Call for Papers /// ARQ no.121: Utopian América
- s-architecture

- Jul 21
- 3 min read

ARQ no.121: Utopian América
Date:
Jul 16, 2025 - Aug 15, 2025
Location: Chile
Contact: Ediciones ARQ
Email: editorial@edicionesarq.cl
Website: https://edicionesarq.com/ENG
Add to:
The open call for the third issue of ARQ’s 2025 editorial cycle, This is America, is now open. Part of a trilogy that explores the continent through a transnational lens, Utopian América examines how the idea of utopia has shaped—and continues to shape—América. How have ideals of transformation, refusal, and possibility informed our understanding of the built environment? How have they fuelled architectural and territorial interventions? And how do contemporary projects—amid climate collapse, political disillusionment, and deepening inequality—mobilize utopia as a form of critique, speculation, or repair?
About ARQ
ARQ, a peer-reviewed academic journal focusing on architecture, landscape architecture, and urban design. Published three times a year by Ediciones ARQ of Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (PUC), ARQ is indexed in several academic databases including WoS, DOAJ, Scopus, Avery Index, SciELO, and Latindex. Articles are published in English and Spanish.
ARQ 121: Utopian América
Coined by Thomas More in 1516, utopia holds a telling ambiguity: it means “no place” (ou-topos) but is sufficiently close to “good place” (eu-topos). Since then, the concept has oscillated between aspiration and critique—between imagining radical alternatives and exposing society’s deepest failures. Utopian thinking underwrote modern architecture’s confidence in masterplans, technological optimism, and universalising visions of social order. [...] . In América, some of these utopias were projected onto real geographies, testing grounds for ideal societies, or escapist narratives from complex realities. In 1935, Joaquín Torres García offered a counter-image: a map of South America turned upside down, declaring “Our North is the South.” His was not just a gesture of inversion, but an invitation—to imagine utopia from América itself, not as a vision imported from elsewhere but as a projection rooted in the continent’s own spatial, cultural, and political horizons.
From early colonial fantasies of paradise and extractive plenitude to radical urban experiments, ecological design proposals, and speculative futures, utopian thinking has left a lasting imprint on América’s landscapes, cities, and imaginaries. This issue of ARQ seeks to explore how the idea of utopia has shaped—and continues to shape—the continent. How have ideals of transformation, refusal, and possibility informed ourunderstanding of the built environment? How have they fuelled architectural and territorial interventions? And how do contemporary projects— amid climate collapse, political disillusionment, and deepening inequality—mobilise utopia as a form of critique, speculation, or repair?
Submission formats
We encourage contributions from emerging and established scholars, practitioners, and researchers. Submissions are accepted in various formats, including interviews, academic papers (approximately 6,000 words), critiques (1,500 words), and projects—built or unbuilt, including a special section for master thesis or diploma projects. Material should be previously unpublished, or at least not have been published in Spanish. For detailed submission guidelines, please visit: https://edicionesarq.com/Open-Call.
Calendar
Submission Deadline: August 15, 2025
Publication Date: December 2025
s-architecture is intended for scholars of Architecture (academe, practice, students, and the public). The list posts scholarship and grant opportunities, academic jobs, calls for papers, notices of conferences which will be of interest to academic staff, postgraduate students, and those in the profession with a scholarly turn of mind.
This blog/email and any attachments are confidential and intended solely for the recipient(s) listed. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and delete this email. Any unauthorised review, use, disclosure, or distribution is strictly prohibited. While we take precautions to protect against viruses and malware, we cannot guarantee that this email is free from harmful elements. The views expressed in this email do not necessarily reflect those of s-architecture or the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia (AASA).



