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International design competition platform Volume Zero has announced the results of the Tiny Library 2025 Architecture Competition.

The Tiny Library Competition was envisioned to foster awareness, encourage creative exposure, and enhance productivity—ultimately contributing to community development through learning. The initiative underscores the importance of accessible spaces that promote education and self-learning, enabling local communities to benefit from knowledge within their immediate environment.

The competition challenged its participants to rethink and re-imagine the idea of the Library as a 21st-century self-learning and educational incubation space that not only sheds light on conventional means of knowledge but also encourages its users to interact, share ideas, and grow together. Participants were required to design a Tiny Library optimized for 50 users with engaging multifunctional spaces for all ages and spatial experience, where they need to choose a site in a rural or remote context for the proposal, wherever they feel accessibility to knowledge may change the existing circumstance and the structure should not exceed 300 sq.mt of built-up area.

Participants from more than 45 countries contributed valuable concept ideas to the contest, which was evaluated by a panel of international experts.

Volume Zero Competition thanks all the competitors for participating in this competition and for contributing to this competition's research.

The esteemed jury for judging this competition consisted of Avinash Ankalge (A Threshold), Petchimuthu Kennedy (Earthscape Studio), Swapnil Valvatkar (Collage Architecture Studio), Chen Xi (Atelier Xi), Peter Rich (Peter Rich Architects), Chenchen Hu (HCCH Studio), Soumitro Ghosh (Mathew and Ghosh Architects), Song Yehao (THAD SUP Atelier), Bernardo Quinzaños (CCA Centro de Colaboración Arquitectónica), David Barragán (Al Borde).

Jury Panel of Tiny Library 2025 Architecture Competition




The top three winners and Best Student were awarded total prize money of $4,500 while ten entries received Honorable Mentions. Here are the winning entries. The full result for the competition the Tiny Library 2025 Architecture Competition can be found at –
https://volumezerocompetitions.com/competitions/result/tinylibrary-2025


FIRST PLACE - Crossword by K Shashavindu (India)




Agoda, a remote village in India, where geography shapes daily life. Residents must traverse vast river valleys on foot to access essential services. For young children, this journey especially to school - becomes a daily burden. This design reimagines the bridge not just as a connector of places, but as a catalyst for change.

Bridges connect communities and are integral to our social fabric, but they can do more. By embedding a library within the bridge itself, the design merges movement with learning. Creating a dual-purpose structure that serves both physical and intellectual needs. Bridge construction is often costly and disruptive to communities and the environment, so this proposal seeks to maximize public investment and expand social value.

SECOND PLACE - Bivacco Library by Jinyue Hu & Xiang Li (United Kingdom)




As technologies and modes of reading continue to evolve, our access to distant knowledges grows increasingly seamless. Yet, questions remain: How is a library grounded in immediacy and local specificity? Can shared reading experience strengthen not only the connections between individuals and knowledges, but also the ties among people and places?

This project investigates the essential role of a minimal library for diverse reading communities embedded in a rural context of the Italian Alps. It proposes the design of a “bivacco library”, a hybrid of two archetypes-reading space and dwelling-deeply rooted in the cultural and natural heritage of the Alps.

THIRD PLACE - Barcoteca by Lucas Karmann & Jean Pfrunner (Brazil)




Barcoteca is a new word, blending barco (boat) and biblioteca (library), to represent a mobile, water-borne cultural infrastructure.

The Rio Negro basin, nestled in the heart of the Amazon rain forest, is a vast and isolated territory where mobility is limited and access is possible only by boat. Indigenous, riverine, and Quilombola communities rely entirely on the river for transport, communication, and survival.

In this region, the State of Amazonas has only 19 public libraries, an average of one for every 170,000 people, leaving most inhabitants without access to books or educational resources.
This project proposes a modular floating library that combines vernacular building knowledge with contemporary parametric design tools.

STUDENT AWARD – Amoxcalli Carlos by Francisco Nava Martinez (Mexico)




This project envisions a 300-square-meter library in Malinalco, a small town nestled in the heart of Mexico. Renowned for its Aztec temple ruins-once a sacred space for the preparationof warriors before the Conquest—Malinalco breathes history and ritual. The town later grew around the San Salvador Augustinian Convent, layering colonial heritage over ancient memory.

Over time, these rich narratives have shaped an economy centred on tourism, drawing visitors from afar. Yet, behind this cultural tapestry lies a quiet need: the local population remains underserved, particularly in access to educational infrastructure. This library seeks to redress that imbalance-to create a space not just for book, but belonging, learning, and the weaving of new knowledge into the fabric of a storied place. 

Honourable Mention 1: Sky Within Walls by Gregor Hufnagl & Jovana Milojevic (Austria)




Honourable Mention 2: Finding in Self - Confirmation by Feng Yibo, Liu Qian & Zhang Yitian (China)






Honourable Mention 3: Wisdom flow by Milana Yanbukhtina & Elena Lvova (Russia)




Honourable Mention 4: Shelter Library by Park Garam & Choi Yeonsoo (Korea South)




Honourable Mention 5: Connecting Generations, Through Time by Song Jieun & Yun Seobin (Korea South)





Honourable Mention 6: Tibet Sand Mandala by Wang Lan & Li Yujie (China)





Honourable Mention 7: Shelter of Light by Vengseng Chiv & Dany Rith (Cambodia)





Honourable Mention 8: Canyon Codex by Darshan Dilipkumar, Shubham Negi & Priyanka Kalita (India)





Honourable Mention 9: The Learning Kiln by Aditya Sharma, Siddhant Bhatasana & Abhidev Thankappan (India)





Honourable Mention 10: Canopy of Commons by Ananya P Nayak & Tasneem Vali (India)






Upcoming Deadlines


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Little Big Loo
Architecture Competition

Early Bird Deadline - 22 Aug 2025
Standard Registration Deadline - 03 Oct 2025

Submission - 30 Oct 2025

Register Now



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Upcoming Deadlines


little-big-loo-2025 image
Little Big Loo
Architecture Competition

Early Bird Deadline - 22 Aug 2025
Standard Registration Deadline - 03 Oct 2025

Submission - 30 Oct 2025

Register Now