Architecture website resource
Architecture Website Design Examples
The best architecture websites make taste, trust, and project fit visible quickly. They give prospective clients enough structure to understand the studio without flattening the work into a sales page.
1. Project Hierarchy
- Project cards show type, location, scale, and one visual reason to keep looking.
- The strongest work appears first, not the newest work by default.
- Case studies separate concept, constraints, material decisions, and finished outcome.
- Images are large enough to judge proportion, detail, and atmosphere.
2. Studio Positioning
- The first screen names what kind of work the studio wants more of.
- The copy explains approach without generic words like timeless or bespoke carrying the page.
- Team, press, awards, and process details support the same positioning.
- The page makes it clear whether the studio serves residential, cultural, workplace, hospitality, or mixed projects.
3. Inquiry Path
- Contact is visible, but not louder than the work.
- The inquiry prompt sets expectations for timeline, budget, location, and project type.
- Prospective clients can understand what happens after they reach out.
- The site feels curated without hiding essential information.