Junya Ishigami pavilion at Vitra Campus, Weil am Rhein, with Konstantin Grcic Scout tubular-steel workplace system in the foreground

Vitra Campus 2026: Ishigami Pavilion vs Grcic Scout

Vitra in 2026 placed two answers to the same brand question on opposite ends of the Vitra Campus 2026 brief: Junya Ishigami’s 280-square-metre transparent pavilion held up by 47 needle-thin steel columns of 16–31 millimetre diameter, and Konstantin Grcic’s Scout, a five-piece modular workplace family launched on 19–20 March 2026 from a tubular-steel kit assembled by hand. One is architecture-as-statement, sited in Weil am Rhein and engineered with Jun Sato Structural Engineers; the other is product-as-statement, a workspace system shipped in flat-pack pieces and tightened with mechanical tilts and no firmware. Read together, they describe how Vitra now wants to be understood — as a company that argues with both buildings and chairs, and that no longer treats one of those as the warm-up act for the other. ...

May 6, 2026 · 14 min · 2821 words · FORMA Editorial
Junya Ishigami's 280-square-metre Vitra Campus pavilion paired with Theaster Gates's Chawan Cabinet at Prada Home on Via Montenapoleone 6, Milan Design Week 2026

Japanese Design at Milan Design Week 2026

Three statements anchor Japanese design at Milan Design Week 2026: Junya Ishigami’s Vitra pavilion — 280 square metres held up by 47 hair-thin steel columns at Weil am Rhein — Theaster Gates’s Chawan Cabinet at Prada Home, Via Montenapoleone 6, and Toshiko Mori becoming, this April, the first woman to take the AIA Gold Medal for Architecture in the Institute’s 119-year history. Around those three poles, a denser map: Koyori’s Salone debut, Karimoku’s “A Thoughtful Stay,” Hosoo’s “Wave Weave” with Carsten Nicolai, Kengo Kuma’s rugs at the Crespi Bonsai Museum, Noritake at Alcova’s Baggio Military Hospital, We+ casting aluminium from foundry burrs at Galleria Rubin, Roberto Sironi salvaging kominka beams with Sansui at Rossana Orlandi, and Hideo’s plant-derived bioresin tubs in Pavilion 10. This is the lineage; this is the map. ...

April 28, 2026 · 15 min · 3116 words · FORMA Editorial
Toshiko Mori, 2026 American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Architecture — Japanese-architecture canon alongside Tadao Ando, SANAA, and Junya Ishigami

Toshiko Mori Gold Medal: A Japanese Lineage

Toshiko Mori is the first woman to receive the American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Architecture — and her 17 April 2026 award places a Japanese-American architect in the same US institutional canon Tadao Ando entered in 2002. The Toshiko Mori Gold Medal is not a career capstone delivered late; it is a re-positioning. The Academy, founded in 1898, rotates its Gold Medals among artistic disciplines, so architecture recognition is irregular — which is what makes the 2026 cycle load-bearing. It arrives in the same year Shigeru Ban takes the AIA Gold Medal, the same year Junya Ishigami opens his pavilion on the Vitra Campus, and the same year Peter Zumthor’s David Geffen Galleries open at LACMA. Read together, these four events redraw the map of what Japanese architecture in the West actually means. ...

April 28, 2026 · 9 min · 1852 words · FORMA Editorial
Junya Ishigami pavilion at Vitra Campus 2026

Junya Ishigami's Vitra Pavilion: A Building That Almost Isn't There

The Vitra Campus has, since the late 1980s, functioned as an open-air collection of contemporary architecture. Frank Gehry’s Vitra Design Museum, Tadao Ando’s conference pavilion, Zaha Hadid’s fire station, Herzog & de Meuron’s VitraHaus, and SANAA’s factory building have made the site, in Weil-am-Rhein on the Swiss-German border, into one of the few places where significant work by major architects can be experienced in concentration. It is a campus that has, over four decades, accumulated Pritzker laureates the way most institutions accumulate furniture. ...

April 22, 2026 · 13 min · 2641 words · FORMA Editorial

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