This subcategory is dedicated to individual and collective housing projects, reflecting the diversity and complexity of modern private life. Projects may range from single-family homes to residential complexes, each playing a role in improving quality of life and integrating into the urban or rural landscape.

Architects with the right to practice in the country where they reside may submit projects in this subcategory, provided that the projects were completed and received between July 2024 and July 2026.

Projects may be submitted according to the following types:

Under this sub-subcategory, eligible projects include newly constructed single-family homes or interventions on existing homes that were officially completed (received final completion approval) during the period from July 2024 to July 2026.

Under this sub-subcategory, eligible projects include newly constructed multi-family residential buildings or interventions on existing residential buildings that were officially completed (received final completion approval) during the period from July 2024 to July 2026.

Useful information for registration

For detailed information about eligibility and the entire registration process, please consult the awards rules.

What projects can be submitted in this subcategory?

Single-family houses, duplexes, and collective housing projects completed within the last two years (July 2024 – July 2026).

Who can participate in this category?

Architects or architectural engineers with the right to practice in accordance with the legislation in the country where they practice, as well as the teams coordinated by them, may participate in this category. If the project is not located within the DKMT region, the author of the project must reside in or have graduated from a specialized university within this region.

DKMT

The DKMT Euroregion is a European cross-border cooperation region (DKMT referring to the territory between the Danube–Criș–Mureș–Tisa rivers) which currently includes the counties of Timiș, Caraș-Severin, Arad, and Hunedoara in Romania, the counties of Csongrád and Bács-Kiskun in Hungary, and the province of Vojvodina in Serbia.