Tag 20yearsfloornature

29-10-2021
Ten years of Next Landmark, Floornature's international architectural competition
2021 marks not only the 20th anniversary of the founding of Floornature.com, but also the 10th anniversary of Next Landmark, the international competition promoted by the Iris Ceramica Group and curated by the editorial staff of Floornature.com, in collaboration with leading names in contemporary architecture. Over the years, the contest has been continuously updated in terms of the themes covered and the partners involved, while maintaining one key element unchanged: Next Landmark values original and innovative projects and research, representative of the state of the art of contemporary architecture.

20-10-2021
2001-2021: 20 years of Floornature.com, a pioneer of brand journalism and observer of the changing face of architecture
After twenty years of reporting on the world of architecture and design day in, day out, Floornature.com has now become one of the go-to portals for information on the industry. Passion, commitment and constant devotion to issues around sustainability and the environment: these are the fortes of a website that has proven capable of offering new tools for communication, harnessing the power of the image and new architectural languages, and promoting projects and research through incredibly successful international contests such as Next Landmark. By developing new themes and fine-tuning the information it offers, Floornature.com maintains its commitment to this day by constantly improving its columns, with twenty years spent not just monitoring the evolution of projects and materials, but also providing an insight into their consequences at the social, cultural and environmental levels.

15-10-2021
20 years of architecture: at the cutting edge of design, in real time
Floornature was founded in 2001, born out of the intuition of a business leader. Twenty years of reading and analysing all the latest from the world of architecture in real time. A bold stance on sustainability and a preference for architects working in the more remote areas of the world.