Career Expansion and Global Projects
European and Scandinavian Developments (2009–2015)
In 2009, BIG published Yes is More: An Archicomic on Architectural Evolution, a 400-page manifesto presented in comic-book format that articulated the firm's evolving design ethos of pragmatic utopianism, emphasizing iterative problem-solving through architectural evolution rather than rigid ideology.[33] The publication coincided with a solo exhibition at the Danish Architecture Centre (DAC) in Copenhagen, marking BIG's first comprehensive showcase in Denmark and reinforcing Ingels' influence in Scandinavian architectural discourse.[34]
The same year, BIG received a commission for a multi-purpose hall extension at Gammel Hellerup High School north of Copenhagen, Ingels' alma mater, adding 1,100 m² of facilities including classrooms for arts, music, and drama beneath an elevated football pitch to preserve the site's historic low-rise character while accommodating modern educational needs.[35] This project, completed in 2015, exemplified BIG's approach to adaptive reuse and spatial efficiency in constrained Scandinavian contexts.[36]
In 2010, BIG designed the Danish Pavilion for Expo 2010 in Shanghai, a 3,000 m² white steel monolith featuring interactive cycling experiences to promote Denmark's sustainable urban lifestyle, though executed outside Europe, it advanced BIG's Scandinavian-rooted hedonistic sustainability model internationally.[37] Domestically, the firm completed 8 House in Ørestad, Copenhagen—a 61,000 m² mixed-use complex forming a continuous figure-eight loop that integrates 150 apartments, offices, shops, and communal spaces, with a 1.5 km ramp enabling residents to bike or walk to a green rooftop park overlooking preserved wetlands.[38] Completed in December 2010 at a cost of approximately $133 million, the project concluded BIG's Ørestad trilogy (following VM Houses and Mountain Dwellings) and earned recognition for blending density with accessibility in urban Scandinavian development.[39]
By 2013, BIG delivered the Danish National Maritime Museum in Helsingør, a subterranean 17,500 m² facility excavated around a historic dry dock adjacent to Kronborg Castle, using black-painted concrete walls to evoke a ship's hull while preserving the site's UNESCO-protected landscape through minimal above-ground intervention.[40] Opened in October 2013, the museum's design prioritized contextual sensitivity and narrative flow, with exhibition spaces looping 300 meters around the dock to immerse visitors in Denmark's maritime history without disrupting the coastal horizon.[41] These works during 2009–2015 solidified BIG's reputation in Scandinavia for innovative, site-responsive architecture that integrated public amenities with environmental constraints, contributing to Copenhagen's urban regeneration efforts.[18]
North American and Major Commissions (2016–2020)
In 2016, Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) completed VIA 57 West, a 750-foot (229-meter) residential skyscraper at 625 West 57th Street in Manhattan, New York City, marking the firm's first high-rise building in North America.[12] The project features a tetrahedral "court-scraper" form that integrates a 1.2-acre (0.5-hectare) public park within its sloping plinth, housing 709 condominium units across 32 stories with amenities including a spa, fitness center, and rooftop terrace.[12] Developed by the Durst Organization in collaboration with developer Douglas Durst, the building's hybrid typology—blending courtyard typology with skyscraper efficiency—yielded approximately 400,000 square feet (37,000 square meters) of residential space while preserving views of the Hudson River and Central Park.[14]
Building on this foothold, BIG secured significant commissions in the U.S. urban core. In 2015, the firm was appointed by Silverstein Properties to design Two World Trade Center, a proposed 1,340-foot (408-meter) office tower at the World Trade Center site, featuring stacked, terraced volumes with a stacked-box aesthetic to maximize daylight and flexibility for tenants.[12] Although construction remained stalled through 2020 due to market conditions and tenant commitments, the project underscored BIG's entry into high-profile commercial developments amid New York City's post-9/11 redevelopment. Concurrently, BIG advanced resiliency initiatives, including contributions to the East Side Coastal Resiliency project for New York City, commissioned under the Rebuild by Design initiative, which involved elevating parks and infrastructure along 120 blocks to mitigate flooding risks from storm surges.[42]
By 2019, BIG's North American portfolio expanded with its selection as a co-designer for Google's North Bayshore headquarters campus in Mountain View, California, a 1.1-million-square-foot (102,000-square-meter) development emphasizing modular, low-rise structures with green roofs, bike paths, and energy-efficient systems to support 2,800 employees.[13] This commission, part of a Heatherwick Studio-led team, aligned with Silicon Valley's focus on innovative workplaces. In 2018, Ingels was named Chief Architect for WeWork, advising on standardized designs for the company's global co-working spaces, which influenced interiors across hundreds of locations with flexible, community-oriented layouts prior to WeWork's 2019 valuation peak and subsequent challenges.[43] These efforts reflected BIG's shift toward large-scale, tech-driven, and adaptive commissions, though critics noted potential overemphasis on form over long-term feasibility in variable economic climates.[14]
Recent Global Initiatives (2021–present)
In 2021, BIG advanced its Oceanix City concept, a modular floating urban platform designed for coastal resilience against sea-level rise, capable of housing 10,000 residents in self-sustaining units powered by solar energy and aquaculture, with a prototype planned for Busan, South Korea, to withstand Category 5 hurricanes.[44][45] The initiative, presented to the United Nations, emphasizes zero-waste systems and scalability to accommodate up to 100,000 people per city module, addressing projections that 90% of major global cities will face coastal flooding by 2050.[46] Updates through 2024 included refinements to energy-efficient deep-sea cooling and renewable integration, though full deployment remains conceptual pending technological and regulatory advancements.[47]
BIG secured the European Commission's Joint Research Centre competition in Seville, Spain, in April 2022, for a 40,000 m² campus focused on sustainable innovation, featuring flexible lab spaces and green roofs to support multidisciplinary research on climate and energy challenges.[48] Expanding into Asia, the firm opened its ninth office in Bhutan in December 2024 to lead the 1,000 km² Gelephu Mindfulness City masterplan, integrating low-carbon infrastructure, biodiversity corridors, and wellness-focused urbanism to foster economic growth while preserving Himalayan ecology; Phase 1 registration as the first international firm underscored its global outreach.[49] In Japan, BIG contributed to Toyota Woven City's Phase 1 launch in fall 2025, a 175-hectare experimental community testing autonomous mobility, hydrogen energy, and human-centered design on a former forest site near Mount Fuji.[50]
European commissions proliferated in 2025, including the 11,500 m² "The Sail" congress center in Rouen, France, won in October, with a timber-clad riverside structure targeting Passivhaus energy standards and accommodating 2,000 visitors for events along the Seine.[51] In Tirana, Albania, BIG's Faith Park proposal prevailed in October 2025, envisioning a 200,000 m² hillside public space with nine stone pavilions representing global spiritual traditions, blending ecology and interfaith dialogue amid urban expansion.[52] The Marengo Multimodal Hub in Toulouse, France, advanced to building permit in October 2025 for a 12,000 m² transport node integrating rail, bus, and bike facilities, with construction slated for 2026 completion.[50] In the United States, approvals for the 670 Mesquit mixed-use development in Los Angeles in December 2024 encompassed 895 residential units and 676,000 sq ft of offices, prioritizing adaptive reuse and public amenities.[50] These projects reflect BIG's emphasis on resilient, multi-use designs amid urban densification and climate pressures.