Architecture in Ecuador: 16 Projects Rooted in Territory, Craft, and Collective Practice

Architecture in Ecuador: 16 Projects Rooted in Territory, Craft, and Collective Practice
Chaki Wasi, Artisanal Center of the Shalalá Community / La Cabina de la Curiosidad. Image © JAG Studio Chaki Wasi, Artisanal Center of the Shalalá Community / La Cabina de la Curiosidad. Image © JAG Studio

Between the Andes, the coast, and the Amazon, Ecuador's architecture has evolved as a reflection of its layered geography, a place where climate, topography, and culture unite. Throughout the territory, architecture has been an act of adaptation: from vernacular traditions rooted in collective labor and local materials to the colonial and modernist influences that reshaped its cities. This diversity has produced distinct constructive systems, from bamboo and cane structures along the coast to earth and stone constructions in the Andes, forming an archive of adaptive design that continues to influence contemporary practice.

Yet in the past decade, Ecuadorian architecture has undergone a quiet but deep transformation. New academic programs and international references have encouraged a growing awareness of climate and social justice. Emerging architects are redefining practice through workshops, collective studios, and on-site experimentation that blurs the line between design and activism. No longer focused on architecture as an object, a new generation of architects is approaching design as a process. One focused on collaboration, sustainability, and cultural identity. Their questions have shifted the design language from what to build to with whom.

Read more »