The Venice Architecture Biennale’s 2027 Theme Is a Reality Check

The cocurators of next year’s exhibition—with the blunt, but open-ended title "Do Architecture"—are squarely focused on the crises that architects face today, from craftsmanship to climate change.

Like global design fairs, architecture’s biennials and triennials are, fundamentally, opportunities to showcase the most pressing ideas in the field; curators provide an expert glimpse into the professional and academic practices that envision what the future might hold. The Venice Biennale—the most prestigious of such fairs—has provided the world with many prospects: In 2023, curator Leslie Lokko’s The Laboratory of the Future invited architects, academics, and artists to imagine a decolonized and decarbonized African continent; in 2021, curator Hashim Sarkis’s How We Live Together exhibition explored how we might cohabitate generously during times of political and social divisions. These underlying themes ask participants to think through how the built environment can shape or play a role in shaping future possibilities. In some ways, many of the most recent editions have been intrinsically optimistic.

The forthcoming edition, which opens in the spring of 2027, will instead ask participants to instead address the here-and-now. Hangzhou-based architects Wang Shu and Lu Wenyu, cofounders of the firm Amateur Architecture Studio, were selected in 2025 to curate. Their work, which bridges contemporary buildings with material reuse and historic knowledge, announced their biennale theme this week: Do Architecture - For the Possibility of Coexistence Facing a Real Reality. To be honest, I laughed when I first read the ArchDaily headline; the curators of the world’s most prestigious biennale are asking architects to do the thing that they are trained to do. The duo seems to be tapping into whatever hope and optimism that could exist within that invitation—to simply do—in the context of our warming planet, degrading infrastructure, and artificial intelligence sucking up our natural resources and cognitive capabilities. These curators are turning away from the speculative, asking instead how architects might take action.

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The National Archives of Publications and Culture in Hangzhou (left) and Museum of Ancient Animals in Baoding (right) are among Amateur Architecture Studio’s best known buildings.

Left photo: Ji Yun, right photo: Laksana Studio

The invitation to do feels strangely spot-on, and comes with a critique of the common role of speculative design during our current range of daily catastrophes. Reality, as a term, plays an important role: They call it "real reality" outright, making a distinction between the imagined conditions in which many architectural concepts would be welcome (and likely funded)—these might look like sci-fi-esque futures where the problems of humanity like war, famine, and disease, have been eradicated; or, wherein funding for extravagant design propositions is plentiful. Unfortunately for us, none of that is real, and architects instead are often working upstream of the existing political, financial, and climate-related constraints. There’s always a space for imagination, but according to the curators, focusing solely on these fantastical states (and designing solely for them) has larger implications.

"Conceptual experiments driven to extremes are often divorced from reality and overcommercialization tends to be merely popular and short-lived," the curators wrote in their statement. "It will lead to the death of architecture."

The pavilion of Hungary at the Giardini (left) and the Catalonia Pavilion, titled Catalonia in Venice 2025, are two exhibitions from 2025's messy biennale.

The Hungarian Pavilion at the Giardini (left) and the Catalonia Pavilion, titled Catalonia in Venice 2025, are two exhibitions from 2025’s messy biennale. 

Left photo: Stefano Mazzola/Getty Images, right photo: Simone Padovani/Getty Images

One can’t help but feel that this thematic choice is a direct rebuke of the Venice Biennale’s most recent 2025 edition. Under the curatorial leadership of Carlo Ratti, a professor at MIT, architecture’s future was shown through his selected theme of Intelligens—artificial, natural, and collective—that hoped to show "how we can adapt to the world of tomorrow with confidence and optimism," per the curatorial statement. The resulting exhibition was described as "daunting and dense": 300 unique installations explored the theme through myriad technological whizzgigs. Visitors encountered robotics in architectural craft, humanoids, algae, espresso brewed with purified canal water, blobs, drones, and much more. It was called a noisy, "tech bro fever dream" by ArtReview; the Guardian characterized the show as unfocused, "like trying to complete the internet." The edition boiled our current affairs down to problems that can be solved with an array of technocratic one-liners. "Don’t fear the climate crisis," the Guardian continues, sardonically, "a harmonious union of technology and nature will save us."

Instead, 2027 cocurators Shu and Wenyu are asking architects to acknowledge the role that their profession plays in such ecological collapse. Speaking at the thematic announcement in Venice this week, they said that "architecture must recognize the depth of the crisis in which it finds itself,’" Designboom reports. But it’s not just the climate crisis that the curatorial vision will touch upon; the thematic announcement also includes issues related to land, material, and craft—the essential elements that speak to a building’s relationship with its specific place and time. It’s unsurprising, considering Amateur Architecture Studio’s portfolio, which has frequently combined recycled building materials and adaptive reuse strategies that speak to traditional building practices, particularly in China where rapid urbanization and demolition has resulted in the large-scale vernacular loss.

At left, the Canal Cafe' project by Diller Scofidio + Renfro turned Venice lagoon water into coffee during the 2025 biennale. The Takashi Ikegami and Luc Steels work "Am I a Strange Loop?

At left, the Canal Café project by Diller Scofidio + Renfro turned Venice lagoon water into coffee during the 2025 biennale. The Takashi Ikegami and Luc Steels work Am I a Strange Loop? was exhibited in the Corderie Pavilion. 

Photos: Giuseppe Cottini/Getty Images

See the full story on Dwell.com: The Venice Architecture Biennale’s 2027 Theme Is a Reality Check
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Raw Concrete Meets Refined Details in This $535K Melbourne Loft

Set above a bakery, the flat has oak flooring, crisp white cabinetry, and a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows.

Location: 102/1 Wilson Avenue, Brunswick, Victoria, Australia

Price: $750,000 - $800,000 (approximately $535,203 - $570,884 USD)

Year Built: 2022

Developers: Neometro and Milieu

Architect: Fieldwork

Footprint: 969 square feet (1 bedroom, 1 bath)

From the Agent: "Expansive, single-level space framed by a 3.6-meter concrete ceiling and extensive double-glazing creates a bold, warehouse-inspired setting for refined contemporary living in this impressive, approximately 90-square-meter apartment. A substantial interior overlooking peaceful landscaped gardens features a vast stretch of living, dining, and work-from-home space to configure as desired, backed by wide, stack-sliding doors and large-scale glazing. This apartment stands apart in its class through sheer proportion, versatility and quality of finish. Coupled with a secure covered car space and a storage cage on title, the best of Brunswick is at the doorstep—Sydney Road’s cafes and restaurants, Barkly Square shopping, the train station and trams—along with Royal and Princes Parks, major hospitals, and the University of Melbourne."

Designed by Neometro and Milieu, this Melbourne loft pairs industrial concrete details with refined finishes.

Designed by Neometro and Milieu, this Melbourne loft pairs industrial concrete details with refined finishes.

Courtesy of Neometro

Track lighting illumanates the great room.

Track lighting illuminates the living area.

Courtesy of Neometro

Courtesy of Neometro

See the full story on Dwell.com: Raw Concrete Meets Refined Details in This $535K Melbourne Loft
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Welcome to the Social Sauna Era—and Everything Else You Need to Know About This Week

California considers banning quartz countertops after workers develop lung disease, the House passes a bill to stop major investors from purchasing single-family homes, and more.

  • Saunas like Othership are becoming North America’s newest social hotspots, turning spa sweat sessions into DJ sets, comedy nights, singles socials, and theatrical wellness performances as guests trade bars and clubs for communal bathing. (Condé Nast Traveler)
  • California is considering banning high-silica quartz countertops after hundreds of workers developed silicosis, an irreversible lung disease. Safety experts warn thousands more fabricators across the U.S. may already have undiagnosed silicosis from cutting slabs of the popular material. (NPR)

  • This week, the House overwhelmingly passed a bipartisan housing bill that would stop large investors from buying more single-family homes while still allowing them to build new rental housing. But, the bill’s future remains uncertain, as it’s not clear whether it will pass in the Senate or be signed off by Trump. (CNBC)

  • Artist Maya Lin is bringing Manhattan’s "bedrock to the surface" with a massive, living stone sculpture at the new JPMorgan Chase Tower. The piece—titled A Parallel Nature—is a large, intricate wall of granite, with native plants and trickling water, inspired by Central Park’s rocky terrain and Lin’s lifelong connection to nature. (The New York Times)

Vintage curators Rarify debuted lighting at Afternoon Light during New York design week.

Vintage curators Rarify debuted lighting at Afternoon Light during New York design week.

Photo by Valeria Suasnavas

  • Dwell’s Sarah Buder and Valeria Suasnavas found that at NYCxDesign’s Afternoon Light Design Fair, "indie-minded" tactile objects stole the show, from glass-like dimmer knobs and brutalist flatware to witchy hand-carved furniture. (Dwell)

Top photo by Ian Patterson

One Night in a Historic Department Store Turned Luxury Hotel—With a Toddler

I had always thought the best stays were wasted on the young. Could a fancy hotel in downtown Portland, Oregon, convince me otherwise?

Welcome to One Night In, a series about staying in the most unparalleled places available to rest your head.

In recent years, I’ve developed a bit of a philosophy about traveling. Airbnbs are for groups and/or longer trips where you’d benefit from a kitchen, or traveling to a place where the hotels are for whatever reason exorbitantly expensive. Hotels are for everything else. This approach has served me well in planning trips—that is, until I had a child, an experience that, you might have heard, means that most everything you know about how to approach planning most everything has to be reassessed (or even if it doesn’t have to be, inevitably is, however briefly).

My traveling-with-a-child approach was tested on my first family vacation, which I documented for Dwell, glamping at Snow Peak’s first campsite in the U.S. on the coast of Washington. The timing of the flights for that trip meant we’d have one night before going home that, for our sanity, we’d want to spend in Portland, Oregon, proper before flying out quite early the next day. Having never been to Portland, or glamped, I thought this seemed like a great idea—a night in an actual hotel, safe from the elements. But I was also wary about that evening; at the campsite, my partner and I spent a couple of our evenings chilling outside by the fire, and being stuck whispering in a hotel room while a 20-month-old slept next to us seemed…unpleasant. On the flip side, staying at a luxury hotel that would provide more space and comfort seemed like asking for trouble—would children even be welcome there?

After mulling it over—rich people also have children! was one thought I had—and doing some research, I decided we’d try to go the high-end route, and zeroed in on The Nines, a hotel in downtown Portland regularly on best-of lists that would be only a 20-minute drive to the airport at 4:30 in the morning, but also had a cool backstory. The publicist I conversed with about a press stay knows I have a child, but I didn’t go as far as to request anything more than enough space to have her in a Pack ‘N Play. So we’re going into this fancy night blind, and wondering where it will take us.

The interiors of The Nines offer a contrast to its more classic facade.

The interiors of The Nines offer a contrast to its more classic facade.

Courtesy The Nines

Wednesday

12:30 p.m.: The day before arriving, I’d called the hotel to see if we could get early check in, because, as every parent with a young child knows, your day is structured around nap time, and we were going to be in a bit of a strange slot checking in at four. Plus, we had piles of stuff with us I’d rather have put in a room and not in the rental car or with the concierge. I was told someone would be checking out of the suite (! exciting news to me) we were assigned to, so we probably couldn’t get in until two. No matter—our plan would be to slowly make our way from the Washington coast to Portland, which is about a two to two-and-a-half-hour drive. The hope was that she might fall asleep in the car, leaving us unconcerned for the rest of the day.

Well, that hope is dashed, though she is fairly chill. After stopping in Astoria, Oregon, to pick up some salmon jerky at Josephson’s Fish House, as one does, we enjoy a somewhat overcast drive to Portland. And once we arrive at the hotel, we find we can check in immediately, no problem, the best omen you can get on a trip, no matter its length.

The luxe living clicks in immediately. The Nines Portland is located right in the middle of downtown, and straddles the line between old and new, the relaxed energies of this region of the world and the high-end expectations of this level of hospitality. Part of the Luxury Collection of Marriott, a subsidiary of properties the brand calls "the world’s most exciting and desirable destinations," it’s located in an adaptive reuse property: the renovated Meier & Frank Building, built in 1909 on a full square city block to house the department store of the same name. It was originally designed by A.E. Doyle, and the top nine floors were reworked in 2008; it’s also on the National Register of Historic Places. The bottom floors were briefly a Macy’s, and now hold a Muji, among other tenants. According to a press release, "The concept of being ‘dressed to the nines’ serves as a guiding narrative, connecting the building’s fashion-retail history to its present-day identity as a refined and expressive hospitality environment." The exterior still looks and feels exactly like the classic department stores of the 1900s, but as I notice immediately, the hotel decor has been funked up quite a bit.

A valet takes our car while a bellhop gathers our belongings to be brought up to our room. Check in for the hotel requires getting in the elevator, which reminds me of a 21c Museum hotel I stayed at once; the property similarly has a bevy of artworks integrated into it, all curated by Portland-based photographer Paige Powell. Behind the concierge is the lounge and Urban Farmer Steakhouse, which sit in a massive, light-filled seven-story atrium at the center of the building.

Note the baby spoon.

Note the baby spoon.

Photo by Kate Dries

Once in the room, we see this is certainly a suite, one that, I see later, could put you out a few hundred dollars for a night, season depending. With an entryway, living room, large bathroom, bar area, and massive bedroom with great views of the city all around, there’s more than enough space for the three of us. I also find that the ask about whether we had any dietary restrictions had a purpose—we’ve been left with the most thoughtful care package, which ranges from a diaper pail to stuffed animals and homemade purees for our daughter to wine for us. If this is how a VIP travels—and from what I’ve seen on reality television, it is—I’m sold.

Nothing more exciting than exploring a new diaper pail.

Nothing more exciting than exploring a new diaper pail.

Photos by Kate Dries

See the full story on Dwell.com: One Night in a Historic Department Store Turned Luxury Hotel—With a Toddler
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You Couldn’t Begin to Count the Perforations in the Facade of This Bangkok Home

Breeze blocks with hundreds of holes make for a mesmerizing exterior, but the climbing wall inside might steal the show.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Bangkok, Thailand

Architect: Anonym Studio / @anonym.studio

Footprint: 10,000 square feet

Structural and Civil Engineer: Wor Consultants

Photographer: Ketsiree Wongwan

From the Architect: "Sailom House is a four-story home that accommodates members from three families. Anonym designed the inside to look and feel like a service apartment with functional spaces that each family member can use independently on each floor. The first floor consists of common areas like the living room and kitchen, while the upper floors house bedrooms, more living areas, and pantries. Two internal courtyards link the spaces and open into the void running from the ground to the fourth floor.

"The first court is an outdoor space with a climbing wall, a requirement from the owner who climbs as a hobby. The remaining court hosts a walkway for each floor, designed to overlap and bring interesting space variations. The roof is elevated at the upper part of the court, creating a void to facilitate airflow with a transparent material used to welcome natural light. While the courts exist as a part of the house’s interiors, the openings that lead the wind and light into the living space creates a pleasant obscurity, adding the outdoor element to the indoor area.

"The highlight of the exterior is the brick facade that offers natural ventilation, with the material having been arranged in various dynamic patterns. The perforated bricks are used not only because of their ventilation properties but also for their safety, affordable price, the freedom they offer the design, and the privacy they add for residents. The facade is designed to cover the parts of the house exposed to an excessive amount of sunlight. The brick pattern is less perforated in the areas on the ground floor where more privacy is required. For the top part of the facade and higher floors, the patterns become more perforated and airier, corresponding to the surroundings that are more open and unobstructed. The space between the facade and the house is designed as a veranda with potted plants, adding a visually pleasant green area to the living space. The variations of perspective result in the house’s diversified floor plans and functional spaces as the facade diminishes the four-story structure’s rigidity."

Photo by Ketsiree Wongwan

Photo by Ketsiree Wongwan

Photo by Ketsiree Wongwan

See the full story on Dwell.com: You Couldn’t Begin to Count the Perforations in the Facade of This Bangkok Home
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Done With Dairy Farming, a Couple Turned a Cow Barn Into Their Own Home

A U.K. couple have converted all five agricultural buildings on their Dorset property into a housing community.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Dorset, United Kingdom

Architect: David Kohn Architects / @officedka

Footprint: 3,186 square feet

Builder: Marks Building Services

Structural Engineer: Structure Workshop

Environmental Engineer: P3r Engineers

Cost Consultant: WT Hills

Photographer: Max Creasy / @maxcreasy

From the Architect: "Suzanne and Peter have lived at Middle Rocombe Farm since the early 1970s. Here they created the U.K.’s first organic ice cream factory, local arts venue the Art Farm Project, and raised a family while managing an organic dairy herd. Fifteen years ago they embarked on their most ambitious project, to convert the farm buildings into a housing community. Cowshed is the last of five buildings to be converted from agricultural to residential use, and now contains an artist studio, office, and a home, with rich connections to the surrounding landscape.

"David Kohn Architects has ensured that the original cowshed, which was built by Suzanne and Peter in 1979, has lost none of its agricultural identity. Like thousands of similar farm buildings it was built simply and cheaply with a concrete floor, concrete columns, blockwork walls, timber trusses, and timber cladding. As much of the original building as possible has been retained for planning, environmental and economic reasons, with two local materials—Cornish concrete blocks and Devon cedar boarding—enhancing the building’s straightforward materials palette. Inside, the exposed structure and surfaces continue this acknowledgement and celebration of Cowshed’s robust character and past life.

"Suzanne’s studio fills the main central space. Here the simplicity of the building acts particularly effectively: this light-filled room acts as the fulcrum of the home and as a backdrop for Suzanne’s artwork, which fills the space wherever one looks. An open-plan living/dining/kitchen area occupies a side aisle where the roof drops down to create a more intimate space, with bedrooms, office and study space similarly arranged around the edge of the main studio.

"One of the Redstone’s main requirements was for a building that would enable to them to live in the light, and feel part of the landscape to which they have been connected for almost fifty years. They also wanted to incorporate large windows and roof lights that fill the interiors with daylight and give views in all directions, David Kohn Architects have harnessed the building structure to create a large sheltered terrace to the entrance, with an outdoor workshop and studio to one side.

"The transition of Middle Rocombe Farm from a dairy farm to a residential community was not without difficulty: other elements were initially refused consent by planners, before a campaign by local residents and national design journalists helped to persuade councillors to approve the project. Cowshed, which proceeded thanks to changes in permitted development rights, now demonstrates how even the most prosaic and cost effective industrial structures can be wholly reused and repurposed to make affordable, playful, and welcoming homes. It represents a reconciliation of contemporary architecture and a traditional rural setting—and the latest chapter in Suzanne and Peter’s work to make Middle Rocombe Farm a place of community and innovation."

Photo by Max Creasy

Photo by Max Creasy

Photo by Max Creasy

See the full story on Dwell.com: Done With Dairy Farming, a Couple Turned a Cow Barn Into Their Own Home
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Massive Steel Panels Conceal (and Reveal) a Deceptively Airy Home in Tbilisi

Flanges form an operable armored facade that can open to let in light and breezes.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Tbilisi, Georgia

Architect: TIMM Architecture / @timmarchitecture

Footprint: 5,400 square feet

Photographer: Grigory Sokolinsky

From the Architect: "Located in the hillside district of Okrokana overlooking Tbilisi, the House of Iron Doors reinterprets the typical residential condition of the area through an architecture of enclosure and controlled openness. The surrounding neighborhood is characterized by individual houses hidden behind high perimeter fences, creating a fragmented streetscape defined more by walls than by architecture. Instead of replicating this condition, the project proposes a different strategy: the house itself becomes the perimeter. The building forms a protective architectural envelope that encloses the site and generates a private interior landscape.

"The street facade appears as a continuous rusted steel surface punctuated by a sequence of large perforated iron doors. These pivoting panels function as a dynamic environmental and spatial filter. When closed, the facade reads as a monolithic metal screen, offering privacy and protection from the street. When opened, the panels transform the building into a porous structure that allows light, air, and views to penetrate the interior spaces. The perforations create constantly shifting patterns of light and shadow throughout the day, giving the otherwise solid envelope a sense of movement and temporal variation.

"Behind this outer layer, the house organizes its spaces around an inward-oriented courtyard. All primary living areas are directed toward this internal garden rather than toward the surrounding streets and neighboring plots. This strategy allows the interior to maintain openness and transparency while preserving privacy from the outside. The courtyard becomes the spatial and environmental center of the house, providing daylight, greenery, and visual continuity across different levels of the dwelling.

"The ground level contains the main living spaces, including the living room, dining area, and kitchen, arranged in a linear sequence along the courtyard edge. Large sliding glass openings allow the interior to extend directly into the outdoor garden. Above, the private rooms continue the same spatial logic, maintaining visual connections to the internal landscape while remaining protected by the outer metal skin. A secondary layer of exterior panels functions as adjustable sun-shading devices for the interior rooms. These movable elements regulate daylight and reduce solar gain while simultaneously shaping the visual identity of the building. Their rhythmic placement along the facade establishes a strong architectural character that changes depending on their position and the angle of the sun."

Photo by Grigory Sokolinsky

Photo by Grigory Sokolinsky

Photo by Grigory Sokolinsky

See the full story on Dwell.com: Massive Steel Panels Conceal (and Reveal) a Deceptively Airy Home in Tbilisi