Architecture has always been the art of creating spaces. However, for a long time, it was created for an abstract \"human in general\" — without considering his biological rhythms, psychology, the need for silence or communication. Today, this approach is becoming outdated. In its place comes human-centered architecture — a direction that puts well-being, health, and emotional experience at the forefront, not aesthetics or economic efficiency. From social housing for the elderly to residential complexes in the polar circle, from offices where you can breathe to art objects that remind us of the importance of emotions — around the world, projects are emerging that prove: architecture can care.
In 2025, the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA Stirling Prize) was awarded to a project that, at first glance, seems modest but exceeds many grandiose buildings in social significance. Appleby Blue Almshouse is a residential complex for people over 65 years old, designed by the architectural firm Witherford Watson Mann.
Unlike traditional nursing homes, which often resemble isolated institutions, Appleby Blue is built around the idea of community. 59 bright apartments are arranged in a U-shape around a central garden with trees, plants, and a water element, creating a sense of a \"forest oasis\" in the heart of London. The main innovation is the \"social corridors\": wide, light-filled passages with pots and benches, designed to encourage chance encounters and communication among residents. On the first floor is a two-story \"garden room\" and a common kitchen where public events are held, open to neighbors from nearby houses. As the chair of the jury noted, this project is not just about providing housing, but about \"providing pure pleasure,\" which offers \"hope and imagination\" in the face of the loneliness crisis among the elderly.
If Appleby Blue solves the problem of social isolation, then the residential complex \"Kolsky\" in Murmansk is a response to the challenge of an extreme environment. The project developed by the research laboratory GloraX Lab, involving neurobiologists and psychologists, uses the principles of neuroarchitecture and biohacking to adapt housing to polar night conditions.
The main innovation is dynamic lighting that imitates the natural daily cycle, helping to maintain the proper functioning of circadian rhythms and reducing the feeling of chronic fatigue. Visual safety is also thought out to the smallest detail: courtyards have soft geometry with smooth, winding lines that are perceived as safer and reduce the activation of anxiety zones by about 22%. Transparent entrance groups with dichroic film, changing color depending on lighting, not only create the effect of the Northern Lights but also eliminate \"surprises behind the door,\" increasing a sense of control. The \"Kolsky\" project is an example of how the science of the brain can turn a harsh climate into a comfortable living environment.
In Moscow, the principles of neuroarchitecture lie at the foundation of the project of the residential skyscraper One in the business center \"Moscow-City\". The concept of the building, developed by the chief architect of Moscow Sergey Kuznetsov, is called \"emo-tech\" — emotional technology. The idea is that architecture should not just perform functions but evoke emotions, surprise, and a positive aesthetic experience.
The facade with continuous glass glazing, reminiscent of the Möbius strip, creates a complex relief that is accentuated by accent lighting in the evening. Experts explain that the brain \"very well catches regularity, rhythms, contrasts, metaphorical aspects\" — and this becomes a source of dopamine, the hormone of positive emotions. One is an attempt to turn high-rise housing from a utilitarian object into a space that is proportional to human perception and gives \"an element of wonder.\"
Not all human-centered projects are buildings in the traditional sense. At the 2025 Seoul Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism, British designer Thomas Heatherwick presented a monumental installation — a 90-meter steel wall that became the center of a public space. Humanise Wall is both an art object, a billboard, and a call to action.
One side of the wall faces the park and represents a critique of modern \"blandemic\" architecture (Heatherwick's term), showing 400 outstanding buildings from around the world. The other side, facing the roads, offers nine creative solutions from local designers on how to bring warmth and individuality back to the urban environment. The structure itself is twisted 180 degrees, creating an enclosed space that can serve as a stage or a place for meetings. Humanise Wall is a reminder that architecture should not only be functional but also emotional, and that each of us can influence its quality.
The trend of human-centeredness does not bypass the working environment. In the face of a shortage of qualified personnel and a hybrid work format, the office has become a tool for retaining talent: companies need not force employees to come but to create conditions in which they will want to do so.
Modern human-centered offices are built on three \"pillars\": air quality (cognitive abilities improve by 60-70% due to clean air), natural lighting (the correct distance from the facade allows the space to be filled with light), and acoustics (zoning into quiet \"library\" zones for concentration and noisy lounge zones for collaboration). Flexible layout, the absence of columns, and an efficient central core allow the space to be adapted to any tasks. The office is no longer a place where you \"serve time\" — it is an environment that supports health, productivity, and the desire to work.
In 2026, the International Union of Architects recognized prizes for projects restoring human health. The Grand Prix in the category \"Built Objects\" went to the Health Center in Copenhagen by Dorte Mandrup — a rehabilitation facility formed by daylight, natural materials, and spaces for movement and communication. In Sweden, the pilot project Fridhemsplan has been launched, where the findings of medical research on the brain are integrated into urban planning to create environments that reduce stress. And in Barnaul, the first residential complex in Siberia with a \"digital firmware\" — \"Burevestnik\" — is being built, where smart home technologies become part of caring for health.
Human-centered architecture is not a fashionable trend but a change in paradigm. From London's social housing that cures loneliness to Murmansk's houses that overcome the polar night, from Moscow skyscrapers that give emotions to Seoul's walls that remind us of the importance of beauty — everywhere the same principle: architecture should serve man, not vice versa. Buildings are becoming not just \"square meters,\" but partners in our daily lives, helping us feel better, work more productively, and live happier.
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