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An architectural competition is a type of design competition, in which an entity that intends to build new work, or is just seeking ideas, invites architects to submit design proposals. The winning scheme is usually chosen by an independent panel of design professionals and stakeholders (such as government and local representatives, the leadership of a cultural institution, etc.). This process is often used to generate new ideas for building and/or landscape design, stimulate public debate, generate publicity for the project and the commissioning entity, and help emerging designers gain exposure (and potentially win commissions that might be out of reach to them otherwise). Architectural competitions are often, though not exclusively, used to award commissions for public buildings: In some countries, rules for tendering public building contracts stipulate some form of open architectural competition.<ref name="DO 1994">Jacques Cabanieu: Competitions and Architectural Excellence, in Places 9:2, MIT, 1994, retrieved 2009-09-25</ref>

Winning first prize in a competition does not guarantee that the project will be realized. The commissioning body often has the right to veto the winning design, and both requirements and finances may change, thwarting the original intention. (Many competitions have been held and won before the financing was even in place.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>) The 2002 World Trade Center site design competition is an example of a highly publicized competition, in which only the basic elements of the winning design by Daniel Libeskind appeared in the finished project.

HistoryEdit

Architectural competitions have existed for more than 2,500 years. The design of the Acropolis, in Athens, resulted from an architectural competition in 448 B.C., as did several European cathedrals in the Middle Ages. During the Renaissance, many projects initiated by the papacy or other top religious bodies were decided through design competition. Examples are the Spanish Steps in Rome and, famously, the competition for the dome of the Florence Cathedral, won by Filippo Brunelleschi in 1419. Open competitions emerged in the late 18th century in countries including the United States, Great Britain, Ireland, France, and Sweden.<ref name="safa">130 Years of Finnish architectural competitions, retrieved 2009-09-23</ref>

In 19th century England and Ireland, more than 2,500 competitions were held within five decades, with 362 in London alone. The Royal Institute of British Architects drafted its first set of rules in 1839 and its first formal regulations in 1872. German regulations had been introduced in 1867. In the same period, in the Netherlands, an association for the advancement of architecture (Maatschappij tot Bevordering van de Bouwkunst) started organizing conceptual competitions to stimulate creativity among architects.<ref>De Jong, Cees and Mattie, Erik: Architectural Competitions 1792-1949, Taschen, 1997, Template:ISBN</ref>

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Competition typesEdit

Various competition paradigms exist, most prominently the following types or combinations of them:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Open vs, Invited (or Otherwise Limited) Competitions:

  • Open Competitions: international, national, regional, or otherwise defined in scope, they typically have little or no restrictions on who may enter.
  • Invited, Limited, Pre-Qualified, or otherwise Non-Open Competitions restrict who may participate (and, in many cases, also provide stipends or honorariums to participants) Project vs. Ideas Competitions:
  • Project Competitions: seek schemes for specific building and/ or landscape projects that the commissioning entities intend to realize
  • Ideas Competitions: held for the purpose of generating new ideas (in some cases, particularly novel, provocative, or visionary ones) Single- vs. Multi-stage Competitions
  • Single-Stage Competitions:
  • Multi-Stage Competitions (two stages or more), many of which invite only short-listed participants, a limited group of chosen semi-finalists, to continue to the next stage(s), for which they might receive a stipend or honorarium to help cover costs Anonymous vs. Non-Anonymous Competitions:
  • Anonymous Competitions: judged or juried, for greater objectivity, with no knowledge of the names or identities of participating individuals and firms
  • Non-Anonymous (or Cooperative) Competitions: Competing architects and firms are openly identified from the start (competitors might even be invited to present their projects in person to the jury to explain design strategies and provide for project-specific dialogue) Recurrent vs. One-Time Competitions:
  • Seasonal or Annual Competitions: These recurrent competitions, including Europan, put out periodical calls for entries. They may, or may not, result in an actual constructed project, depending on the set-up.
  • One-Time Competitions, held for a specific project
  • Student Design Competitions

Rules and guidelinesEdit

The rules of each competition are defined by the organizer; they often, however, follow the guidelines provided by the International Union of Architects<ref>UIA competition guide Template:Webarchive, retrieved 2009-10-10</ref> or the relevant national or regional architectural organization. Competition guidelines define roles, responsibilities, processes, and procedures within a competition<ref>Canadian competition rules Template:Webarchive, retrieved 2009-10-10</ref> and provide guidance on possible competition types, eligibility criteria, jury composition, participation conditions, payments, prizes, publication of results, and other aspects.<ref>Finnish competition rules Template:Webarchive, retrieved 2009-10-10</ref><ref>Indian competition guidelines Template:Webarchive, retrieved 2009-10-10</ref>

In France and Germany, design competitions are compulsory for all public buildings exceeding a certain cost.<ref name="DO 1994"/><ref>German competition guidelines Template:Webarchive, retrieved 2015-09-24</ref>

Major international architectural design competitionsEdit

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Most significant among architectural competitions are the ones which are internationally open, attract a large number of design submissions, and the winning design is built.

Competition Name Location Year Winner(s) Design entries
Grand Egyptian Museum Template:Flagicon Giza 2002 Heneghan Peng Architects 1,557<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
White House Template:Flagicon Washington D.C. 1792 James Hoban 9
Walhalla memorial Template:Flagicon Donaustauf 1816 Leo von Klenze
Houses of Parliament Template:Flagicon London 1835 Charles Barry 98
Vienna Ring Road Template:Flagicon Vienna 1858 Ludwig Förster - Friedrich August von Stache - Eduard van der Nüll and August Sicard von Sicardsburg 85
Hofoper Template:Flagicon Vienna 1860 Eduard van der Nüll and August Sicard von Sicardsburg
Paris Opera Template:Flagicon Paris 1860 Charles Garnier 171
Rijksmuseum Template:Flagicon Amsterdam 1863 P.J.H. Cuypers
Law Courts Template:Flagicon London 1866 George Edmund Street 11
Reichstag Template:Flagicon Berlin 1872 Paul Wallot
Beurs Template:Flagicon Amsterdam 1884 Hendrik Petrus Berlage
World Exhibition tower Template:Flagicon Paris 1889 Gustave Eiffel
Austrian Postal Savings Bank Template:Flagicon Vienna 1903 Otto Wagner
Stockholm City Hall Template:Flagicon Stockholm 1903 Ragnar Östberg
Helsinki Central railway station Template:Flagicon Helsinki 1903 Eliel Saarinen 21
Peace Palace Template:Flagicon The Hague 1905 Louis Marie Cordonnier and J.A.G. van der Steur
Tribune Tower Template:Flagicon Chicago 1922 John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood 260
League of Nations Building Template:Flagicon Geneva 1926 Henri Paul Nénot & Julien Flegenheimer; Carlo Broggi; Camille Lefèvre; Giuseppe Vago 377
Lenin Library Template:Flagicon Moscow 1928 Vladimir Shchuko
ANZAC War Memorial Template:Flagicon Sydney 1929 Charles Bruce Dellit 117
Termini Station Template:Flagicon Rome 1947 Leo Calini, Eugenio Montuori, Massimo Castellazzi, Vasco Fadigati, Achille Pintonello and Annibale Vitellozzi
Town Hall and Church Template:Flagicon Seinäjoki 1950 Alvar Aalto
Sydney Opera House Template:Flagicon Sydney 1955 Jørn Utzon 233
Toronto City Hall Template:Flagicon Toronto 1956 Viljo Revell 500
Amsterdam City Hall Template:Flagicon Amsterdam 1967 Wilhelm Holzbauer, Cees Dam, B. Bijvoet and G.H.M. Holt 804
Supreme Court Template:Flagicon Tokyo 1968 Shin-ichi Okada 217
Centre Georges Pompidou Template:Flagicon Paris 1971 Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers 681
San Cataldo Cemetery Template:Flagicon Modena 1971 Aldo Rossi and Gianni Braghieri
Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank Template:Flagicon Hong Kong 1979 Foster Associates
Parliament House of Australia Template:Flagicon Canberra 1979 Romaldo Giurgola 329
Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie Template:Flagicon Paris 1980 Adrien Fainsilber and Sylvain Mercier
La Grande Arche de la Défense Template:Flagicon Paris 1982 Johan Otto von Spreckelsen 420
Parc de la Villette Template:Flagicon Paris 1982 Bernard Tschumi 471
Opéra Bastille Template:Flagicon Paris 1983 Carlos Ott 750
Carré d'Art Template:Flagicon Nîmes 1984 Norman Foster 12
Shonandai Cultural Centre Template:Flagicon Fujisawa 1985 Itsuko Hasegawa 215
New National Theatre Template:Flagicon Tokyo 1984 Takahiko Yanagisawa and Tak Associates 228
Tokyo International Forum Template:Flagicon Tokyo 1987 Rafael Viñoly 395
Kansai Airport Template:Flagicon Osaka 1988 Renzo Piano Building Workshop 48
Jewish Museum Template:Flagicon Berlin 1989 Daniel Libeskind 165
Bibliotheca Alexandrina Template:Flagicon Alexandria 1989 Snøhetta 523
Bibliothèque Nationale de France Template:Flagicon Paris 1989 Dominique Perrault 244
Centre for Japanese Culture Template:Flagicon Paris 1989–1990 Masayuki Yamanaka, Kenneth Armstrong & Jennifer Smith 453
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao Template:Flagicon Bilbao 1991 Frank Gehry
Kiasma Contemporary Art Museum Template:Flagicon Helsinki 1992 Steven Holl 516
Austrian Cultural Forum Template:Flagicon New York 1992 Raimund Abraham 226
Royal Danish Library Template:Flagicon Copenhagen 1993 Schmidt Hammer Lassen 179
Osanbashi Yokohama International Passenger Terminal Template:Flagicon Yokohama 1995 Foreign Office Architects 660
Felix Nussbaum Museum Template:Flagicon Osnabrück 1995 Daniel Libeskind 296
Millennium Bridge Template:Flagicon London 1996 Norman Foster, Sir Anthony Caro, and Ove Arup 200
Federation Square Template:Flagicon Melbourne 1997 Lab Architecture Studio 177
GeoCenter Møns Klint Template:Flagicon Møn Island 2002 PLH Architects 292
Philharmonie de Paris Template:Flagicon Paris 2011 Jean Nouvel 98

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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