With the turn of the calendar, Archinect’s look back at 2025 comes to a close, and attention shifts to what 2026 might hold.
We asked a group of leading architects, designers, educators, industry experts, writers, advocates, and creators to offer brief reflections on the year ahead — observations shaped as much by uncertainty as by anticipation.
In 2026, diverse intelligence in architecture will have less to do with control and more with curiosity. It will be about setting the stage for exploration rather than prescribing outcomes. The most meaningful advances will emerge from that space of not knowing, where the friction between natural and the artificial opens up new ways of living on a changing planet. Architecture’s power lies in carrying experimentation into daily practice, embracing uncertainty as a generative force, and, as Buckminster Fuller once argued, shaping more livable futures rather than fading into the background.
Carlo Ratti
CRA–Carlo Ratti Associati, MIT Senseable City Lab
Based in Turin and Boston, Carlo Ratti is an architect, engineer, and educator. He directs the MIT Senseable City Lab and is a founding partner of CRA–Carlo Ratti Associati. His work explores the intersection of architecture, technology, and urban systems. Ratti curated the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale and works globally at multiple scales.
As AI accelerates processes of design and production, architecture will be challenged to think more deeply by placing care and emotional intelligence at its center. In 2026, the most relevant practices will be those that frame buildings not as products, but as ecologies of care that are relational, adaptive, and deeply embedded in human and nonhuman worlds.
Farshid Moussavi
Farshid Moussavi Architects, Harvard GSD
Farshid Moussavi is a London-based architect and founder of FMA. She is also a professor in practice at Harvard GSD, where she previously served as chair of architecture. Her work, like the recently completed Houston Ismaili Center, spans cultural, educational, and residential projects worldwide and is known for its formal clarity and theoretical grounding.
I hope 2026 brings more architecture and more thoughtfulness into the world. A year where we uncover the potentials of technology and AI, not as ends in themselves, but as tools that deepen our commitment to an architecture that cherishes humanity and the living world.
Lina Ghotmeh
Lina Ghotmeh — Architecture
Lina Ghotmeh is a Paris-based architect and founder of Lina Ghotmeh — Architecture. Born in Beirut, her work, such as the recent Bahrain Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka or the 2023 Serpentine Pavilion, often engages archaeology, memory, and material craft. She has completed major cultural projects in Europe and the Middle East and teaches internationally.
My prediction for 2026 is that “sustainable” will finally feel too small for the crisis we are in. We do not just need to sustain a broken status quo; we need to imagine and build systems of reciprocity. In a world that rewards speed and distraction, the most radical architectural act will be to imagine with precision and build with responsibility. Projects that matter will be those that repair relationships between people and land, city and port, industry and landscape, generations and memory. Imagination here is not a moodboard, it is a political tool. It allows us to refuse the default settings: extraction, over-programming, polished emptiness. I see 2026 as a year where more clients, cities, and communities start asking, very directly, “What does each project give back?” and where architects who can answer that with honesty and imagination will shape the next decade.
Michel Rojkind
Rojkind Arquitectos
Michel Rojkind is an architect based in Mexico City and founder of Rojkind Arquitectos. His practice works across cultural, commercial, and infrastructure projects throughout the Americas. Rojkind frequently writes and lectures on urban responsibility, public space, and the social impact of architectural practice. Catch his favorite Mexico City spots in our Archinect City Guide series.
A 2026 prediction seems ambitious given the speed of change we face in our society today. Instead, we offer an ambitious and hopeful encouragement to every architect, planner, and landscape designer to realize and utilize the positive influence they can wield, no matter the scale or type of their work. In every meeting, presentation, or design proposal, there is an opportunity to shape more humane and mature conversations about our collective social and environmental health.
Anne Marie Duvall Decker & Roy Decker
Duvall Decker
Anne Marie Duvall Decker and Roy Decker are architects and educators based in Jackson, Mississippi. They are known for their long-standing leadership in architecture education and practice. Their work emphasizes ethical practice, mentorship, and architecture’s civic responsibility. Last month, Duvall Decker was honored with the 2026 AIA Architecture Firm Award.
In 2025 the New York City mayoral campaign’s central messages around affordability and quality of life resonated across the country. Addressing these issues not only in NYC but also nationally will require the design and construction of millions of housing units and accompanying infrastructure. In 2026 this provides a great opportunity, in a context in which expertise is under attack, to clearly show to the public at large the impact of architecture and allied design/planning fields in not only getting these structures built but also embedding them thoughtfully in their social and environmental contexts.
Quilian Riano
Pratt School of Architecture, DSGN AGNC
Quilian Riano is the dean of the Pratt School of Architecture, founder of DSGN AGNC, Architectural League of New York board member, Architecture Lobby activist, and former senior editor for Archinect. Riano’s work focuses on equity in architecture, expanding access to the profession, and reframing design culture through education, advocacy, and institutional critique. We recently shared his favorite Brooklyn spots as part of Archinect City Guide.
I think that in 2025, schools will place increased emphasis on imaginatively reconsidering house and home at all scales — from new housing solutions to inventive forms of inhabitation that respond to the full spectrum of contemporary households: from co-housing to living alone; from single-parent households to extended families; from aging in place to working from home; from living with friends to sharing with strangers.
Mónica Ponce de León
Princeton School of Architecture, MPdL Studio
Mónica Ponce de León is an architect, educator, and former dean of the Princeton School of Architecture. She is the founder of her practice MPdL Studio and has led influential academic and professional work. Her research and teaching often address housing, pedagogy, and disciplinary experimentation.
As we approach 2026, disruption across every sector will continue to accelerate, and the creativity and systems thinking of architects will be needed more than ever. As shocks and stresses intensify, so too do the opportunities for transformation and global change. I believe the rise of regenerative design and practice is now at hand and will grow exponentially worldwide—even as entrenched interests, particularly within the fossil fuel sector, resist this transition as they are displaced by new technologies and fundamentally new ways of thinking.
Illya Azaroff
American Institute of Architects, New York City College of Technology, +LAB
Illya Azaroff is the new president of the American Institute of Architects and founder of +LAB Architect PLLC in New York City. He teaches at New York City College of Technology and is active in climate action advocacy through architecture. Azaroff’s work centers on resilience, regenerative design, and public-sector and community-based projects.
In 2026, I expect continued efforts to challenge which histories deserve public space, driven by fear of truth rather than concern for accuracy, to collide with private philanthropy, municipal investment, and grassroots support, reshaping how cultural institutions are funded and sustained. Architects will be positioned to serve truth-telling by designing spaces, processes, and development strategies that invite participation, build trust, and convert public engagement into long-term support, resilience, and cultural power.
Michael Ford
Hip Hop Architecture, BrandNu Design Studio
Michael Ford is an architect and designer based in Dallas. He is the founder of BrandNu Design Studio and the Hip Hop Architecture Camp, an educational initiative connecting architecture, design, and hip-hop culture. Ford’s work focuses on cultural storytelling, community engagement, and expanding pathways into the design professions. Ford recently received the AIA’s 2026 Whitney M. Young Jr. Award for his work.
While the world is fast, architecture may be slow. While the world is complex, architecture may be simple. While the world is noisy, architecture may be silent. While the world is adrift, architecture may stand grounded.
Dong Gong
Vector Architects
Dong Gong is a Beijing-based architect and founding partner of Vector Architects. His practice is known for cultural and landscape-driven projects across China, particularly in remote and coastal contexts. In December 2025, Gong was named the winner of the $100,000 Marcus Prize for Architecture by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning.
It’s not sunny, but I predict that conditions are going to grow a lot worse for American architecture both in practice due to AI infestations and labor shortages in the construction industry and in visa-based architectural work due to Trump’s immigration policies, and in theory, as the conservative turn in architecture continues apace, whether through technocratic dogma (as expressed in the AI boom) or through political repression across the board. I hope I’m wrong.
Kate Wagner
The Nation, McMansion Hell
Kate Wagner is an architecture critic and writer based in Chicago. She is The Nation’s architecture critic, founder of the blog McMansion Hell, and a contributing voice in architectural media. Wagner’s work focuses on housing, ideology, aesthetics, and the political dimensions of architecture and urban development in the United States.
My prediction for 2026 is that the foundation of architecture education begins to crumble. With Architecture no longer deemed a professional degree, what can educators and administrators do to rethink academia and preparation for the field? Students are demanding a detachment from the status quo, and what will we do to give it to them, considering a lack of financing will undo decades of progress in equity and fairness.
Germane Barnes
University of Miami School of Architecture, Studio Barnes
Germane Barnes is an architect, educator, and founding principal of Studio Barnes in Miami. He is a member of the Black Reconstruction Collective and an associate professor and the graduate program director at the University of Miami School of Architecture. Barnes’s work investigates architecture’s relationship to identity, race, and cultural narratives, spanning residential, exhibition, and research-based projects. Check our Archinect City Guide episode for Barnes’ favorite spots in Miami.
Next year will probably be a lot like this year, in that we will continue to see evidence of the fantasy/reality disconnect in the market for homes designed by architects. On one hand, we will continue to see record prices being paid for well-designed homes, as architecture typically commands a premium in the real estate market, compared to more generic builder-designed homes. On the other hand, the sky is not the limit for these prices, as the market is much more price-sensitive since interest rates began rising in 2023. We will continue to see pedigreed architecture languishing on the market, as sellers chase prices down with overly aspirational list prices in the beginning. Case Study House #22 comes to mind.
Brian Linder
The Value Of Architecture
Brian Linder is an architect, real estate broker, and content creator based in Los Angeles. Under the name The Value Of Architecture, he publishes video tours of the (mostly mid-20th-century modern) properties he represents in the LA area. We profiled Linder in our Archinect Meets series in June.
We will be doing our best to advance ecological and social regenerative design, which will increasingly require more persuasive and compelling stories and data to sway hearts and minds. We will be working on communicating ideas in a way that creates connections and brings people together- always with an unwavering optimism.
Christiana Moss
Studio Ma
Christiana Moss is an architect and co-founder of Studio Ma, with offices in Phoenix and Santa Barbara. Her practice focuses on environmentally responsive design in the American Southwest. Moss is also active in advocacy and education around climate, equity, and the role of architecture in shaping healthier communities. She shared more about Studio Ma’s hiring process in our How To Get A Job At ____ series.
AEC industry activity has steadily moved from new construction to the reconstruction of existing facilities as changes in our economy have shifted demand for many building types. Boosted by a recent surge of building conversions and adaptive reuse, for the first time, architecture firms are reporting that a majority of their revenue is coming from these projects.
Kermit Baker
American Institute of Architects
Kermit Baker is chief economist at the American Institute of Architects and a leading analyst of the architecture and construction industry. He regularly publishes research on firm performance, market trends, and economic conditions affecting the built environment, including the monthly AIA/Deltek Architecture Billings Index.
Architects and designers can no longer ignore the urgency concerning the impacts of climate change, political unrest, violence, waste, and unaffordability, and the field’s intimate role in these issues. In 2026, I hope designers and design educators, from the jobsite to the classroom, step firmly into their power to stand for equity in the built environment through innovation, collectivism, advocacy, community building, and the prioritization of people over profit.
Maya-Bird Murphy
Mobile Makers
Maya-Bird Murphy is a Chicago-based architectural designer, cultural producer, educator, and founder of the nonprofit Mobile Makers. Her work bridges practice and pedagogy, with a focus on equity, climate justice, and labor in architecture. She has taught and written widely on the social responsibilities of design.
In 2026, architecture will begin to shift from an ocular-centric regime of visibility toward one of legibility. Questions of communication and embodiment will move from the margins toward the center of disciplinary discourse and recalibrate our definitions of architectural expertise. As a result, long-standing anxieties about “archi-speak” may give way to a belated recognition of the institutions that have already learned how to translate spatial ideas into public meaning.
Stewart Hicks
University of Illinois Chicago School of Architecture, Design With Company
Architect Stewart Hicks is an associate professor and associate dean at the University of Illinois Chicago’s School of Architecture, co-founder of Design With Company, and content creator. Through his highly popular YouTube channel, he presents complex topics in long-form videos that are both entertaining and educational. We interviewed Hicks for Archinect Meets last year.
As algorithms fragment attention, in 2026, I see architectural media consolidating around fewer but more intentional platforms and individuals with strong editorial perspectives. Beyond that, writers and editors who build direct relationships with audiences through live, experiential, and community-driven formats will connect more with their readers and drive impact.
Julia Gamolina
Madame Architect, Ennead
Julia Gamolina is an architect, educator, and founder of Madame Architect, based in New York City. Her platform highlights women and underrepresented voices in architecture and design. Gamolina works across media, curation, and advocacy, and frequently speaks on leadership, visibility, and architectural culture. In August, she shared her favorite Manhattan spots in an Archinect City Guide.
With up to half of fire-burned lots sold to private investors and corporate developers, recovery may move faster, but at the expense of returning residents and neighborhood continuity.
Mohamed Sharif
Sharif, Lynch: Architecture, UCLA Architecture & Urban Design, AIA Los Angeles
Mohamed Sharif is an architect, educator, writer, and advocate based in Los Angeles. His work focuses on housing, post-disaster recovery, and community-centered design. Sharif has contributed to both practice and public discourse around rebuilding, land use, and the social consequences of development and displacement, most recently in the aftermath of the 2025 Los Angeles Fires as co-chair of the AIA Los Angeles chapter’s Ad Hoc Disaster Relief Task Force (in collaboration with Greg Kochanowski).
Last year, a mind-numbingly predictable outcome came to be as DEI, DBE, and otherwise equitably corrective policies across the country were effectively dismantled. This year, in the year of our lord 2026, as the dumbest form of authoritarianism rises, an equally predictable assault on sovereign territories continues in Palestine, in Gaza to create beach front real estate, in the Ukraine for the control of land and ports, and currently an unsanctioned war in Venezuela for the oil and minerals of the land. A core understanding of spatial design justice is that the inequity of our world is bound to the land and all of its derivatives. Our work is inherently political because it shapes and codifies the material realities of our world. In 2026, we have no choice but to speak up, organize, fight, design and build the world we deserve.
Bryan Lee Jr
National Organization of Minority Architects, Colloqate Design
Bryan Lee Jr. is an architect and design justice advocate based in New Orleans. He is the founder and design director of Colloqate Design and currently serves as president of the National Organization of Minority Architects. His work centers on housing, equity, and design as a tool for cultural and spatial justice.
We want to hear from you, dear readers: Let us know in the comments what you think, predict, or hope for this year!