• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

Dear Architecture

Register/Submit Deadline:  Friday, Jul 24, 201511:55 PMEDT

image

"Dear Architecture,"

For the largest portion of our history as a kind, we humans have entrusted paper with most of our acts of communication. Letters have been the most important tool at our disposal, and we have used them to convey the words of gods and kings, to serve as means of payment, to shake the collective conscience by writing open ones and publishing them where many could see them, as well as to connect with distant people that we love and nurture our relationships with them.

As paper is being replaced by our electronic devices, the function of letter writing is also being transformed by our incorporeal, atemporal new channels.

While physical mail turns into junk mail and into the occasional Hallmark card with a pre-printed message ready for us to subscribe to by signing our name, email takes the place of pen and paper when we are communicating with specific recipients, and social media is the sea in which we disperse thousands of unsolicited, self-promoting messages in a bottle with no ideal reader in mind.

Paper is just a support, but with its specific characteristics and limitations it forged a communication genre that forces us to say all that we need to say, with as much precision as we can muster, within the physical boundary of the available space on the page.

A letter is not as casual as any of the electronic communications we are growing accustomed to. It takes time and effort. It takes intention. It represents its writer for all the time it exists as a physical object, and is not editable. While an email thread can be updated at any point with a new message, a letter doesn't allow for this flexibility and it forces us to reflect on our words, and only use those we really mean.

This exercise in exactitude, together with the potentially disruptive power of a well worded open letter within the community it resonates with (that is, the community it creates by uniting people who identify themselves as members of it), are at the core of the challenge Blank Space invites you to accept.

We invite you to address architecture, as a concept, as a social practice and as a community, in no more than 500 words, and with an illustration as an auxiliary tool to convey your message.

Through the solemnity and poignancy that letter-writing encourage us to confer to our own ideas, we hope to instigate passionate reflections on architecture's place in society, and start an open dialogue on its responsibility and mission.

Let's take this opportunity to make demands of architecture, to keep it on its toes, to express wishes as to what its future should look like and what its concerns should be, to declare our love for it, our hate for it, our neutrality towards it. Let's use our words to congratulate architecture on its accomplishments, or criticize it for what it has become. Let's make our own commitments to it, and hold ourselves accountable to them in a public, written form.

With "Dear Architecture," we wish to initiate a discussion on architecture that extends beyond the life of the competition, one that will grow larger and inclusive, revolving around universal questions such as "How do we shape our world through our actions?" and "How do our actions shape our world?"

Whether the actions in question are building a house, building a city, or rethinking the ways in which we inhabit and use the space around us at an even larger scale and scope, everybody should feel entitled to interact with these ideas and practices which we call "Architecture" for short, and there's no better way to create a connection than to reach out and say something.

Say something to architecture. Say it to all of us, and say it to yourselves too. Let's start a conversation.

We look forward to hearing from you.


SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS:

image
image


JURY:

  • Beatrice Galilee: Associate Curator of Architecture and Design at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Fernando Romero: Founder, Fr-EE
  • Daniel Arsham & Alex Mustonen: Cofounders, snarkitecture
  • Elena Manferdini: Principal, Atelier Manferdini
  • Natasha Jen: Partner, Pentagram
  • Hani Rashid: Founder, Asymptote Architecture
  • Kelsey Keith: Editor in Chief, Curbed
  • Dr. Diana Balmori, FASLA: Founder, Balmori Associates, Inc.
  • Matthew Hoffman & Francesca Giuliani: Founders, Blank Space
  • David Celento: Founder, DigiFabLab
  • Dr. Rebecca Henn: Professor of Architecture, Pennsylvania State University
  • Adam Hostetler: Founder, Urban Nomad Architecture Lab
  • Alexander Walter: Editorial & Production Manager for Archinect and Editor in Chief of Bustler
  • David Basulto: Founder and Editor in Chief, ArchDaily
  • Becky Quintal: Executive Editor, ArchDaily


SCHEDULE & FEES:

image

Competition Launched: May 12, 2015
Early Bird Registration — $30 USD
Until: May 27, 2015
Regular Registration — $40 USD
Until: June 24, 2015
Late Registration — $50 USD
Until: Final Submission Deadline
Final Submission Deadline: July 24, 2015
Winners Announced: late August 2015


QUESTIONS & ANSWERS:

Please send your questions to:

[email protected]

with subject line "dear architecture q&A".

Questions and answers will be posted as they come in at:

www.blankspaceproject.com/competition

Please make sure that your questions are not already answered in the FAQ section located on our web site.


MORE INFO:

blankspaceproject.com

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Dear Architecture

Register/Submit: Fri, Jul 24, 2015

New York High Falls Riverfront Market

Register: Wed, Jul 29, 2026

Submit: Mon, Jan 18, 2027

Open Access: Exploring 130 Years of American Design

Register/Submit: Sun, Jun 28, 2026

Open Call: Architectural Essay Writing, 7th Cycle: 'Thresholds of Movement'

Register/Submit: Mon, Aug 31, 2026

Envision Resilience National Design Studio Grant

Register/Submit: Fri, Jun 19, 2026

BIGFIELDS STUDENTS PRIZE 2026

Register/Submit: Mon, Aug 31, 2026

CCC Emerging Design Awards 2026

Register/Submit: Tue, Jun 30, 2026

Valli Wine Tasting Room

Register: Thu, Jul 30, 2026

Submit: Mon, Feb 15, 2027

International Architectural Competition for the Christo and Jeanne-Claude Center in Gabrovo, Bulgaria

Register: Fri, Jul 17, 2026

Submit: Mon, Jul 20, 2026

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

2026 NY Architectural & Interior Design Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 NY Product Design Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 TITAN Innovation Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 TITAN Property Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Wed, Sep 16, 2026

2026 iLuxury Awards: Season 2

Register/Submit: Fri, Sep 18, 2026

Designing with Lower-Impact Materials? Submit Your Project to revalu

Register/Submit: Mon, Jun 15, 2026

2026 Global Photography Awards

Register/Submit: Thu, Sep 10, 2026

Next page » Loading

Dear Architecture

Register/Submit Deadline:  Friday, Jul 24, 201511:55 PMEDT

Share

Related

letter ● international ● dear architecture ● blankspace

image

"Dear Architecture,"

For the largest portion of our history as a kind, we humans have entrusted paper with most of our acts of communication. Letters have been the most important tool at our disposal, and we have used them to convey the words of gods and kings, to serve as means of payment, to shake the collective conscience by writing open ones and publishing them where many could see them, as well as to connect with distant people that we love and nurture our relationships with them.

As paper is being replaced by our electronic devices, the function of letter writing is also being transformed by our incorporeal, atemporal new channels.

While physical mail turns into junk mail and into the occasional Hallmark card with a pre-printed message ready for us to subscribe to by signing our name, email takes the place of pen and paper when we are communicating with specific recipients, and social media is the sea in which we disperse thousands of unsolicited, self-promoting messages in a bottle with no ideal reader in mind.

Paper is just a support, but with its specific characteristics and limitations it forged a communication genre that forces us to say all that we need to say, with as much precision as we can muster, within the physical boundary of the available space on the page.

A letter is not as casual as any of the electronic communications we are growing accustomed to. It takes time and effort. It takes intention. It represents its writer for all the time it exists as a physical object, and is not editable. While an email thread can be updated at any point with a new message, a letter doesn't allow for this flexibility and it forces us to reflect on our words, and only use those we really mean.

This exercise in exactitude, together with the potentially disruptive power of a well worded open letter within the community it resonates with (that is, the community it creates by uniting people who identify themselves as members of it), are at the core of the challenge Blank Space invites you to accept.

We invite you to address architecture, as a concept, as a social practice and as a community, in no more than 500 words, and with an illustration as an auxiliary tool to convey your message.

Through the solemnity and poignancy that letter-writing encourage us to confer to our own ideas, we hope to instigate passionate reflections on architecture's place in society, and start an open dialogue on its responsibility and mission.

Let's take this opportunity to make demands of architecture, to keep it on its toes, to express wishes as to what its future should look like and what its concerns should be, to declare our love for it, our hate for it, our neutrality towards it. Let's use our words to congratulate architecture on its accomplishments, or criticize it for what it has become. Let's make our own commitments to it, and hold ourselves accountable to them in a public, written form.

With "Dear Architecture," we wish to initiate a discussion on architecture that extends beyond the life of the competition, one that will grow larger and inclusive, revolving around universal questions such as "How do we shape our world through our actions?" and "How do our actions shape our world?"

Whether the actions in question are building a house, building a city, or rethinking the ways in which we inhabit and use the space around us at an even larger scale and scope, everybody should feel entitled to interact with these ideas and practices which we call "Architecture" for short, and there's no better way to create a connection than to reach out and say something.

Say something to architecture. Say it to all of us, and say it to yourselves too. Let's start a conversation.

We look forward to hearing from you.


SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS:

image
image


JURY:

  • Beatrice Galilee: Associate Curator of Architecture and Design at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Fernando Romero: Founder, Fr-EE
  • Daniel Arsham & Alex Mustonen: Cofounders, snarkitecture
  • Elena Manferdini: Principal, Atelier Manferdini
  • Natasha Jen: Partner, Pentagram
  • Hani Rashid: Founder, Asymptote Architecture
  • Kelsey Keith: Editor in Chief, Curbed
  • Dr. Diana Balmori, FASLA: Founder, Balmori Associates, Inc.
  • Matthew Hoffman & Francesca Giuliani: Founders, Blank Space
  • David Celento: Founder, DigiFabLab
  • Dr. Rebecca Henn: Professor of Architecture, Pennsylvania State University
  • Adam Hostetler: Founder, Urban Nomad Architecture Lab
  • Alexander Walter: Editorial & Production Manager for Archinect and Editor in Chief of Bustler
  • David Basulto: Founder and Editor in Chief, ArchDaily
  • Becky Quintal: Executive Editor, ArchDaily


SCHEDULE & FEES:

image

Competition Launched: May 12, 2015
Early Bird Registration — $30 USD
Until: May 27, 2015
Regular Registration — $40 USD
Until: June 24, 2015
Late Registration — $50 USD
Until: Final Submission Deadline
Final Submission Deadline: July 24, 2015
Winners Announced: late August 2015


QUESTIONS & ANSWERS:

Please send your questions to:

[email protected]

with subject line "dear architecture q&A".

Questions and answers will be posted as they come in at:

www.blankspaceproject.com/competition

Please make sure that your questions are not already answered in the FAQ section located on our web site.


MORE INFO:

blankspaceproject.com

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Promoted Competitions

Pavilion Atlas 2026

Register by Wed, Sep 16, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Re:Form - New Life for Old Spaces / Edition #3

Register by Thu, Jul 2, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 12, 2026

Kingspan MICROHOME 2026

Register by Wed, Sep 30, 2026

Submit by Mon, Nov 2, 2026

2026 Fall 2x8 Exhibition and Scholarship Program

Register by Mon, Sep 14, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8

Register by Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jul 20, 2026

100,000 € Prize / Buildner's Unbuilt Award 2026

Register by Thu, Jul 9, 2026

Submit by Tue, Oct 20, 2026

Underbridge / Edition #2

Register by Thu, Jul 16, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Kinderspace: Architecture for Children's Development competition / Edition #4

Register by Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit by Mon, Nov 30, 2026

50,000€ Prize / Mujassam Watan Urban Sculpture Challenge #8

Register by Thu, Jul 23, 2026

Submit by Thu, Aug 27, 2026

Valli Wine Tasting Room

Register by Thu, Jul 30, 2026

Submit by Mon, Feb 15, 2027

Portugal Long Table Restaurant

Register by Wed, Jul 8, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jan 11, 2027

Next page » Loading