Is Arch has Unveiled the Winners of its ISArch Awards for Architecture Students
Is ARCH has announced the winners of the seventh edition of the ISArch Awards, an international award competition for students of architecture. In an effort to provide students with a ?gateway to the professional and corporate world,? the competition calls for students to engage in dialogue and debate within the framework of their university studies.Â
Courtesy of Is Arch
Is ARCH has announced the winners of the seventh edition of the ISArch Awards, an international award competition for students of architecture. In an effort to provide students with a ?gateway to the professional and corporate world,? the competition calls for students to engage in dialogue and debate within the framework of their university studies. The three winners of the seventh IsArch Awards are:First Prize: Delta Reconfiguratoria / José Alberto González MartÃn; Spain
Courtesy of Is Arch
The Ebro Delta is disappearing because of sea level rise due to climate change and the lack of sand coming from the mountains due to over construction of reservoirs. This project proposes a temporary low-tech industrial overlay made of traditional knowledge and local materials and techniques that will let Nature itself draw a new productive delta and restore balance.Second Prize: No man's land / Orit Theuer; Academy of Fine Arts Austria
Courtesy of Is Arch
Regarding the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, this law is a powerful political tool to prevent a union between two peopl...
Courtesy of Is Arch
Is ARCH has announced the winners of the seventh edition of the ISArch Awards, an international award competition for students of architecture. In an effort to provide students with a ?gateway to the professional and corporate world,? the competition calls for students to engage in dialogue and debate within the framework of their university studies. The three winners of the seventh IsArch Awards are:First Prize: Delta Reconfiguratoria / José Alberto González MartÃn; Spain
Courtesy of Is Arch
The Ebro Delta is disappearing because of sea level rise due to climate change and the lack of sand coming from the mountains due to over construction of reservoirs. This project proposes a temporary low-tech industrial overlay made of traditional knowledge and local materials and techniques that will let Nature itself draw a new productive delta and restore balance.Second Prize: No man's land / Orit Theuer; Academy of Fine Arts Austria
Courtesy of Is Arch
Regarding the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, this law is a powerful political tool to prevent a union between two peopl...
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