Past Architecture Competitions: Browse 7182 Entries, Results, and Winning Work (Updated April 2026)
This is the UNI past competitions archive — the world's largest public record of completed architecture and design competitions. Since 2017, UNI has hosted 617 concluded competitions across 68 disciplines, collecting 7182 design entries from architects and students worldwide, evaluated by 895 jurors. Every brief, every entry, every leaderboard, and every result is publicly viewable here — a decade of design thinking you can browse, study, and learn from.
What the UNI Past Competitions Archive Contains
A "past" competition on UNI is one where the submission deadline has passed, the jury has completed their evaluation, and the results have been officially announced. For each concluded brief you can access:
- The original brief: the full prompt, site context, design requirements, submission guidelines, and evaluation criteria exactly as they were published.
- All submitted entries: every public submission in the competition, browsable as a gallery of presentation boards, concept statements, and team information.
- The leaderboard: a ranked view of all entries, sorted by jury scores, showing winners, runners-up, honourable mentions, and shortlisted teams. Each leaderboard is linked directly from the competition page at
/competitions/{slug}/leaderboard. - Jury decisions and results announcements: the official results post, winner statements, and where available, jury feedback explaining why the chosen entries stood out.
- Prizes awarded: the cash prizes, publication deals, and recognition granted to winners.
- Entries and comments archive: discussions between participants and organizers during the competition cycle, preserved as context for future researchers.
Why Studying Past Competitions Is One of the Most Valuable Things a Designer Can Do
Precedent research is the foundation of every strong competition entry. Studios that consistently win competitions don't start with a blank page — they start with the archive. Here is what careful study of past briefs, entries, and results unlocks:
- Brief pattern recognition: after reading 30 or 40 past briefs, you start seeing how organizers frame problems. You recognize the signals that tell you whether a brief is going to reward conceptual boldness, technical polish, or community impact.
- Presentation benchmarking: browsing past entries reveals the visual language of winning boards — layout rhythm, diagram style, render quality, typography, information density. This is the bar you must match before you can clear it.
- Jury expectation mapping: the 895 jurors who have served on UNI competitions leave patterns behind. Studying which entries they shortlisted, which they awarded, and how they justified their choices teaches you what a juror actually values.
- Concept storytelling models: winning entries tell stories. The concept statement, the diagram sequence, the hero image, the caption text — every choice serves a narrative. The archive is a masterclass in how to structure a design argument.
- Portfolio strategy: understanding what's been done before helps you avoid cliches and find the genuinely underexplored angle.
Every Entry Is Publicly Browsable — The Full Gallery of 7,000+ Submissions
Unlike most competition platforms that hide entries behind login walls or publish only winners, UNI makes every public entry across 617 concluded competitions browsable by anyone. That is roughly 7182 presentation boards worth of research material, all searchable and filterable. For students building precedent libraries, for studios preparing competition pitches, and for academics tracking design culture over time, this is an unmatched resource.
Each entry includes the team's concept statement, the full set of submission boards, and a link to the creators' UNI profiles where you can see their other work. Winning and shortlisted entries are marked with badges, so you can quickly scan for the strongest submissions in any brief.
How the Leaderboard Makes Results Meaningful
For every concluded competition on UNI, a leaderboard page publishes the full ranking of entries alongside the results announcement. The leaderboard is the key interface for studying a competition's outcome beyond just its single winner. From the leaderboard you can:
- See the full ranking: from the top-ranked entry down to honourable mentions, giving you a much richer sense of what the jury valued than a "1st / 2nd / 3rd" list.
- Compare entries side by side: winners vs runners-up is where the real design lessons hide. What tipped the first-place board over the second-place one?
- Study score distribution: where jury scores are published, you can see how tight or spread the competition was, and which categories of evaluation separated the winners.
- Identify trending teams and studios: repeat finalists across multiple briefs tell you who the strongest participants in a discipline really are.
- Find shortlisted work worth citing: many shortlisted entries are as rewarding to study as winners, and shortlisting is already a significant accolade.
Leaderboards for every completed competition are linked from the results section of each competition page. Use them as your primary research interface for archive work.
Past Editions of UNI's Thesis and Graduation Awards
UNI's annual thesis competitions have been running for years, and each edition has its own leaderboard, results, and winning entries preserved in the archive:
- UnIADA '26 — The Global Benchmark for Architecture Dissertation Awards
- UnIATA '26 — The Global Benchmark for Graduation Excellence
Browse past editions by replacing the year suffix in the URL (e.g. UnIATA '25, UnIATA '24, UnIATA '23). Winning dissertation and graduation entries are featured in the UNI Design Yearbook every year.
What You Can Learn From Studying Winners and Results
Every competition winner on UNI was picked because they beat every other entry on a specific, measurable set of criteria. The lessons compound fast when you read results attentively:
- Visual presentation patterns: board layouts, colour hierarchy, diagram language, rendering style, text density — winners share surprising amounts of common ground even across different briefs.
- Concept framing: how winners name their proposals, how they open their concept statement, how they tie the first sentence to the final image.
- Problem reframing: the best entries almost always reframe the brief's question before answering it. Reading results teaches you how to perform that reframing gracefully.
- Technical feasibility signals: juries reward proposals that feel buildable even when the brief is speculative. Past results show exactly how winners signal feasibility.
- Narrative arc: great entries have a beginning, middle, and end — just like any good story. The archive is where you can study dozens of them in an hour.
Browse the Archive by Year, Discipline, or Theme
With 617 completed competitions on record, the archive rewards structured browsing. A few ways to navigate it:
- By year: browse architecture competition results from 2017 through 2026 — nine years of design thinking.
- By discipline: filter across all 68 disciplines including architecture, interior design, landscape architecture, urban planning, product design, photography, visualization, computational design, and more.
- By theme: sustainability, adaptive reuse, affordable housing, micro-housing, cultural infrastructure, pavilions, memorials, speculative futures, AI-integrated design, and many more recurring topics across the archive.
- By winner or team: follow specific studios or individual designers to see all their competition entries, past and present.
- By brief type: student vs professional tracks, free vs paid entry, solo vs team competitions.
Notable Themes Across Nine Years of UNI Competitions (2017 – 2026)
Looking at the archive as a whole, a few recurring themes dominate the history of design competitions on UNI:
- Sustainability and climate response: from early net-zero experiments in 2018 to today's carbon-neutral and regenerative briefs, climate-aware design has been the through line of nearly every UNI year.
- Housing affordability and density: affordable housing, micro-housing, shared living, co-op design, modular and prefabricated housing — the archive is a timeline of how architects have reframed the housing crisis over a decade.
- Adaptive reuse and heritage: competitions challenging designers to transform abandoned industrial buildings, heritage structures, and underused infrastructure into new civic assets.
- Speculative and unbuilt futures: briefs where the concept matters more than the feasibility — essays, illustrations, visions of future cities, floating architecture, and interplanetary design.
- Cultural and community infrastructure: libraries, community centres, memorials, public art pavilions, and civic spaces.
- Emerging technology: AI-integrated design, parametric workflows, computational systems, digital fabrication briefs, and VR-ready spaces.
The UNI Design Yearbook: Where Past Winners Are Permanently Published
Every year, UNI publishes the UNI Design Yearbook — a curated compilation of the strongest entries across all competitions concluded in that year. The yearbook is distributed to architecture schools and studios worldwide and serves as a permanent record of the best work the community produced. Featured entries receive lasting visibility long after the original competition has faded from the front page. Browsing past yearbook editions alongside the leaderboards gives you two complementary views of the same history: the editorial selection and the community-wide ranking.
April 2026 Archive Snapshot
A live snapshot of what's in the UNI competitions archive today:
- 767 total competitions hosted since 2017
- 617 competitions fully concluded with results published
- 7182 total entries submitted across all competitions
- 895 jurors who have evaluated entries on the platform
- 68 disciplines covered across architecture and design
- 260K+ architects and designers in the UNI community
- 244 entries submitted so far in 2026
- 57 competitions currently open — these will join the archive once concluded
Using UNI as a Citation and Research Source
Journalists, academics, educators, and studio librarians routinely cite UNI past competition pages in articles, research papers, and studio curricula. A few reasons the archive has become a go-to reference:
- Public and persistent URLs: every competition, entry, and leaderboard has a stable URL. Citations stay valid.
- Full brief preservation: unlike aggregator sites that publish only result summaries, UNI preserves the original brief so you can read the prompt that produced the winning work.
- Entry-level metadata: team names, countries, dates, jury composition, discipline tags — all structured for easy citation.
- Public jury commentary: where jurors leave public comments, those comments become primary-source material for anyone studying competition culture.
UNI Membership and the Archive
The UNI archive is free to browse. Anyone can read past briefs, view public entries, and study leaderboards without an account. A UNI Membership adds unlimited entry access across every current and future competition, detailed analytics on your own entries, a free copy of the UNI Design Yearbook, and access to members-only discussions. For researchers and active participants, membership is the fastest way to get maximum value out of both the archive and the live platform. Plans start at $9 a week. Explore UNI Membership Plans.
Frequently Asked Questions About Past Competitions
Where can I find past architecture competition results online?
The UNI past competitions archive at uni.xyz/competitions/past is the largest public archive of completed architecture and design competition results. It contains 617 concluded competitions with full results, entries, and leaderboards — dating back to 2017.
Are past competition briefs and entries free to read?
Yes. The entire UNI competitions archive is public. You can browse any past brief, view any public entry, and study any leaderboard without paying or creating an account. Signing up for a free UNI account unlocks the ability to save competitions and follow designers whose work you like.
Can I see the actual submission boards from past competitions?
Yes. Every entry submitted to a UNI competition is publicly viewable once the competition concludes. Each entry page shows the team's full presentation boards, concept statement, and team information. Winning and shortlisted entries are marked with badges.
How do I access the leaderboard of a past competition?
Every past competition on UNI has a dedicated leaderboard page. From the main competition page, click "Leaderboard" to see the full ranking of entries, with winners at the top, followed by runners-up, honourable mentions, and shortlisted teams. The URL pattern is /competitions/{slug}/leaderboard.
How are entries evaluated and ranked?
Each UNI competition is evaluated by an independent jury of architects, academics, and industry professionals. Jurors score entries on criteria specific to each brief — typically including design innovation, feasibility, presentation quality, and response to the prompt. Scores are aggregated to produce the leaderboard ranking.
What makes an architecture competition entry win?
Winning entries share a few consistent traits: a strong and clearly articulated concept, confident visual presentation, a direct response to the brief's core question, and narrative coherence from first image to final caption. Studying past leaderboards on UNI is the fastest way to internalize what juries consistently reward.
What are the most notable architecture competitions in the UNI archive?
Flagship series like UnIATA (the global benchmark for graduation excellence) and UnIADA (the global benchmark for architecture dissertation awards) run annually. Alongside these, the archive includes hundreds of thematic briefs on housing, sustainability, adaptive reuse, cultural infrastructure, and speculative futures. Browse the full past archive to explore them.
How is a "past" competition different from an ongoing or upcoming one on UNI?
Past competitions are concluded — results announced, leaderboard published, entries archived for reference. Ongoing competitions are currently accepting registrations and entries. Upcoming competitions are announced but not yet open for registration.
Can I enter a competition that has already closed?
No. Once a competition's submission deadline has passed, entries are locked and the jury begins evaluation. However, you can study the brief, the entries, and the results to prepare for similar upcoming competitions. Many organizers run annual editions, so if you missed one year, you can watch for the next.
Does UNI publish the results of every competition it hosts?
Yes. Every concluded competition on UNI publishes its results and leaderboard publicly. Once the jury finalizes their evaluation, a results announcement is published, the leaderboard goes live, winners are notified, and the competition moves to the past archive.
Explore More on UNI
Beyond the past archive, browse ongoing competitions currently open for registration, preview upcoming launches, see what's trending with the community, or explore third-party listed competitions. To go deeper into the design community, visit the creators' featured projects, read their design journals, or study long-form architecture publications. Ready to start entering? Join UNI as a member for unlimited access.