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We celebrate hope and optimism in architecture at the 2026 Wallpaper* Design Awards
Seeking the positive and the spirit-lifting, we commend this year’s architectural innovators and change makers
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Our three Architects of the Year are Je Ahn (top left), Marina Tabassum (bottom, centre) and Lina Gotmeh (top right). Three houses get the nod for Best Use of Material: Rammed Earth House by Tuckey Design Studio (bottom left), Sombra de Santa Fe by DUST Architects (top, centre) and Bin Nouh’s Courtyard House by Shahira Fahmy.
Architecture is an inherently optimistic profession – a quality instilled in me through training and flagged to me in many an interview over the years. Architects set out to change the world, often consciously and purposefully, quite literally shaping the environment around us. It helps to remember this essential positivity at a time when it is easy to get caught up in global events that weigh heavily on our minds.

Rammed Earth House by Tuckey Design Studio wins a Best Use of Material 2026 award alongside two other exceptional homes using earth building techniques – (Image credit: Jim Stephenson)
We celebrate hope and optimism in architecture
At Wallpaper*, we are always keen to champion innovations, ideas and designs that bring hope and optimism, including architectural wonders that put a smile on our faces. There have been quite a few of those over the past year. The 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale had its critics, but it also showcased the architecture world’s hunger for change. Meanwhile, Sarah Housley’s new book Designing Hope discussed specific scenarios that nod to a better outlook for us all.

Sombra de Santa Fe, a New Mexico house by DUST Architects, was one of the three homes sharing our Best Use of Material 2026 award – (Image credit: Joe Fletcher)
Also in 2025, Finland was named the world’s happiest country for the eighth year in a row; its ambitious sustainability strategies surely play a role here (policy makers, take note). Elsewhere, ingenious initiatives, such as Retrofit House – a live showcase of sustainable homebuilding techniques, by Civic Square, Dark Matter Labs and Material Cultures – landed to give power to ordinary people.

Bin Nouh’s Courtyard House by Shahira Fahmy in Saudi Arabia’s AlUla is another home using earth building techniques and sharing our Best Use of Material 2026 accolade – (Image credit: Nour El Refai)
Above all, it’s the plurality of architectural voices and radical solutions by the world’s creative minds that brings the most hopeful message for a sunnier future. And what better way mark what we look forward to seeing more of than our annual Wallpaper* Design Awards?

Je Ahn, one of our three Architects of the Year 2026 (Image credit: Studio Weave)
In that spirit, a series of our 2026 awards – newly announced in the February issue of Wallpaper* and featured over the coming weeks on Wallpaper.com – celebrates one of the many ways in which we can sustainably diversify building design and construction: working with earth. Once dismissed as ‘backwards’ and unfashionable, building with earth is making a strong comeback. Readily accessible, endlessly adaptable, and honed through generational wisdom, this construction method has many iterations across the world. Polished or textured, geometric or organic, today’s earth buildings look as aspirational as the finest, conventionally built 21st-century villas.

Marina Tabassum, one of our three Architects of the Year 2026 (Image credit: Asif Salman)
Our Best Use of Material awards category spotlights three standout residential examples that use local soil – in the UK, the US and Saudi Arabia – with decidedly contemporary outcomes that show off the age-old technique’s potential.

Lina Ghotmeh, one of our three Architects of the Year 2026 (Image credit: Photography by Brigitte Lacombe)
When we interviewed each of them, continuing in our pursuit of optimism, we asked them to name a building that made them smile. We were looking for spatial expressions of serenity – architecture that brings hope and a visceral twinkle. We also ended up talking about everything from height-specific kitchen counters and spilling wine on light-coloured floors to the revelation that architecture need not take centre stage, and we left feeling inspired. Here’s to a great year in architecture – join us as we raise our always-half-full glass.
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