RIBA International Awards 2026 Shortlist Announced

52 Exceptional Projects Shortlisted for the International Awards for Excellence

London – 5th March 2026 – The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has revealed the 52 projects shortlisted for the 2026 RIBA International Awards for Excellence. Celebrating outstanding architecture from 18 countries, the biennial awards highlight design that tackles global challenges, including climate change, limited resources, social equity and rapid urban growth.

The shortlist features projects from 5 continents, ranging from net-zero industrial hubs to refugee art centres. The list includes projects from global practices – including David Chipperfield Architects (UK/Germany), Foster + Partners (UK), Snøhetta (Norway/USA), Hassell (Australia) and WOHA (Singapore), alongside noteworthy boutique firms, including MAKER architecten (Belgium) and Studio Mumbai (India).

Neil Gillespie, Awards Group Chair, said:

“The RIBA International Awards for Excellence celebrate incredible diversity and creativity across the world. These projects show howarchitects can respond to complex social, cultural, and environmental challenges, from revitalising communities and preserving heritage to pioneering sustainable and technologically innovative solutions. They demonstrate the power of architecture to connect people, strengthen identity, and create inclusive, resilient places for future generations.”

The winners of the RIBA International Awards for Excellence will be announced on 11 June 2026.

Culture and public spaces

Across the shortlist, architects reimagine cultural and civic buildings as places of openness, renewal and shared identity. In China, the Beijing Library and Shanghai Library East redefine the library as a civic landmark for the digital age, while in Norway, Kunstsilo transforms a former grain silo into a landmark art museum that retains its industrial past. In Uganda, the Bidi Bidi Performing Arts Centre acts as a vital cultural anchor within one of the world’s largest refugee settlements, supporting creative expression and local identity.

Adaptive reuse features strongly, from Rockbund Shanghai’s revitalisation of historic. concession-era buildings into a mixed-use cultural district, to Belgium’s Royale Belge, which reimagines a 1960s corporate landmark as a flexible civic and commercial hub, extending the life of a modernist icon.

Community-led projects further demonstrate architecture’s social role. Bangladesh’s Zebun Nessa Mosque reinterprets religious architecture as a net-zero ‘breathing pavilion’, using light, ventilation and shared space to connect worship and community life. South Korea’s Dokebi Platform transforms an overlooked car park into a neighbourhood gathering space, and Iran’s Nedarag Guesthouse reworks traditional forms and materials into a shared courtyard building that supports hospitality, social ties and local economic opportunity.

Education & Innovation

Shortlisted projects demonstrate how learning environments can respond to environmental challenges, social complexity and rapid urban change. In Bangladesh, BRAC University transforms a former landfill site into a lush, vertical campus shaped by passive cooling and landscape-led design. In India, Sondara Gurukulam employs a community-centred approach rooted in local climate, culture and social need, creating a light-filled, naturally ventilated campus of terraces and plazas that anchors the school within its landscape. The DY Patil Centre of Excellence integrates LEED Platinum sustainability with shaded courtyards, a two-acre sky garden and craft-led design to reinforce the relationship between wellbeing and education.

Several projects position schools as civic and cultural anchors. In Australia, Darlington Public School combines flexible learning hubs with outdoor spaces that reflect its urban context and Aboriginal heritage, embedding inclusion and local narratives into everyday learning. In China, the Foreign Language School Affiliated to Longhua Academy of Educational Science addresses acute educational demand through agile construction, using lightweight structures and circular layouts that create adaptable, climate-responsive learning spaces on temporary urban land.

Innovation also extends to using buildings as teaching tools. In Belgium, the WVDM Living Lab transforms at-risk modernist student housing into a live testbed for circular renovation, material reuse, and modular adaptability, prioritising process over fixed outcomes and reframing preservation as a collaborative, evolving practice.

Sustainability & Housing

Housing on the shortlist tackles one of architecture’s most urgent challenges: delivering density, affordability, and environmental responsibility without compromising quality of life. In Mexico, KON-TIGO provides incremental infill housing that grows over time, fostering community resilience in a neighbourhood affected by Hurricane Otis in 2023. In Belgium, YIMBY (Yes In My BackYard) revitalises a former garden-city district through small-scale, participatory interventions that reconnect homes, green spaces and social life.

Several projects rethink urban living through adaptive reuse and low-carbon construction. In Paris, France, Wood Up delivers 132 timber housing units, a climbing gym and a neighbourhood cafe, reducing carbon emissions and setting a benchmark for urban development. Switzerland’s Transformation Warmbächli converts a former industrial warehouse into cooperative housing, prioritising shared living and resource efficiency. Other projects respond to landscape, heritage and materials.

Château de Beaucastel in France integrates low-tech sustainable strategies within a historic estate. In Australia, Burnt Earth Beach House uses handcrafted terracotta to anchor the building within its coastal environment, while Gold Creek embeds passive bushfire resilience into its design logic. In India, OH HO Residence reinterprets vernacular stone construction through a contemporary courtyard, and House of Memories translates personal narrative into a climate-responsive home.

Infrastructure & Industry

Shortlisted projects show how infrastructure and industrial architecture can be sustainable, innovative, and socially engaging. Vietnam’s Urban Farming Office integrates food production directly into the workplace, challenging conventional separations between labour and landscape and redefining the office as a site of innovation. Norway’s The Plus sets new standards for carbon-neutral timber manufacturing, reframing the factory as both a workspace and architectural landmark. China’s Shenzhen Energy Ring, the world’s largest waste-to-energy plant, transforms heavy infrastructure into a civic space, combining public access, education, energy generation and landfill management.

In Mexico, the Mezcal Production Palenque combines vernacular craft traditions with ecological production methods, and the Czech Republic’s Štvanice Footbridge uses ultra-high-performance concrete to provide a fluid, durable, and human-scale pedestrian and cyclist connection. Collectively, these projects challenge industrial typologies, integrating infrastructure into the public realm.

Project name Architectural practice City/Region Project sector
Architects’ Studio O’Donnell + Tuomey Dublin, Ireland Offices
Beijing Library Snøhetta, East China Architectural Design & Research Institute Beijing, China Culture and entertainment
Beijing Performing Arts Center Schmidt Hammer Lassen, and Perkins & Will Beijing, China Culture and entertainment
Bidi Bidi Performing Arts Centre Hassell Yumbe District, Uganda Culture and entertainment
BRAC University WOHA Dhaka, Bangladesh Education
Burnt Earth Beach House Wardle Anglesea, Australia House – new house, extension, conversion, alteration
Chapel of Music Vector Architects Qinghuangdao, China Culture and entertainment
Château de Beaucastel Studio Mumbai and Studio Méditerranée Courthézon, France Mixed
Church of the Living God Angelo Candalepas and Associates Sydney, Australia Community and other public
Darlington Public School fjcstudio Sydney, Australia Education
Dokebi Platform Plot Architects Seoul, Korea, Republic of Community and other public
DY Patil Centre of Excellence Foster + Partners Maharashtra, India Education
Foreign Language School Affiliated to Longhua Academy of Educational Sciences Unitinno Architectural Technology Development Company Limited Shenzhen, China Education
Gold Creek Brian Steendijk, Glenn Murcutt in collaboration Brookfield, Brisbane, Australia House – new house, extension, conversion, alteration
GREEN HILL – Transforming Closed Technological Industrial Remains into an Open and Shared Ecological Complex Tongii Architectural Design (Group) Co Shanghai, China Community and other public
HOUSE OF MEMORIES STUDIO GRAVITAS IN COLLABORATION WITH ELEEMENTE AND BODH DESIGN GROUP TUMKUR, India House – new house, extension, conversion, alteration
Jingyang Camphor Court Vector Architects Jingdewzhen, China Community and other public
KinderKunstLabor Schenker Salvi Weber St. Pölten, Austria Culture and entertainment
KON-TIGO Manuel Cervantes Estudio Guerrero, mexico, Mexico House – new house, extension, conversion, alteration
Kunstsilo Mestres Wåge, BAX, Mendoza Partida Kristiansand, Norway Culture and entertainment
Mezcal Production Palenque Estudio ALA I Armida Fernández and Luis Enrique Flores Jiquilpan de Juárez, Michoacán, México, Mexico Industrial
MONOSPINAL Makoto Yamaguchi Design Taito-ku, Japan Offices
Multi-Disaster Reduction Engineering Complex Tongji Architectural Design (Group) Co., Ltd. Jiading District, Shanghai, China Education
Nedarag Guesthouse Next Office Sistan and Baluchestan province, Iran, Islamic Republic of Community and other public
OH HO Residence Play Architecture Bangalore, India House – new house, extension, conversion, alteration
Parikrama SPASM Design Architects Nandgaon, India House – new house, extension, conversion, alteration
Ras Houses Sanjay Puri Architects Ras, Rajasthan, India Housing – multiple  homes
Revitalization of Village Heritage in Yong’an Village College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Tongji University Dali City, China Mixed
Rockbund Shanghai David Chipperfield Architects (Historical Buildings)

Arquitectonica (New Buildings)

Shanghai, China Mixed
Royale Belge Caruso St John Architects and Bovenbouw and Architectuur with DDS+ Watermael-Boitsfort, Brussels, Belgium Mixed
School at Joram, Arunachal Pradesh, India Studio Advaita Joram village, Arunachal Pradesh, India Education
Service Station Under Wuning Road Bridge, Suzhou Creek Atelier Z+ Shanghai, China Community and other public
Shanghai Library East Schmidt Hammer Lassen Shanghai, China Culture and entertainment
Shenzhen Energy Ring Schmidt Hammer Lassen, Gottlieb Paludan Architects Shenzhen, China Industrial
Sondara Gurukulam Studio Advaita Domri, Dist Beed, India Education
Štvanice Footbridge in Prague Petr Tej, Marek Blank and Jan Mourek (Atelier Bridge Structures, Atelier Petr Tej, Blank architekti) Prague, Czech Republic Transport
Taoxichuan Ceramic Culture Industrial Park Jie Zhang, Beijing An-Design Architects, THUPDI Jingdezhen City, China Masterplan
Tenjincho place Hiroyuki Ito Architects Tokyo, Japan Housing – multiple  homes
Terra Cotta Workshop Tropical Space Quang Nam, Viet Nam Mixed
The GEAR KAJIMA DESIGN Singapore, Singapore Offices
The Plus BIG – Bjarke Ingels Group Magnor, Norway Mixed
The Porter House Hotel Angelo Candalepas and Associates Sydney, Australia Mixed
The White Renovation Olgoo Architects Tehran, Iran, Islamic Republic of Offices
Transformation Warmbächli BHSF Architektur & Städtebau, Zurich / Munich Berne, Switzerland Housing – multiple  homes
Urban Farming Office VTN Architects Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam Offices
West Wusutu Village Community Center in Hohhot Inner Mongolian Grand Architecture Design Co. Hohhot, China Culture and entertainment
Wood Up – 132 housing units, a climbing gym and a neighborhood café in Paris 13th LAN – Local Architecture Network Paris, France Housing – multiple  homes
WVDM Living Lab MAKER architecten Brussels, Belgium Mixed
Yaoli Village Courier station SuiPingYiLi Architecture Studio Nanping, China Culture and entertainment
YIMBY (Yes In My BackYard) – social and urban infill project MAKER architecten Kortrijk, Belgium Housing – multiple  homes
Z33 Francesca Torzo Architetto Hasselt, Belgium Culture and entertainment
Zebun Nessa Mosque: A Spiritual-Social Space between Land and Water Saiqa Iqbal Meghna / Studio Morphogenesis Ltd. Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh Community and other public