Architectural Authorship in the Age of the Collective Practices - Image 1 of 28Courtesy of OMA

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https://www.archdaily.com/1032507/architectural-authorship-in-the-age-of-the-collective-practices

Editor’s Note: To deepen our engagement with the critical questions shaping the discipline, we are introducing a new section for argument-driven essays. The aim of these articles is to provide a platform for rigorous debate and to explore complex topics with a clear, articulated perspective. We begin with this exploration of architectural authorship, a fundamental question for today’s design world. — Maria-Cristina Florian, Managing Editor

Who designs architecture today? In a professional landscape increasingly shaped by collaborative workflows, generative software, and collective authorship, the idea of the architect as a singular, creative author appears both anachronistic and insufficient. The shift from individual to distributed authorship is not merely a result of larger teams or digital tools; it reflects a structural transformation in how architecture is practiced, represented, and legitimized.

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