Archigram 🔍

Architectural collective (1961 - Present)

Archigram was an avant-garde architectural group formed in London in the early 1960s, known for its conceptual projects that celebrated technology, pop culture, and nomadic lifestyles. They envisioned dynamic, adaptable, and often plug-in cities that radically questioned traditional architecture.

Mentors & Influences (Looking Backward)

Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate
Unknown Influence Log in to Generate

Inspired By Archigram (Looking Forward)

27%
SuperStudio
Architectural design collective
Archigram's futuristic, collage-based proposals for mobile cities and technological utopias directly inspired Superstudio's own conceptual explorations of universal grids and radical urbanism.
12%
Andrea Branzi
Architect, Designer, Theorist
Archigram's playful, technology-embracing vision of the future acted as a direct trigger for Italian Radical Architecture, including Branzi, who later said Archigram 'was the detonante' that inspired his generation.
62%
Anthony Dunne
Designer
Archigram's emphasis on conceptual architecture, futurism, and the critical exploration of technology's role in daily life aligns with Dunne's speculative design approach to envisioning alternative futures.