Essay and Architecture Journalism Competitions 1
This competition section includes challenges that are writing focussed and based around several spheres / issues / challenges / opportunities in architecture and design.
This competition section includes challenges that are writing focussed and based around several spheres / issues / challenges / opportunities in architecture and design.
This is the UNI editorial home for architecture writing competitions — the competitions whose deliverable is not a rendering or a floor plan but words. Essays, criticism, journalism, manifestos, op-eds, research papers, and speculative fiction about the built environment. It is the rarest brief in the architecture competition world. Most competitions ask for drawings; this section curates the ones that ask for arguments, readings, and sentences. It is the home of writers who want to compete, be read, and develop their voice alongside their design practice.
Architecture writing competitions are open calls where participants submit written work — not designs — in response to a brief. The deliverables vary, but they fall into a consistent set of forms:
The submission format is usually a Word document or PDF. The judging criteria are the quality of the argument, the precision of the prose, the originality of the insight, and the relevance to the brief. There is no software to learn, no team to assemble, no rendering budget required. The barrier to entry is an idea worth defending and the discipline to write it well.
Architecture is a public art. It shapes the lives of everyone who walks past a building, enters a room, or lives in a city. But the public rarely has the vocabulary to criticize what architects do — and when they try, their critique is often dismissed as uninformed. That gap between the discipline and its public is the space where architecture critics and journalists work. The best ones translate architectural ambition into public argument, hold architects accountable to the people who inherit their buildings, and keep the profession honest about its stakes.
This has always been part of the discipline's history. Vitruvius wrote De Architectura in the 1st century BC as both a technical manual and a theory of architectural virtue. Ruskin's Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849) and Stones of Venice (1853) shaped Victorian taste more decisively than any building ever did. Jane Jacobs, without a formal architectural education, rewrote American urban policy from the pages of The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Ada Louise Huxtable won the first Pulitzer Prize for architecture criticism in 1970 and proved that a newspaper column could reshape how citizens thought about their cities.
Architectural writing is not a lesser activity than architectural design. It is what makes the design legible to the world — and what connects the built environment to the broader intellectual life of its time.
The landscape of architecture writing has changed dramatically in the last twenty years. Print architecture criticism has contracted as newspapers cut dedicated critics. Online architecture writing has expanded into an ecosystem of journals, blogs, newsletters, and Substacks. Knowing the major platforms is essential if you want to write architecture and be read:
A remarkable wave of independent architecture writing has emerged on Substack and other newsletter platforms in the last five years. Writers who could not find room in traditional publications are building direct audiences and in some cases making more money than their legacy-media peers. This is the fastest-growing corner of architecture writing, and a realistic pathway for emerging critics to build a voice.
The most common brief. Analyze a specific building, project, architect, or idea against a broader cultural or historical framework. 1,500-5,000 words typical. The strongest entries have a clear thesis, specific evidence, and a distinctive voice. The weakest entries describe rather than argue.
Reportage rather than criticism. Profiles of architects, investigation of housing policies, stories about communities in conflict with developers, chronicles of projects in crisis. Journalism demands that you find a story, interview sources, and write for a reader who does not already know architectural vocabulary.
A declaration of principle. Short, polemical, visionary. Manifestos take a clear position about how architecture should be practised or what it should become. Rem Koolhaas's Delirious New York and Le Corbusier's Vers une architecture (1923) are the canonical references. Writing competitions sometimes invite manifesto-format entries specifically because they force clarity of position.
Imagined architectures delivered through narrative. The tradition runs from J.G. Ballard's High-Rise (1975) through Ursula K. Le Guin's urban fiction to contemporary solarpunk, hopepunk, and climate fiction about future cities. A distinctive and underserved competition format that UNI hosts regularly through briefs like Domain, On Water, and Slum City.
The academic register. Longer form (5,000-15,000 words typical), rigorous citation, engagement with existing scholarship. UNI's flagship UnIADA (UNI International Architecture Dissertation Award) is the most prestigious platform in this category — a dedicated annual award for architecture dissertation writing. See the UNI Design Awards section.
Short, direct, argumentative. 600-1,200 words typical. Takes a contemporary issue — a proposed demolition, a policy debate, a design controversy — and makes a specific case about it. The op-ed is the hardest form to do well because every word has to pay for itself.
Edited conversations with architects, critics, residents, or community members. A format that looks easy but rewards careful editing, thoughtful questions, and attention to what the interviewee reveals unintentionally.
Beyond UNI's own briefs, a small ecosystem of architecture writing competitions exists internationally. Knowing them is part of being a serious architecture writer:
Architecture journalism is in a paradoxical moment. Traditional newspaper critics are disappearing — most American daily newspapers no longer have a dedicated architecture critic, and the staff positions that remain at publications like the New York Times have been consolidated or reduced. Paul Goldberger described the current state as "a lot of shouting and not a lot of clarity."
At the same time, online architecture writing has expanded enormously. Kate Wagner's McMansion Hell became one of the most-read architecture criticism projects of the 2010s — and Wagner now writes regularly for The Nation. Substack has become a viable home for independent architecture writers. Platforms like Places Journal, KoozArch, e-flux Architecture, and Common Edge are publishing more rigorous architectural criticism than ever before, without the constraints of print advertising.
The paradox: architecture journalism is contracting in mainstream media and expanding in independent media simultaneously. For emerging architecture writers, this is both a crisis and an opportunity. The career path of "get a job at a major newspaper as the architecture critic" is nearly extinct. The alternative path — build your own audience through independent publishing, competition wins, and Substack — is more realistic now than it has been in any previous generation.
Architecture writing competitions are part of how this new ecosystem works. A competition win is a publishable credit, a calling card, and a proof of quality that emerging writers can use to access the editorial conversations that used to require institutional employment.
Not usually. Most writing competitions are open to anyone who engages with architecture as a subject — students in adjacent fields (urban studies, history, philosophy, literature), journalists, bloggers, practising architects, and independent researchers. The Avery Review Essay Prize welcomes submissions across fields. UNI's writing briefs are similarly open. Jane Jacobs had no architectural training; Kate Wagner started as a musicologist. Outsider voices regularly win.
Architecture criticism evaluates and interprets buildings, projects, or ideas against broader cultural, historical, or aesthetic frameworks. Architecture journalism reports on events, people, and developments in the field — often with a news peg and edited for a general audience. The best architectural writing blurs the boundary: Reyner Banham's Los Angeles is neither entirely criticism nor journalism but something more alive than either.
Strong entries typically demonstrate: a clear, original argument; a specific object of analysis (a building, a policy, a book, a neighbourhood); command of architectural context without jargon overload; a distinctive writing voice; and tight, edited prose. Vague essays about "what architecture means to me" rarely win. Specificity and argument beat enthusiasm and description every time.
Yes. Many competitions, including most of UNI's writing briefs, are open to professionals. The RIBA Journal Future Architects competition targets early-career professionals. Graham Foundation grants are for mid-career practitioners and researchers. And more generally: practising architects writing about their own field have been a central part of the discipline since Vitruvius.
The Avery Review Essay Prize is an annual competition run by Columbia University's GSAPP journal. It awards $4,000 for first place and $2,000 each for three second-place winners. Essays run 3,000-4,500 words and are published in the journal. It is one of the most prestigious architecture essay prizes in the world and has launched multiple careers. The 2026 ninth annual prize closed in January 2026.
Yes. The Minds Underground Architecture Essay Competition is aimed at students aged 8-18. The Immerse Education Essay Competition also accepts architecture topics for students aged 13-18. For younger writers, these are genuine entry points into the discipline.
An architectural manifesto is a written declaration of principles, intentions, or a vision for how architecture should be practised or what it should become. Canonical examples include Le Corbusier's Vers une architecture (1923), Rem Koolhaas's Delirious New York (1978), and the Futurist Manifesto. Writing competitions sometimes invite manifesto-format entries: short, polemical, visionary texts that stake a position rather than analyze one.
Design competitions are judged primarily by visual jury — drawings, renders, models, diagrams. Writing competitions are judged entirely on text: the quality of the argument, the precision of the language, the originality of the insight, and sometimes the accessibility of the writing to non-specialist readers. There is no aesthetic to hide behind. The judges are typically critics, editors, and academic theorists rather than practising architects.
Speculative fiction about architecture imagines future or alternative built environments through narrative. It draws on traditions from dystopian fiction (J.G. Ballard's High-Rise) through Afrofuturism to contemporary solarpunk and climate fiction. Some UNI competitions specifically invite speculative or creative non-fiction alongside critical essays — briefs like Domain, On Water, and Slum City are examples.
Beyond competitions themselves, unsolicited architecture writing is welcomed by: e-flux Architecture, KoozArch, Common Edge, Places Journal, Failed Architecture, and the opinion desks at ArchDaily and Dezeen. Independent Substacks are increasingly viable. Winning or placing in a competition on UNI is itself a publication credit that opens conversations with editors at these platforms.
Start your library with: VitruviusDe Architectura (any reliable edition); John RuskinThe Seven Lamps of Architecture; Jane JacobsThe Death and Life of Great American Cities; Lewis MumfordThe City in History; Reyner BanhamLos Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies and Theory and Design in the First Machine Age; Rem KoolhaasDelirious New York and S,M,L,XL; Aldo RossiThe Architecture of the City; Beatriz ColominaPrivacy and Publicity; Paul GoldbergerWhy Architecture Matters; and the collected essays of Ada Louise Huxtable. For contemporary criticism, subscribe to Places Journal, e-flux Architecture, and at least one independent architecture Substack. Read the Avery Review archive cover to cover if you want to write in the academic register.
Beyond architecture writing and journalism, explore related sections including narrative and thematic design (where speculative architecture meets storytelling), futuristic and conceptual architecture, UNI Design Awards (home of the flagship UnIADA dissertation award), typological competitions, and public architecture. Browse all ongoing competitions, see what's trending, preview upcoming launches, or study the past competitions archive. Ready to compete with your voice rather than your software? Explore UNI Membership for unlimited access to every brief on the platform.