Architects at Brenac & Gonzalez & Associés have become both a trailblazer and an inspiration for new Archicad users in France. Their projects all share a design approach inspired by the forest fox and range from residential to commercial.
Artécnica is an engineering company that specializes in the innovation, planning, modeling, design, and evaluation of HVAC and industrial thermal systems with the help of DDScad and Archicad.
Matteo Thun & Partners has grown into a multi-disciplinary team with offices in Milan and Munich. The team is working on several unique hotels and residences, with Archicad the key to bringing each of these inspirational projects to life.
Designed by PMR Architecture, Lower Woodland Barns is a development of two sustainable, low-cost and high-quality homes built on the site of a former agricultural barn in South Devon.
JKMM Architects is one of the leading architecture practices in Finland, the largest Archicad user in Finland, combining expertise in architecture, interior design, urban design, furniture design, graphic design, and art.
Plans for the expanded mountain resort call for a new ski lodge, new home sites, upgrades to terrain and snowmaking, a new condominium hotel and other phased upgrades.
A joint collaboration between Bond Bryan and Simpson Haugh has delivered a state-of-the-art city centre campus for The Manchester College and UCEN.
Since adopting an Archicad workflow, the New York-based Architecture, Interior and Brand Design firm The Up Studio has established a system that supports early design flexibility and developed a design process to demonstrate their concept thinking.
Reflex has developed specialisms in large commercial developments such as office spaces and hotels, city planning, and interior design. Kineum, a signature project for Archicad 27, was an outstanding project creating a new landmark on the Gothenburg skyline.
As part of a mixed-use redevelopment of the iconic Everards Printworks in Bristol, AMA Studio was tasked with sensitively transforming a long-disused office building into a 4-star hotel.
The appeal of this Toronto home has little to do with technical sophistication or a smartly ordered layout. It’s the sense you get, from your first view of the front facade to the gracious views through the expansive glass curtain walls facing the ravine, that human beings live here, and enjoy the living.