World Architecture Day, celebrated on the first Monday of October, is a global event dedicated to raising awareness about the role of architecture in shaping the built environment and its impact on society.
This year’s theme focuses on “Architecture for the future generation,” highlighting the theme of World Architecture Day 2024, “Empowering the next generation to participate in urban design.” This theme highlights the important role of young architects in designing tomorrow’s cities and their contribution to urban transformation.
In celebration of World Architecture Day, we curated a list of 6 pavilions from 2024, each embodying creativity, sustainability, and cutting-edge design.
Flourish Pavilion
Architects: Studio A-Light
Location: Changhua City, Taiwan
“Flourish” is inspired by the agricultural greenhouses of Changhua in Taiwan, while this bamboo-structured dome represents exuberance in flowering through modern geometric shapes. The heat-treated Moso and Makino bamboo pipes achieve this 9-meter-tall and 23-meter-wide dome with prestressed bamboo arches and custom-designed metal joints for accuracy and stability.
Interior floating floral islands, a mist irrigation system, original electronic music, and projection art make this an active space. By uniting the materials of agriculture with those of contemporary art, the installation itself represents the meeting of nature, innovation, and community involvement in celebration of spring.
Hybrid Flax Pavilion
Architect: ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
Location: Wangen im Allgäu, Germany
The Hybrid Flax Pavilion, realized together with the institutes ICD and ITKE at the University of Stuttgart, will be a central exhibition building of the Landesgartenschau in Wangen im Allgäu, Germany, to be completed in 2024. It represents a prominent example of regenerative and expressive design, demonstrating a novel wood-natural-fiber hybrid construction system grown from research within the Cluster of Excellence “Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture (IntCDC).”
By integrating slim cross-laminated timber with robotically wound flax fiber elements, this pavilion is able to showcase a resource-efficient architecture that reconnects deeply with the region’s heritage flax traditionally being processed in the local textile industry. This striking structure not only testifies to the possibilities of bio-based materials but also stands for a commitment to sustainability. The building presents a very meaningful addition to the reawakened landscape along the Argen River.
Jinji Lake Pavilion
Architect: Galaxy Arch
Location: Suzhou, China
The Jinji Lake area in Suzhou Industrial Park is imagined as a new type of urban center for the future, with the waterfront public space around the lake serving as a hub for community activities. This area integrates existing visitor facilities into a lakeside pavilion service system designed within a 15-minute walking radius, featuring light commercial spaces, rest areas, and restrooms to ensure comprehensive service coverage.
There are 11 pavilions in total—5 newly constructed and 6 renovated—highlighting the urban brand of the park. In November 2022, an international architectural competition was held for the six Jinji Lake pavilions, with firms like Arata Isozaki & Qian Hu Studio and GALAXY ARCH among the winners. GALAXY ARCH designed two pavilions, including the Wooden Cabin Pavilion No. 1, completed in April 2024 and housing Suzhou’s first illy café, which opened to the public in May 2024. The pavilion, carefully reconstructed on its original site, retains the nostalgic essence of a beloved local hangout while introducing a fresh aesthetic.
Chrysalis Entrance Pavilion
Architect: Cave Urban
Location: Woodford, Australia
Chrysalis is a bamboo pavilion that provides a tenuous, shaded area where people can congregate at the Woodford Folk Festival. Designed under the artistic direction of Juan Pablo Pinto and constructed by Cave Urban’s team with the help of festival volunteers, the structure incorporates straightforward techniques of bamboo splitting and lashing with wire, thus enabling a more inclusive and community-driven building process.
Over four weeks, the participants learned to harvest and work with bamboo and produced two vaulted spaces—a 5.5m dome and a larger 7m toroidal chamber. The organic form of the pavilion takes inspiration from nature as it dapples sunlight by day and transforms into a glowing lantern at night. Sustainably constructed, Chrysalis reflects the ethos of minimal environmental impact; its life cycle mirroring bamboo’s regenerative growth as it literally returns to nature and the poles mature for use in the next.
3dPA Forest Campus
Architects: IAAC – 3dPA
Location: Vallès, Spain
With the Crane WASP 3D printer, IAAC has completed a prototype low-carbon emissions building of 100 m² in Collserola Natural Park, Barcelona, using local soil and natural materials. Semi-closed spaces roofed and covered are part of the 3D-Printed Earth Forest Campus, serving as a living laboratory for experimental construction and architectural solutions.
This house, developed over more than a decade of research at IAAC and the 3DPA, serves as a prototype for a sustainable and affordable housing model, combining traditional materials with state-of-the-art 3D printing technology. A flexible, organic floor plan brings into view the potential of 3D-printed architecture to adapt to its user’s needs. Natural materials and design want this building to be a CO2-neutral development that faces the global housing shortages.
Xingcheng Exhibition Garden
Architects: Archermit
Location: Chengdu, China
Archermit designed the Xingcheng Exhibition Garden. It extracts its design element from the cultural essence of the Western Sichuan Garden-a place where nature, humanity, and dwellings are harmoniously coexisted. The landscape design carves into a poetic dwelling philosophy of Chengdu with architectural form serving as one of the scenic focuses.
With an appearance of a lotus-leaf pavilion, the exhibition hall perfectly integrates essential elements of a Western Sichuan garden: bamboo forest and lotus pond. A special feature is that it will have a curved roof with dramatic features, imitating the traditional folk house with its light and artistic structure. Having a hollow center, the roof serves as a collector of rainwater, marrying form and sustainability in an artistic installation.