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    Architects and designers from around the world celebrate at Dezeen Awards 2022 party

    Dezeen Awards judges joined architects and designers from all over the world for this year’s Dezeen Awards party where this year’s overall winners were revealed.

    The event at One Hundred Shoreditch hotel in London welcomed guests from Australia, Mexico, India, Iran, USA, China, Brazil and Japan to celebrate 50 winners.
    The three overall project winners, which recognise the best building, interior and design of the year, were chosen from the project winners and were revealed at the party by head of Dezeen Awards Claire Barrett.
    Winners joined co-CEOs Benedict Hobson and Wai Shin Li (centre) for a group photographGuests included Italian architect Fabio Novembre, Sharjah Architecture Triennial curator Tosin Oshinowo, artist Rosey Chan, designer Tom Dixon and experiential designer Nelly Ben Hayoun, amongst others.
    Studios MVRDV, RSHP, Scott Whitby Studio and Proctor and Shaw were among the project category winners that attended to collect their Dezeen Awards trophies designed by Dutch studio Atelier NL.

    Guests networking and celebrating at the Dezeen Awards partyGuests at One Hundred Shoreditch enjoyed drinks provided by this year’s Dezeen Awards drinks sponsors X Muse, Pasqua, Maestro Dobel and The Dalmore, as well as music by Next Door Records. The winners also received a bottle of X Muse vodka.
    The photography is by Luke Fullalove. More

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    Dezeen announces interiors winners for Dezeen Awards 2022

    Dezeen has revealed the winners of this year’s Dezeen Awards interiors categories, which include interiors by Proctor and Shaw, Kelly Wearstler and Woods + Dangaran.

    The 11 winners awarded in Dezeen’s annual awards programme are located across nine different countries including Denmark, Taiwan, USA, Belgium and Canada.
    Three interiors that feature various reclaimed materials have been awarded this year, including a supermarket-style secondhand bookshop in China, a design school with mobile furniture in the south of France and a flexible retail interior for Italian eyewear brand Monc on London’s Chiltern Street.
    Other winners this year include Atelier Boter for its glass-fronted community hub in a Taiwanese fishing village and Hariri Pontarini Architects for its warm wood-toned clinic in Canada.
    Danish studio Tableau and Australian designer Ari Prasetya collaborated to design Connie-Connie Cafe at the Copenhagen Contemporary, winning them restaurant and bar interior of the year.

    Entries were initially scored by our jury of 25 leading international interior designers before the winners were decided by a master jury that met at One Hundred Shoreditch in September and was made up of Lore Group creative director Jacu Strauss, Studiopepe co-founder Chiara Di Pinto and London-based fashion designer Mary Katrantzou.
    They were joined by Design Haus Liberty founder Dara Huang and French architect and designer India Mahdavi.
    The 11 project winners will now compete to win overall interiors project of the year award, which will be unveiled at the Dezeen Awards 2022 party in London on 29 November.
    Find out more about the winning interiors projects on the Dezeen Awards website or read on below:
    Photo by Joe FletcherHouse interior of the year: Twentieth by Woods + Dangaran
    Twentieth is a three-storey house designed for a couple and their three young children in Santa Monica. Living spaces are organised around a courtyard with a decade-old olive tree with a U-shape ground floor, creating space for living rooms on both sides of the courtyard.
    The kitchen and bathrooms designed by Los Angeles studio Woods + Dangaran feature dark grey marble surfaces with streaks of white.
    “This project demonstrates a nice interplay between inside and outside and a good mix of different finishes and textures,” said the interiors master jury panel.
    Read more about Twentieth by Woods + Dangaran ›
    Photo by Stale EriksenApartment interior of the year: Shoji Apartment by Proctor and Shaw
    Shoji Apartment is a 29-square-metre micro-apartment in London that features birch plywood joinery throughout its interior.
    The apartment has an elevated sleeping area enclosed in translucent panels, which reference Japanese shoji screens and lend the project its name.
    “This is a highly innovative solution to the treatment of a challenging space that retains all the functionality of a normal apartment,” said the judges. “We would definitely accept an invitation to dinner!”
    Read more about Shoji Apartment by Proctor and Shaw ›
    Photo by Michael RygaardRestaurant and bar interior of the year: Connie-Connie at Copenhagen Contemporary by Tableau and Ari Prasetya
    Connie-Connie is a 150-square-metre cafe located within the Copenhagen Contemporary art gallery, an international art centre in a former welding facility. Tableau created the overall spatial design while Prasetya was in charge of the design and manufacturing of the bar as well as several other furniture pieces.
    The cafe explores how furniture can also be art and features chairs made by 25 designers from offcut wood.
    “The project addresses everything we expect from an interior design today, not only does it connect on a physical level, it connects with the community,” said the interiors panel. “There is also an impressive sobriety and humility to the design.”
    Read more about Connie-Connie at Copenhagen Contemporary by Tableau and Ari Prasetya ›
    Photo by The IngallsHotel and short-stay interior of the year: Downtown LA Proper Hotel by Kelly Wearstler Studio
    American designer Kelly Wearstler transformed the interior of the Proper Hotel group chain’s new hotel in downtown Los Angeles. Wearstler stripped out alterations made to the 1930s building to reveal existing grand ceilings, checkered tiled floors and wood panelling.
    The interiors are furnished with custom furniture as well as vintage furniture and artwork.
    “This project exudes a sense of joyfulness that needs to be rewarded!” said the judges. “The interior design evokes an experience that subverts the formality of conventional hotel design through its sense of identity and integrity throughout.”
    Read more about Downtown LA Proper Hotel by Kelly Wearstler Studio ›
    Photo courtesy of DysonLarge workspace interior of the year: Dyson Global HQ, St James Power Station by M Moser Associates
    M Moser Associates reconditioned the interiors of a power station in Singapore to create the global headquarters for multinational technology company Dyson. The interiors feature amphitheatre-style seating to encourage informal gatherings and a sculptural spiral staircase in the former turbine hall.
    The judges valued using an existing building to house a leading global enterprise such as Dyson.
    “We were pleasantly surprised that Dyson, a bleeding-edge company in innovation and technology, have opted for a refurbishment rather than a new build,” they said. “We were impressed with how they took an old shell and modernised it.”
    Read more about Dyson Global HQ, St James Power Station by M Moser Associates ›
    Photo by James LinSmall workspace interior of the year: The F.Forest Office by Atelier Boter
    The community centre situated in a fishing village in Taiwan was designed by Atelier Boter as a hybrid dining, working and event space, loosely divided by a curtain.
    The 53-square-metre venue is almost entirely lined with warm-hued plywood. A plywood partition wall at the end of the workspace is fitted with bookshelves and a small hatch, which connects to the kitchen.
    “This project is very well embedded in its cultural context and, despite a small budget, the designers were able to create something beautiful and modern – a small jewel within an old fishing village,” said the interiors panel.
    Read more about The F.Forest Office by Atelier Boter ›
    Photo by Hu YanyunLarge retail interior of the year: Deja Vu Recycle Store by Offhand Practice
    Deja Vu Recycle Store is a second-hand bookshop located on the first and second floors of a three-storey building in Shanghai. Local studio Offhand Practice aimed to create a relaxed shopping environment by mimicking the experience of grocery shopping. The clothes and books are displayed on shelves that resemble fruit and vegetable crates.
    Green mosaic tiles made from stone off-cuts were used to frame the building’s windows and accentuate other architectural details.
    “This is food for the mind!” said the judges. “It’s stripped back but in a confident way, exuding calmness and thoughtful simplicity.”
    Read more about Deja Vu Recycle Store by Offhand Practice ›
    Photo courtesy of Nina+CoSmall retail interior of the year: Monc by Nina + Co
    London-based Nina + Co incorporated biomaterials throughout the interior of eyewear brand Monc’s debut store.
    The glasses made from bio-acetate rest on cornstarch-foam shelves and mycelium display plinths. Long mirrors lean on blocks of local salvaged concrete.
    “This project demonstrates integrity between the finishes used and the product they are selling,” said the jury. “It is a very well-executed retail interior with an encouraging use of sustainable materials.”
    Read more about Monc by Nina + Co ›
    Photo by A-Frame PhotographyLeisure and wellness interior of the year: Barlo MS Centre by Hariri Pontarini Architects
    The clinic was designed by Canadian practice Hariri Pontarini Architects for patients who suffer from multiple sclerosis (MS), a complex autoimmune disease that affects the central nervous system.
    As some MS patients experience vision and cognitive loss, as well as fatigue and decreased coordination, durability and accessibility were present throughout the design process. Barlo MS Centre features atypical colours, materials, textures and lighting to rethink sterile-looking healthcare spaces.
    “We were impressed by the fusion of the spa and the medical facilities, introducing a wellness element into something that would not traditionally have such an emphasis,” said the judges.
    “It is a more holistic approach to healthcare design, which is considerate to the mental aspects of healthcare environments.”
    Read more about Barlo MS Centre by Hariri Pontarini Architects ›
    Photo by Antoine HuotCivic and cultural interior of the year: Ecole Camondo Méditerranée by Émilieu Studio
    Émilieu Studio designed the interior of Camondo Méditerranée design school in Toulon, France. The studio aimed to create a large-scale flexible learning space, only furnished with reused local materials.
    The project features a mobile furniture system that can be easily compiled, transported and deployed outdoors. The furniture is made from locally sourced construction offcuts.
    “This school sets a new example of how to approach design education, creating a sense of openness and mobility, which is what a school should be all about,” said the interiors master jury panel.
    Read more about Ecole Camondo Méditerranée by Émilieu Studio ›
    Photo by Jochen VerghoteSmall interior of the year: Relaxing Geometry with Pops of Yellow by Van Staeyen Interieur Architecten
    Arched portals, curvy furniture and yellow decor accents feature in Van Staeyen Interieur Architecten’s revamped attic in Antwerp.
    The local studio refurbished a neglected attic in a family home, turning the area into a multi-functional space.
    “This is a good example of how design can be joyful and whimsical,” said the judges. “Accessible in many different aspects, financially and physically, it’s not just a playground for kids but a playground for everyone.”
    Read more about Relaxing Geometry with Pops of Yellow by Van Staeyen Interieur Architecten › More

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    Muhhe Studio inserts “wooden box” into old factory to create light-filled photographer's studio

    A white-painted steel and timber volume that contains an office, dressing room, reception and studio space sits at the centre of this photographer’s studio in an old factory building.

    Located in a former factory building that looks out onto a busy T-junction near a park in Nanjing, China, HNS Studio was designed by architects Muhhe Studio for local photographer Huai Nianshu.
    The studio began by removing all partitions and ceilings in the space to reveal a pitched timber roof structure.
    HNS Studio is a photography studio that was renovated by Muhhe Studio”In the early summer before the reconstruction, we went to the site, after the old partition was removed, the high-rise space of the old plant was warm and transparent in the sunlight of the afternoon,” recalled Muhhe Studio.
    “The photographer himself is extremely sensitive to light. His only expectation for the new space of the studio is a ‘transparent’ space.”

    In order to capture the light, the studio used BIM software to simulate the movement of daylight across the space throughout the course of the day. In response to this study, the studio created several different-sized openings along the building’s west gable end and roof to ensure that the space would be evenly lit at all times.
    It sits within a former factoryIn addition, the architects inserted three large windows that function like a storefront for the studio and increase its connection to the street outside.
    A two-storey structure that resembles two stacked boxes and contains all of the studio’s amenties was built in the centre of the space. At ground floor level, an office, dressing room and toilet are clad in marine-grade plywood.

    Guy Hollaway creates photography studio with concrete pyramid for X-ray apparatus

    A set of stairs at the back of the plywood volume leads up to a floor wrapped in white-painted steel. This open top floor overhangs the space below and will be used as a large photostudio space with a reception and open-plan office.
    The architects left the original factory space with its brick and plaster walls largely untouched to function as a “continuous and rhythmic open space”.
    The interior was painted white and decorated with wooden furnitureThe original street-facing entrance on the south side was moved to the back so that before entering the office, you now have to pass through a semi-enclosed courtyard.
    “We pay attention not only to the indoor space, but also to the outdoor space, and even the relationship of the entire park, as well as the relationship between the history and the present of this space,” the architects told Dezeen.
    “We designed the space very delicately to allow users and visitors to enjoy it. [To be] people-oriented is our ultimate goal.”
    Windows were inserted to function as storefront-style glazingThis project has been shortlisted in the small workspace interiors category of Dezeen Awards 2022.
    Other projects in the category include a part-workspace and part-community hub in a sleepy fishing village in Taiwan, and a wine-bar workspace for a consultancy company in Sweden.
    Photography is by Xiaowen Jin unless stated otherwise.

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    Domino Architects divides reusable sales showroom with fabric walls

    Sheer curtains that look like translucent walls were used to divide up the structure of this temporary showroom space in Japan created by Domino Architects.

    Shortlisted in the large retail interiors category of Dezeen Awards 2022, PROUD Gallery Gotanda aims to offer a solution to the wasteful practice of producing condominium showrooms – temporary structures near new developments that are used as a base for sales teams.
    The showroom was created by Domino ArchitectsThe showrooms, which are usually built and then demolished within a matter of years once the units are all sold, typically contain a customer reception and seating area, as well as rooms for meetings and presentations. These are all styled with the target customer in mind.
    “It’s like a theme park with effects to motivate people to buy,” said the architecture studio.
    “As entertainment, it is very interesting, but we wonder if this method of spending a large amount of energy each time is really appropriate for this age.”

    Arches were constructed using mesh curtainsDomino Architects worked with HAKUTEN and Nozomi Kume from Studio Onder de Linde to create a more sustainable alternative for Nomura Real Estate Development and its PROUD condominium brand in Tokyo.
    Built using the prefabricated skeleton structure of an existing Nomura showroom, the layout of PROUD Gallery Gotanda is easy to change, expand and reconstruct.

    Beyond Space drapes one kilometre of fabric across Amsterdam office

    The steel structure is wrapped with light curtains while the partitions inside the business meeting space are made from “foldable walls”, which are curtains with a wall-like thickness.
    These foldable walls have arched openings and can be repositioned so that the layout can be easily changed according to purpose.
    “By carefully examining the sheen, curves, and colour overlap of the curtains, we were able to create an elegant and light space that does not feel like a rugged prefabricated structure,” the studio said.
    The arches can be moved and repositionedThe materials and samples used in the planned condominiums are subtly incorporated into the interior as part of the showroom’s furniture and fixtures.
    The idea is to allow the buyer to imagine a space rather than be entirely dictated to.
    In Amsterdam, design studio Beyond Space has created an office interior in Amsterdam that uses rippling laser-cut fabric to form cave-like spaces for working.
    The photography is by Gottingham.

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    See who's ahead in the Dezeen Awards 2022 interiors public vote

    After 6,000 votes, projects by Adam Kane Architects and Hollaway Studio are ahead in the Dezeen Awards 2022 public vote interiors categories. Vote now for your favourite!

    Other studios in the lead include Random Studio for its blue pop-up installation for Jacquemus in London’s Selfridges and Ennismore for its hotel inspired by the late architect Ricardo Bofill in Spain.
    The public vote, which closes on 10 October, gives readers the chance to vote for projects shortlisted in the architecture, interiors, design, sustainability and media categories, as well as architects and designers who are battling to be named studio of the year.
    ​​Voting is open for another two weeks, so you still have time to vote for your favourite interiors!
    Click here to vote ›

    Public vote winners crowned in October
    Public vote winners will be published 17 to 21 October on Dezeen. The public vote is separate from the main Dezeen Awards 2022 judging process, in which entries are assessed by our jury of renowned industry professionals.
    We will be unveiling the Dezeen Awards 2022 winners in late November.
    Who is in the lead?
    Of almost 30,000 votes that have been cast and verified across all categories so far, the interiors categories received over 6,000 verified votes.
    Continue reading on to see which projects and studios are ahead in the public vote.

    House interior
    › 26 per cent – Barwon Heads House, Melbourne, Australia, by Adam Kane Architects› 23 per cent – West Bend House, Melbourne, Australia, by Brave New Eco› 22 per cent – Twentieth, Los Angeles, USA, by Woods + Dangaran› 16 per cent – Clear Oak, Los Angeles, USA, by Woods + Dangaran› 14 per cent – House in Marutamachi, Kyoto City, Japan, by Td-Atelier and Endo Shojiro Design
    Browse all projects on the house interior shortlist page.

    Apartment interior
    › 28 per cent – Tribeca Loft, New York City, USA, by Andrea Leung› 23 per cent – Earthrise Studio, London, United Kingdom, by Studio McW› 18 per cent – Shoji Apartment, London, United Kingdom, Proctor and Shaw› 13 per cent – Flat 6, São Paulo, Brazil, by Studio MK27› 11 per cent – The Hideaway Home, Gdańsk, Poland, by ACOS› Seven per cent – Iceberg, Tel-Aviv, Israel, by Laila Architecture
    Browse all projects on the apartment interior shortlist page.

    Restaurant and bar interior
    › 31 per cent – Spice & Barley, Bangkok, Thailand, by Enter Projects Asia› 24 per cent – Connie-Connie at the Copenhagen Contemporary, Copenhagen, Denmark, by Tableau and Ari Prasetya› 22 per cent – Terra, Vynnyky, Ukraine, by YOD Group› 13 per cent – Dois Tropicos, São Paulo, Brazil, by MNMA Studio› 11 per cent – Koffee Mameya Kakeru, Tokyo, Japan, by Fourteen Stone Design
    Browse all projects on the restaurant and bar interior page.

    Hotel and short-stay interior
    › 25 per cent – The Hoxton Poblenou, Barcelona, Spain, by Ennismore› 23 per cent – Downtown L.A. Proper Hotel, Los Angeles, USA, by Kelly Wearstler Studio› 21 per cent – Inhabit Queen’s Gardens, United Kingdom, by Holland Harvey› 16 per cent – Schwan Locke, Munich, Germany, by Locke› 15 per cent – Well Well Well Hotel Renovation, Beijing, China, Fon Studio
    Browse all projects on the hotel and short-stay interior page.

    Large workspace interior
    › 47 per cent – Dyson Global HQ St James Power Station, Singapore, by M Moser Associates› 24 per cent – Victoria Greencoat Place, London, United Kingdom, by Fora› 16 per cent – Midtown Workplace, Brisbane, Australia, by Cox Architecture› Eight per cent – Design District Bureau Club, London, United Kingdom, by Roz Barr Architects› Six per cent – Generator Building, Bristol, United Kingdom, by MoreySmith
    Browse all projects on the large workspace interior page.

    Small workspace interior
    › 30 per cent – Alexander House, Sydney, Australia, by Alexander & Co.› 19 per cent – OTK Ottolenghi, London, United Kingdom, by Studiomama› 15 per cent – HNS Studio, Nanjing, China, Muhhe Studio Institute of Architecture› 14 per cent – Samsen Atelier, Stockholm, Sweden, by Note Design Studio› 13 per cent – The F.Forest Office, Linbian, Taiwan, by Atelier Boter› Nine per cent – Asket Studio, Stockholm, Sweden, by Atelier Paul Vaugoyeau
    Browse all projects on the small workspace interior page.

    Large retail interior
    › 33 per cent – An Interactive Spatial Design and Scenography for Jacquemus at Selfridges, London, United Kingdom, by Random Studio› 29 per cent – Deja Vu Recycle Store, Shanghai, China, by Offhand Practice› 15 per cent – XC273, Shanghai, China, by Dongqi Design› 12 per cent – Kolon Sport Sotsot Rebirth, Cheju Island, South Korea, by Jo Nagasaka / Schemata Architects› 11 per cent – Proud Gallery Gotanda, Gotanda, Japan, by Domino Architects / HAKUTEN / Nozomi Kume (Studio Onder de Linde)
    Browse all projects on the large retail interior page.

    Small retail interior
    › 33 per cent – MONC, London, United Kingdom, by Nina+Co› 20 per cent – Aesop Yorkville, Toronto, Canada, by Odami› 18 per cent – Durat Showroom, Helsinki, Finland, by Linda Bergroth› 15 per cent – Haight Clothing Store, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by Aia Estudio› 13 per cent – The Market Building, London, United Kingdom, by Holloway Li
    Browse all projects on the small retail interior page.

    Leisure and wellness interior
    › 39 per cent – Patina Maldives Spa, Fari Islands, Maldives, by Studio MK27› 24 per cent – Self Revealing, Taipei City, Taiwan, by Studio X4› 16 per cent – Barlo MS Centre, Toronto, Canada, by Hariri Pontarini Architects› 13 per cent – Bath & Barley, Brussels, Belgium, by WeWantMore› Nine per cent – Wan Fat Jinyi Cinema, Shenzhen, China, by One Plus Partnership
    Browse all projects on the leisure and wellness interior page.

    Civic and cultural interior
    › 40 per cent – F51 Skate Park, Folkestone, United Kingdom, by Hollaway Studio› 34 per cent – Stanbridge Mill Library, Dorset, United Kingdom, by Crawshaw Architects› 12 per cent – The Groote Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands, by Merk X› Eight per cent – Yorck Kino Passage, Berlin, Germany, by Batek Architekten› Five per cent – Designing Ecole Camondo Méditerranée’s Interior, Toulon, France, by Émilieu Studio
    Browse all projects on the civic and cultural interior page.

    Small interior
    › 34 per cent – A Private Reading Room, Shanghai, China, by Atelier Tao+C› 22 per cent – OHL Cultural Space for the Arts, Lisbon, Portugal, by AB+AC Architects› 19 per cent –Relaxing Geometry with Pops of Yellow, Antwerp, Belgium, by Van Staeyan Interior Architects› 14 per cent – Fatface Coffee Pop Up Shop, Shenyang, China, by Baicai Design› 11 per cent – Sik Mul Sung, South Korea, by Unseenbird
    Browse all projects on the small interior page. More

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    Dezeen reveals the world's 57 most striking interiors shortlisted for Dezeen Awards 2022

    Dezeen has announced the interiors shortlist for this year’s Dezeen Awards, which includes interiors by Kelly Wearstler, Cox Architecture and Studio MK27.

    The 57 shortlisted projects, which are in the running for awards in 11 different interiors project categories, are located in 24 different countries including Ukraine, Japan, Canada, South Korea, and Sweden.
    The top three represented countries are UK with 12 shortlisted entries followed by China with seven and both USA and Australia with four.
    Five projects are shortlisted in each interiors category except the small workspace interior and apartment interior categories, which have six, including a multi-storey skatepark in a seaside town in Kent and a refurbished cinema with pistachio-green arches in the heart of Berlin.
    The shortlist also includes a renovated hotel in a Beijing hutong, a micro-apartment in Belsize Park wrapped in translucent panels and a restaurant with a granite gravel floor in São Paulo.

    All shortlists announced this week
    The shortlists were scored by our interiors jury which includes London-based interior designer and creative director Charlotte Taylor, French architect India Mahdavi and Arianna Lelli Mami and Chiara Di Pinto of Milan-based Studiopepe.
    The architecture shortlist was announced yesterday, the design shortlist will be revealed tomorrow, the sustainability and media shortlists on Thursday and the studio shortlist on Friday.
    Above: The Hideaway Home by ACOS has been shortlisted. Top: The Hoxton Poblenou by Ennismore was also shortlistedAll shortlisted architecture projects are listed below, each with a link to a dedicated page on the Dezeen Awards website, where you can find an image and more information about the project. All shortlisted projects will also feature in their own dedicated Dezeen post.
    The winner of each project category will be announced online in November. All 11 winners will then go on to compete for the title of interiors project of the year.
    Vote for your favourite project next week
    For the third year running, Dezeen Awards is holding a public vote after the shortlist announcements, meaning readers will be able to choose their favourite projects from 12 September onwards.
    Projects with the highest number of votes in their category will win a public vote award. Winners will be announced in mid-October, ahead of the Dezeen Awards event in November.
    Continue reading for the full interiors shortlist:
    West Bend House by Brave New EcoHouse interior
    › Barwon Heads House, Melbourne, Australia, by Adam Kane Architects› West Bend House, Melbourne, Australia, by Brave New Eco› House in Marutamachi, Kyoto City, Japan, by Td-Atelier› Twentieth, Los Angeles, USA, by Woods + Dangaran› Clear Oak, Los Angeles, USA, by Woods + Dangaran
    Browse all projects on the house interior shortlist page.
    Flat 6 in São Paulo by Studio MK27Apartment interior
    › The Hideaway Home, Gdańsk, Poland, by ACOS› Tribeca Loft, New York City, USA, by Andrea Leung› Iceberg, Tel-Aviv, Israel, by Laila Architecture› Shoji Apartment, London, United Kingdom, Proctor and Shaw› Earthrise Studio, London, United Kingdom, by Studio McW› Flat 6, São Paulo, Brazil, by Studio MK27
    Browse all projects on the apartment interior shortlist page.
    Koffee Mameya Kakeru by Fourteen Stone DesignRestaurant and bar interior
    › Koffee Mameya Kakeru, Tokyo, Japan, by Fourteen Stone Design› Spice & Barley, Bangkok, Thailand, by Enter Projects Asia› Dois Tropicos, São Paulo, Brazil, by MNMA Studio› Connie-Connie at the Copenhagen Contemporary, Copenhagen, Denmark, by Tableau and Ari Prasetya› Terra, Vynnyky, Ukraine, by YOD Group
    Browse all projects on the restaurant and bar interior page.
    Schwan Locke by LockeHotel and short-stay interior
    › The Hoxton Poblenou, Barcelona, Spain, by Ennismore› Well Well Well Hotel Renovation, Beijing, China, Fon Studio› Inhabit Queen’s Gardens, United Kingdom, by Holland Harvey› Schwan Locke, Munich, Germany, by Locke› Downtown L.A. Proper Hotel, Los Angeles, USA, by Kelly Wearstler Studio
    Browse all projects on the hotel and short-stay interior page.
    Design District Bureau Club by Roz Barr ArchitectsLarge workspace interior
    › Midtown Workplace, Brisbane, Australia, by Cox Architecture› Victoria Greencoat Place, London, United Kingdom, by Fora› Dyson Global HQ St James Power Station, Singapore, by M Moser Associates› Design District Bureau Club, London, United Kingdom, by Roz Barr Architects› Generator Building, Bristol, United Kingdom, by MoreySmith
    Browse all projects on the large workspace interior page.
    Samsen Atelier by Note Design StudioSmall workspace interior
    › Alexander House, Sydney, Australia, by Alexander & Co.› The F.Forest Office, Linbian, Taiwan, by Atelier Boter› Asket Studio, Stockholm, Sweden, by Atelier Paul Vaugoyeau› HNS Studio, Nanjing, China, Muhhe Studio Institute of Architecture› Samsen Atelier, Stockholm, Sweden, by Note Design Studio› OTK Ottolenghi, London, United Kingdom, by Studiomama
    Browse all projects on the small workspace interior page.
    XC273 by Dongqi DesignLarge retail interior
    › Proud Gallery Gotanda, Gotanda, Japan, by Domino Architects› XC273, Shanghai, China, by Dongqi Design› Kolon Sport Sotsot Rebirth, Cheju Island, South Korea, by Jo Nagasaka / Schemata Architects› Deja Vu Recycle Store, Shanghai, China, by Offhand Practice› An Interactive Spatial Design and Scenography for Jacquemus at Selfridges, London, United Kingdom, by Random Studio
    Browse all projects on the large retail interior page.
    Aesop Yorkville by OdamiSmall retail interior
    › Haight Clothing Store, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by Aia Estudio› The Market Building, London, United Kingdom, by Holloway Li› Durat Showroom, Helsinki, Finland, by Linda Bergroth› Monc, London, United Kingdom, by Nina+Co› Aesop Yorkville, Toronto, Canada, by Odami
    Browse all projects on the small retail interior page.
    Wan Fat Jinyi Cinema by One Plus PartnershipLeisure and wellness interior
    › Barlo MS Centre, Toronto, Canada, by Hariri Pontarini Architects› Wan Fat Jinyi Cinema, Shenzhen, China, by One Plus Partnership› Patina Maldives Spa, Fari Islands, Maldives, by Studio MK27› Self Revealing, Taipei City, Taiwan, by Studio X4› Bath & Barley, Brussels, Belgium, by WeWantMore
    Browse all projects on the leisure and wellness interior page.
    F51 Skate Park by Hollaway StudioCivic and cultural interior
    › Yorck Kino Passage, Berlin, Germany, by Batek Architekten› Stanbridge Mill Library, Dorset, United Kingdom, by Crawshaw Architects› Designing Ecole Camondo Méditerranée’s Interior, Toulon, France, by Émilieu Studio› F51 Skate Park, Folkestone, United Kingdom, by Hollaway Studio› The Groote Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands, by Merk X
    Browse all projects on the civic and cultural interior page.
    A Private Reading Room by Atelier Tao+CSmall interior
    › OHL Cultural Space for the Arts, Lisbon, Portugal, by AB+AC Architects› A Private Reading Room, Shanghai, China, by Atelier Tao+C› Fatface Coffee Pop Up Shop, Shenyang, China, by Baicai Design› Sik Mul Sung, South Korea, by Unseenbird› Relaxing Geometry with Pops of Yellow, Antwerp, Belgium, by Van Staeyan Interior Architects
    Browse all projects on the small interior page. More

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    Dezeen Agenda newsletter features the Dezeen Awards 2022 longlists

    The latest edition of our weekly Dezeen Agenda newsletter features the longlists for this year’s Dezeen Awards. Subscribe to Dezeen Agenda now!

    This week, Dezeen revealed the longlists for Dezeen Awards 2022, which feature over 1,000 of the world’s best projects and practitioners across more than 40 categories.
    The architecture longlist highlights the best recently completed buildings from around the globe, designed by studios from 48 different countries including Peru, New Zealand, Germany, Mexico, Belgium and Japan.
    Grimshaw’s Victorian Tunnelling Centre (above) and LUO Studio’s Timber Bridge in Gulou Waterfront (above) feature in the Dezeen Awards 2022 architecture longlistDezeen also revealed this year’s studio longlist, as well as dedicated longlists for design, interiors, sustainability and media.
    Other stories in the latest newsletter include a roundup of seven innovative projects by Japanese designer Issey Miyake following the news of his death last week and an interview with the developer behind Saudi Arabia’s controversial megacity The Line, who says the development will “revolutionise our current way of life”.

    Dezeen Agenda
    Dezeen Agenda is a curated newsletter sent every Tuesday containing the most important news highlights from Dezeen. Read the latest edition of Dezeen Agenda or subscribe here.
    You can also subscribe to Dezeen Debate, which is sent every Thursday and contains a curated selection of highlights from the week, as well as Dezeen Daily, our daily bulletin that contains every story published in the preceding 24 hours on Dezeen.

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    Dezeen Awards 2022 is open for entries

    Dezeen Awards 2022 is now accepting entries! Enter before 30 March to take advantage of discounted early entry fees.

    Now in its fifth year, Dezeen Awards celebrates the world’s best architecture, interiors and design and has become the benchmark for international design excellence as well as being the ultimate accolade for architects and designers across the globe.
    Enter before 30 March to save 20 per cent
    Standard entry prices remain unchanged for the fifth year in a row, costing just £100 for small companies and £200 for large companies to enter. This makes Dezeen Awards the most affordable and accessible awards programme in architecture and design.
    From now until 30 March, it is even cheaper to enter with our special early-entry discount. Entries submitted by the early-entry deadline will cost just £80 for small companies and £160 for large ones.

    Create an account or log in to start your entry ›
    A wide range of categories
    There are 47 categories in total, with 33 project categories across architecture, interiors and design, as well as two studio awards in each sector awarding the best emerging and established practices.
    Common Sands Forite tiles by Studio Plastique, Snøhetta and Fornace Brioni won sustainable design of the year at Dezeen Awards 2021Following the success in 2021 we are keeping our sustainability and media categories, which reward architects and designers who are reducing their impact on the environment and celebrating digital work across architecture, interiors and design.
    Find out about the categories ›
    A star-studded panel
    Entries will be judged by a diverse panel of influential industry professionals, made up of 75 architects, designers, and academics from all over the world.
    We will have two separate panels of specially selected experts to judge the sustainability and media categories.
    Past judges have included structural engineer Hanif Kara, who described Dezeen Awards as ‘scandalously exciting’.
    Other past jury members include David Adjaye, Frida Escobedo, Virgil Abloh, Norman Foster and Alison Brooks.
    Keep your eyes peeled for our upcoming announcements about our 2022 judges.
    Why enter Dezeen Awards?
    Dezeen Awards is organised by Dezeen, the world’s most popular and influential architecture and design magazine, and judged by a panel consisting of leading figures from the architecture and design world. This means that Dezeen Awards has unprecedented credibility and reach.
    Every longlisted entry will be published on the Dezeen Awards website and will receive Dezeen Awards 2022 badges to share on social media and their own websites.
    Shortlisted entries will also be entered into the Dezeen Awards 2022 public vote, through which the public can choose their favourite projects and studios.
    All shortlisted entries will be featured in full in an article on Dezeen and get further badges.
    Winners will receive a hand-made trophy and a certificate.
    Watch our 2021 winners ceremonies ›
    Last year, winners were announced in a series of video shows hosted by Lionheart and Nelly Ben Hayoun. All winners received a wooden trophy designed by Atelier NLPast winners have described how winning a Dezeen Award has kickstarted or elevated their careers.
    “I have won other awards in the past, but none have been as impactful in terms of being put in front of the right people.” said designer Hans Ramzan, who won product design of the year and design project of the year in 2020 with Catch: HIV Detector.
    Last year’s Dezeen Awards attracted over 4,700 entries from 86 different countries, making it one of the largest and most international awards programmes in the industry.
    Prices and dates
    While other awards programmes have increased their prices year by year, our standard entry prices have remained the same since day one. We hope to make Dezeen Awards accessible to smaller studios and avoid categories being dominated by large companies that can afford to enter multiple categories.
    Once you have paid for your Dezeen Awards entry, you do not need to make any further payments. If we are able to hold a physical awards ceremony there may be a charge, but attendance is not obligatory.
    Find out about dates and prices ›
    Join our mailing list
    Subscribe to our mailing list to receive reminders about deadlines and regular information about Dezeen Awards including news of judges.
    Sign up now ›
    Questions?
    If you have any questions, please email [email protected] and someone from the team will get back to you.
    Good luck with your entries! More