Call for Entries: League Prize 2022 | Grounding

Registration Deadline: Feb 13, 2022; Submission Deadline: Feb 13, 2022 CALL FOR ENTRIESYoung architects and designers are invited to submit work to the annual Architectural League Prize Competition. Projects of all types, either theoretical or real, and executed in any medium, are welcome. The jury will select work for presentation in lectures, digital media, and an exhibition in June 2022. These events will be either in-person, online, or hybrid, depending on local and national health guidelines this spring. Winners will receive a cash prize of $2,000. Established in 1981 to recognize visionary work by young practitioners, the Architectural League Prize is an annual competition, lecture series, and exhibition organized by The Architectural League and its Young Architects + Designers Committee. Learn more about past winners of The Architectural League Prize.THEME: GROUNDINGSearching for grounding is a sticky, precarious, and stubborn pursuit of our time. In an unpredictable and hybrid world, more focus is needed on how architecture can respond to this condition and how young architects can situate themselves within it.Through grounding, designers come to terms with complex material realities, sociocultural contingencies, and more fundamental ways of being. Although grounding suggests locality, contemporary environments are invariably embedded in global systems that complicate architecture’s relationship with place. Grounding thus means, on one hand, making vital connections to what is already there—materially, socially, and otherwise—and, on the other, contending with placeless, pervasive processes. Navigating the remote and embodied, the nonlocal and local, architecture requires methods of retooling, reappropriation, and transformation to find its grounding. Engaging with what precedes and underlies, grounding is also about establishing productive contexts for action and bringing design into new orbits of collaboration. Such messy interdependencies pull architecture toward the ground, urging designers to consider contingencies as resources for practice.This year’s Architectural League Prize reflects on the substance of design’s foundations. How do young architects tether their work and practices to the grounds upon which they design? How can designers respond to both the particularities of location and the ubiquity of global forces? What are intentional approaches to and forms of grounding?ELIGIBILITYThe competition is open only to current, full-time residents (who need not be citizens) of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Entrants must be ten years or less out of a bachelor’s or master’s degree program. Current students are ineligible. Entrants may submit individually or as a group. If the individual(s) is/are the sole principal(s) of a firm, the winning firm name will be listed as well. Entrants must submit work done independently; no work done as an employee of a firm, where the entrant is not a principal or partner, is eligible for submission. No student work completed for any academic program or degree is eligible for submission. Educators may not include work done in their studios or for their teaching. Past League Prize winners are ineligible. If only one partner of a firm is eligible, he, she, or they can enter as a single entrant. He, she, or they must include a signed document from all other partners describing the collaborative nature of the work and the firm will not be listed as a recipient of the Prize. Collaborative work will be considered within the context of an individual’s complete portfolio.SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTSA single digital portfolio in PDF format, no larger than 35MB. It may not contain more than 15 spreads (or 30 pages) in total, excluding the cover page. The competition theme is given as a basis for young architects and designers to reflect upon and reevaluate their work. A written statement not to exceed 250 words is required, which defines and considers the work under the rubric of the competition theme. Significant weight is given to how an applicant’s work addresses the theme. The written statement must be on the first page of the portfolio. If relevant, please also include collaborator acknowledgment and/or partner acknowledgment form(s). This is an anonymous competition. Your portfolio cannot contain any form of identification. Please do not include your name, firm name, or photograph on your submission materials. ENTRY FEEEach entrant must submit an entry fee of $35. COMPETITION DEADLINESunday, February 13, 2022, 11:59pm EST.There will be no exceptions to this deadline.SELECTIONWinning entrants will be notified by mid-March 2022.PROGRAM DIRECTORAnne RieselbachPROGRAM MANAGERRafi LehmannQUESTIONSApplicants may email questions to Program Manager Rafi Lehmann, lehmann@archleague.org.Graphic identity by Pentagram. SupportThe Architectural League Prize is made possible by Tischler und Sohn, Delta Millworks, and Judlowe.  Learn more and apply.Read the full post on Bustle

Call for Entries: League Prize 2022 | Grounding
Registration Deadline: Feb 13, 2022; Submission Deadline: Feb 13, 2022

CALL FOR ENTRIES

Young architects and designers are invited to submit work to the annual Architectural League Prize Competition. Projects of all types, either theoretical or real, and executed in any medium, are welcome. The jury will select work for presentation in lectures, digital media, and an exhibition in June 2022. These events will be either in-person, online, or hybrid, depending on local and national health guidelines this spring. Winners will receive a cash prize of $2,000. 

Established in 1981 to recognize visionary work by young practitioners, the Architectural League Prize is an annual competition, lecture series, and exhibition organized by The Architectural League and its Young Architects + Designers Committee. Learn more about past winners of The Architectural League Prize.

THEME: GROUNDING
Searching for grounding is a sticky, precarious, and stubborn pursuit of our time. In an unpredictable and hybrid world, more focus is needed on how architecture can respond to this condition and how young architects can situate themselves within it.

Through grounding, designers come to terms with complex material realities, sociocultural contingencies, and more fundamental ways of being. Although grounding suggests locality, contemporary environments are invariably embedded in global systems that complicate architecture’s relationship with place. Grounding thus means, on one hand, making vital connections to what is already there—materially, socially, and otherwise—and, on the other, contending with placeless, pervasive processes. Navigating the remote and embodied, the nonlocal and local, architecture requires methods of retooling, reappropriation, and transformation to find its grounding. 

Engaging with what precedes and underlies, grounding is also about establishing productive contexts for action and bringing design into new orbits of collaboration. Such messy interdependencies pull architecture toward the ground, urging designers to consider contingencies as resources for practice.

This year’s Architectural League Prize reflects on the substance of design’s foundations. How do young architects tether their work and practices to the grounds upon which they design? How can designers respond to both the particularities of location and the ubiquity of global forces? What are intentional approaches to and forms of grounding?

ELIGIBILITY
The competition is open only to current, full-time residents (who need not be citizens) of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Entrants must be ten years or less out of a bachelor’s or master’s degree program. Current students are ineligible. Entrants may submit individually or as a group. If the individual(s) is/are the sole principal(s) of a firm, the winning firm name will be listed as well. Entrants must submit work done independently; no work done as an employee of a firm, where the entrant is not a principal or partner, is eligible for submission. No student work completed for any academic program or degree is eligible for submission. Educators may not include work done in their studios or for their teaching. Past League Prize winners are ineligible. If only one partner of a firm is eligible, he, she, or they can enter as a single entrant. He, she, or they must include a signed document from all other partners describing the collaborative nature of the work and the firm will not be listed as a recipient of the Prize. Collaborative work will be considered within the context of an individual’s complete portfolio.

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
A single digital portfolio in PDF format, no larger than 35MB. It may not contain more than 15 spreads (or 30 pages) in total, excluding the cover page. 

The competition theme is given as a basis for young architects and designers to reflect upon and reevaluate their work. A written statement not to exceed 250 words is required, which defines and considers the work under the rubric of the competition theme. Significant weight is given to how an applicant’s work addresses the theme. The written statement must be on the first page of the portfolio. 

If relevant, please also include collaborator acknowledgment and/or partner acknowledgment form(s). 

This is an anonymous competition. Your portfolio cannot contain any form of identification. Please do not include your name, firm name, or photograph on your submission materials. 

ENTRY FEE
Each entrant must submit an entry fee of $35. 

COMPETITION DEADLINE
Sunday, February 13, 2022, 11:59pm EST.
There will be no exceptions to this deadline.

SELECTION
Winning entrants will be notified by mid-March 2022.

PROGRAM DIRECTOR
Anne Rieselbach

PROGRAM MANAGER
Rafi Lehmann

QUESTIONS
Applicants may email questions to Program Manager Rafi Lehmann, lehmann@archleague.org.

Graphic identity by Pentagram.

Support

The Architectural League Prize is made possible by Tischler und SohnDelta Millworks, and Judlowe.  

Learn more and apply.
Read the full post on Bustler