museum's Western Range redesign in London to AlUla's Contemporary Art Museum, and includes landmark commissions such as the Serpentine Pavilion in London, Stone Garden in Beirut, the Bahrain Pavilion at the 2025 Expo Osaka, and the Estonian National Museum in Tartu, Estonia which she won the competition to design at just 25. Through a palimpsest of projects, Ghotmeh has established a distinctive architectural language that bridges memory and contemporary life. Wherever she builds, her process captures a constant dialogue between people, place, past and future.

Lina Ghotmeh on Memory, Museums, and the Archaeology of the Future - Image 1 of 4Lina Ghotmeh on Memory, Museums, and the Archaeology of the Future - Image 2 of 4Lina Ghotmeh on Memory, Museums, and the Archaeology of the Future - Image 3 of 4Lina Ghotmeh on Memory, Museums, and the Archaeology of the Future - Image 4 of 4Lina Ghotmeh on Memory, Museums, and the Archaeology of the Future - More Images+ 7

Rising Architectural Voices and New Commissions: The Week’s Review

This week, architectural conversations were shaped by themes of resilience, equity, and cultural relevance, brought into focus by World Architecture Day. Across global contexts, the discipline continues to expand its understanding of strength, not only as structural endurance but as a framework for inclusive, adaptable, and environmentally conscious design. From strategies for gender-equitable public space to new commissions grounded in memory and reconciliation, recent developments reflect how architecture is increasingly positioned as a tool for social engagement and long-term stewardship in the face of ongoing global challenges.

Rising Architectural Voices and New Commissions: The Week’s Review - Image 1 of 4Rising Architectural Voices and New Commissions: The Week’s Review - Image 2 of 4Rising Architectural Voices and New Commissions: The Week’s Review - Image 3 of 4Rising Architectural Voices and New Commissions: The Week’s Review - Image 4 of 4Rising Architectural Voices and New Commissions: The Week’s Review - More Images+ 3

Lina Ghotmeh Named to TIME100 Next 2025 as One of the World’s Most Influential Rising Stars

French-Lebanese architect Lina Ghotmeh has been recognized on the TIME100 Next 2025 list, an annual ranking of emerging leaders and innovators across disciplines. Known for her sensitive approach to context and materiality, Ghotmeh has built an international portfolio that bridges tradition and modernity. In her TIME profile, written by Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, Ghotmeh is praised for combining historical awareness with forward-looking experimentation. The acknowledgment positions her as the only architect on this year's list, highlighting the continued presence of design voices in a ranking that typically spans entertainment, politics, science, and business.

Lina Ghotmeh Named to TIME100 Next 2025 as One of the World’s Most Influential Rising Stars - Image 1 of 4Lina Ghotmeh Named to TIME100 Next 2025 as One of the World’s Most Influential Rising Stars - Image 2 of 4Lina Ghotmeh Named to TIME100 Next 2025 as One of the World’s Most Influential Rising Stars - Image 3 of 4Lina Ghotmeh Named to TIME100 Next 2025 as One of the World’s Most Influential Rising Stars - Image 4 of 4Lina Ghotmeh Named to TIME100 Next 2025 as One of the World’s Most Influential Rising Stars - More Images+ 11