architecture.com

Royal Gold Medal

Pioneering sustainable, user-centred design for nearly three decades, SANAA, the collaborative practice of Japanese architects Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, will receive the 2025 Royal Gold Medal for architecture. The award, presented on behalf of His Majesty the King, recognises their long-term commitment to projects that prioritise inclusivity and accessibility.

SANAA's hallmark is a deep commitment to creating places that bring people together and inspire collaboration. The medal recognises their work to reshape the global design landscape, creating spaces that bring simplicity, light, and elegance to the fore.

Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, Sanaa, standing wearing dark colours
Kazuyo Sejima (left) and Ryue Nishizawa, Royal Gold Medallist 2025 (Credit: Aiko Suziki)

SANAA's projects undertaken around the globe were praised by the 2025 RIBA Honours Committee for their 'ability to shape a universal language of architecture that resonates with people everywhere.' Balancing boldness with sensitivity to the local environment, their works 'demonstrate that architecture can be both functional and profoundly elegant, offering a sense of calm amidst an increasingly complex and chaotic world.'

white building looking like stacked blocks SANAA
New Museum of contemporary art, New York by SANAA, Royal Gold Medallist 2025 (Credit: Dean Kaufman)

SANAA's distinctive use of light lends their spaces an ethereal quality, where transparency and materiality often interplay seamlessly to create environments that connect users to the architecture and surrounding landscape.

Their designs embody an incredible dedication to their surroundings and local context. From the striking New Museum that rises boldly over the bustling streets of New York City, to the quietly flowing low rise Rolex Learning Centre that 'flows' alongside the shores of Lake Geneva in Lausanne, Switzerland, SANAA's designs reflect a profound sensitivity to place.

Often presenting a simple, minimalistic facade, their projects disguise the quiet complexity of their interiors, a testament to the deep rigour behind Sejima and Nishizawa's work. This balance of simplicity and depth defines their architectural approach.

Tsuruoka, Japan by SANAA, Royal Gold Medallist 2025

Other notable works over the course of their career include, the Dior Omotesando Store, Japan (2003); 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, Japan (2004); Zollverein School of Design, Germany (2006); Serpentine Gallery Pavilion, UK (2009); Louvre-Lens in France (2012); Grace Farms, USA (2015); and Sydney Modern, Australia (2022).

Multi-modular low-lying building in Sydney Australia by SANAA
Modern Sydney development designed by Royal Gold Medallist 2025, SANAA

Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa: "We are delighted and very honoured to receive the Royal Gold Medal. We have always believed that architecture can transform and repair environments, helping us to relate to our surroundings, nature and each other. Throughout our careers we have tried to make spaces that bring people together, inviting them to imagine new ways of living and learning collectively. Architecture is always teamwork and we are very grateful to everyone that has given us opportunities to develop these ideas over the years, and to all those people that have worked tirelessly with us to realise them. This is a very happy moment for us, thank you."

SANAA's Sejima and Nishizawa stood in front of tropical leaves
Sanaa, the collaborative practice of Japanese architects Ryue Nishizawa and Kazuyo Sejima

RIBA President, Muyiwa Oki: "Exemplifying an unassuming yet impactful leadership in the evolving practice and theory of architecture, SANAA's designs demonstrate that architecture can balance functionality with profound elegance. True pioneers in the field, their unwavering commitment to sustainable, user-centred design has quietly blazed a trail for others, setting an inspiring standard for the future of our built environment.

Showing remarkable clarity and consistency over the decades, their work serves as a lasting testament to the transformative power of architecture - to inspire joy, to create a sense of belonging, and to connect us to the environments we inhabit. Rooted in a shared vision where architecture priorities the human experience and interaction alongside form and function, SANAA's legacy will continue to resonate across cultures and generations to come."

Read our complete list of Royal Gold Medallists (1980-2025).