This paper investigates the evolving landscape of architectural criticism in the digital era, leveraging the enduring interplay between architecture and media. It specifically examines the role of social media and public awards in improving user engagement with architectural discourse. A mixed-method approach, incorporating both qualitative and quantitative analyses, is used to discuss three architecture awards. These are chosen for their different evaluation processes and their capacity to offer diverse opportunities for public interaction and engagement. The study emphasises the potential of social media to democratise architectural criticism, while also addressing challenges such as the prominence of non-critical visual material and the presence of algorithmic biases. The findings underline the importance of providing adequate materials for public evaluation and integrating expert juries to support the assessment process. These elements are essential to fostering informed public participation, bridging the gap between professional expertise and popular engagement, and enabling meaningful architectural discourse on social media. This paper fills a gap in the academic literature by connecting public architectural awards, a relatively unexplored aspect of architectural culture, with the potential of social media as a platform for architectural criticism.
Criticism goes social: exploring public architectural criticism through architecture awards / Tempestini, Matteo. - In: ARCHNET-IJAR. - ISSN 2631-6862. - STAMPA. - Ahead of Print:Ahead of Print(2025). [10.1108/arch-04-2024-0165]
Criticism goes social: exploring public architectural criticism through architecture awards
Tempestini, Matteo
2025
Abstract
This paper investigates the evolving landscape of architectural criticism in the digital era, leveraging the enduring interplay between architecture and media. It specifically examines the role of social media and public awards in improving user engagement with architectural discourse. A mixed-method approach, incorporating both qualitative and quantitative analyses, is used to discuss three architecture awards. These are chosen for their different evaluation processes and their capacity to offer diverse opportunities for public interaction and engagement. The study emphasises the potential of social media to democratise architectural criticism, while also addressing challenges such as the prominence of non-critical visual material and the presence of algorithmic biases. The findings underline the importance of providing adequate materials for public evaluation and integrating expert juries to support the assessment process. These elements are essential to fostering informed public participation, bridging the gap between professional expertise and popular engagement, and enabling meaningful architectural discourse on social media. This paper fills a gap in the academic literature by connecting public architectural awards, a relatively unexplored aspect of architectural culture, with the potential of social media as a platform for architectural criticism.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2997582