ArchWeekly: The Weekly Architecture Writing Challenge for Critics, Students & Practitioners (Updated April 2026)
ArchWeekly is uni.xyz's recurring weekly architecture writing challenge — a simple discipline with an ambitious goal: produce one piece of architecture writing every seven days. Whether you write criticism, travel notes on a building you visited, a studio diary, a polemic, a review, or an obituary for a demolished icon, ArchWeekly gives you a structured weekly prompt and a public audience. The platform exists because the architecture community has more voices than outlets, and because writing is the cheapest way to sharpen the way you think about buildings.
Your weekly architecture writing challenge. The idea is borrowed from the oldest advice in the writing world — write every week, ship every week, let the habit do the work. This page is a living archive of active ArchWeekly briefs for April 2026, plus a full guide to the why, the how, and the culture behind the challenge.
What ArchWeekly actually is
ArchWeekly is a weekly writing prompt distributed by uni.xyz to anyone who wants to practise thinking about architecture in public. Each week's prompt asks a specific question — about a building, a city, a movement, a controversy, a detail — and invites a short written response (typically 500 to 1,500 words). Entries are published under your profile, joined to that week's thread, and surfaced in the community feed. There is no entry fee for the core series. There is no minimum experience required. There is no limit to how many weeks you participate in.
Why weekly cadence matters more than long-form ambition
Most architecture writing never gets finished. A student drafts a review of a Herzog & de Meuron building, runs out of steam, and the file sits in a "drafts" folder forever. ArchWeekly breaks that cycle by making the deadline short enough to be unavoidable and the expectations low enough to be beatable. The point is not to produce a polished magazine essay — it is to ship something, every week, in public. That weekly repetition does something nothing else does: it compounds.
- After four weeks, you have four published pieces on your profile.
- After twelve weeks, you have a portfolio any editor can skim.
- After a year, you are a writer. Not aspirationally — literally.
How ArchWeekly differs from traditional architecture essay competitions
The classic architecture writing prize — the RIBA President's Medal, the Berlage Essay Prize, the Architectural Review Essay Prize — runs on an annual cycle. You submit one carefully worked essay in hope of a single shortlist slot. ArchWeekly is the opposite of that. It is a rehearsal room, not a stage. You write 52 pieces a year, not one. Nobody wins ArchWeekly the way you win a prize; the people who benefit are the ones who finish their fiftieth entry and look back to realise they have become far better writers than they were on week one.
Who ArchWeekly is for
- Architecture students looking to build a public writing portfolio alongside studio work.
- Recent graduates who want to stay creatively active while starting a practice career.
- Practising architects who miss having a thinking space outside client work.
- Architecture critics developing a voice before they pitch national publications.
- PhD researchers who want to write for a public audience alongside academic work.
- Architecture journalists and editors treating the feed as a scouting ground for fresh voices.
Active ArchWeekly prompts this month
ArchWeekly briefs publish on a weekly cadence, so if no prompt is listed right now, the next one will appear within the week. To never miss a prompt, create a uni.xyz profile and follow ArchWeekly — prompts are pushed to your feed the moment they open. In the meantime, browse the Essay and Architecture Journalism section for longer-form writing briefs.
How to ship a strong ArchWeekly entry in seven days
Day 1: choose your angle, not your topic
The prompt tells you the topic. Your job on day one is to pick the angle — the specific line of argument only you can write. Resist the urge to write a general essay; general essays are the graveyard of architecture writing.
Day 2 and 3: read and look
Read three sources, walk (or virtually visit) one building, and take notes. The research step is shorter than you think. You are writing an 800-word piece, not a thesis chapter.
Day 4 and 5: draft without editing
Write the full piece from top to bottom in one sitting. Do not scroll up. Do not polish. The first draft exists only to expose the weak paragraphs to your later self.
Day 6: cut 20%
The single most effective edit for architecture writing is subtraction. Delete every sentence that does not advance the argument. You will find a better piece underneath the one you drafted.
Day 7: ship
Read it once out loud. Fix anything that trips your tongue. Upload. Move on to next week.
The kind of writing ArchWeekly rewards
- Specific over general. A close reading of a single stair beats an overview of modernism.
- Observational over encyclopedic. What you saw with your own eyes is more valuable than what you looked up.
- Voice over neutrality. ArchWeekly rewards writers with opinions, not PR summaries.
- Short over long. 800 focused words beat 2,000 hedged ones.
- Finished over perfect. A shipped piece is infinitely better than an unfinished one.
Prompt formats you can expect across the ArchWeekly calendar
- Building of the week — close reading of a single recent project.
- Detail of the week — a window, a joint, a stair, a threshold.
- Obituary of the week — a demolished, endangered, or forgotten building.
- Polemic of the week — a short, argumentative take on a current debate.
- Walking essay of the week — notes from a specific route through a city.
- Manifesto of the week — a hundred-word declaration you are willing to defend.
- Controversy of the week — a take on something trending in the architecture press.
How ArchWeekly connects to the rest of uni.xyz
Every ArchWeekly entry is published under your uni.xyz profile and counts toward your public body of work on the platform. Editors of Journal and Discourse sections frequently scout the ArchWeekly feed for contributors. Strong entries are also eligible for promotion into the Essay and Architecture Journalism competitions, where they can compete for cash prizes and editorial features.
The "write every week" habit, applied to architecture
The most widely repeated advice in the writing world is "write every day". It works for novelists and poets, but it is unrealistic for architects with billable hours, studio critiques, and site visits. ArchWeekly's contribution is to translate that habit into a weekly cadence that actually fits an architect's life. One prompt, one week, one essay. The bar is low enough that you can clear it after a twelve-hour day; the standard is high enough that the pieces stack into a meaningful body of work.
Platform snapshot for April 2026
uni.xyz is the world's largest architecture and design competition platform. The community has shared over 1,50,000 projects, with 5,00,000 members across 190 countries. ArchWeekly is the most active writing surface on the network — a weekly heartbeat of short-form architecture criticism from writers at every stage of their careers.
Frequently asked questions about ArchWeekly
1. Is ArchWeekly free to participate in?
Yes. The core ArchWeekly series is free to enter. You only need a uni.xyz profile to submit, and creating one takes under a minute. Some themed ArchWeekly cycles may run alongside paid prize pools, but the weekly writing challenge itself has no entry fee.
2. How long are ArchWeekly entries supposed to be?
Most prompts ask for 500 to 1,500 words. Shorter is almost always better. If your instinct is to write 2,000 words, cut until you have 1,000 and see whether the argument still holds.
3. Do I need published writing experience to enter?
No. ArchWeekly is specifically designed for writers who have never published anything. Many of the strongest voices on the platform started here with no prior bylines.
4. Can architecture students enter ArchWeekly?
Absolutely — students are the single largest participant group. ArchWeekly is a fantastic companion to a studio course because the weekly discipline forces you to articulate ideas in words, not just drawings.
5. How is ArchWeekly different from the Essay and Architecture Journalism Competition?
The Essay competition is a prize-driven, long-form annual event. ArchWeekly is a practice-driven, short-form weekly habit. They complement each other: the habit of ArchWeekly produces the muscle that lets you compete in the longer, more prestigious essay prizes later.
6. What happens to my ArchWeekly entries after I submit?
Every entry is published to your uni.xyz profile, indexed in search, featured in the community feed, and eligible for editorial promotion. Your entries are yours — you retain the rights to republish them elsewhere.
7. Can I skip a week?
Yes. ArchWeekly is not a streak-tracking system. Skipping a week carries no penalty. The most important thing is to return the week after — consistency beats perfection.
8. Are there judges or winners each week?
ArchWeekly is primarily a practice challenge, not a prize competition. Selected standout entries are occasionally featured in the uni.xyz Journal, but the real reward is the portfolio you build through consistency.
9. Can I use ArchWeekly entries when pitching magazines or editors?
Yes, and many contributors do. A year of weekly entries on uni.xyz is one of the strongest cold-pitch portfolios an emerging architecture writer can put together.
10. What software should I use to write ArchWeekly entries?
Use whatever gets words on the page — Google Docs, Notion, plain text, a notebook. The platform accepts pasted text and simple formatting. Spend your time on the writing, not the tools.
Explore related writing and criticism spaces on uni.xyz
- Essay and Architecture Journalism Competitions — long-form, prize-backed writing briefs.
- Journal — the editorial publication where selected ArchWeekly entries are promoted.
- Discourse — the community discussion space, where ArchWeekly prompts often seed debates.
- Publications — member-curated architecture publications on the platform.
- Student Awards — student-only competition routes, including writing-based briefs.
If you have been waiting for permission to start writing about architecture in public, this is it. Pick this week's prompt, clear two hours, and ship your first entry before April 2026 is over. Every architecture writer you admire started with a first piece that was less polished than the one they are writing now. Your first ArchWeekly entry is that piece.