β Frank Lloyd Wright (Organic architecture, harmonious with nature)
β Zaha Hadid (Fluid, futuristic forms, innovative)
β Tadao Ando (Minimalist, concrete, light-focused)
β Kengo Kuma (Natural materials, integrates with environment)
β Le Corbusier (Modernism, form follows function)
β Santiago Calatrava (Futuristic, sculptural bridges and buildings)
β Frank Owen Gehry (Deconstructivism, sculptural, iconic)
β Renzo Piano (High-tech, transparent, eco-friendly)
β Philip Johnson (Modern, glass structures, sleek)
β Norman Robert Foster (High-tech, sustainable, iconic skylines)
β Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (Minimalist, "less is more")
β Karim Rashid (Pop culture, colorful, digital)
β Jean Nouvel (Contextual, innovative, light manipulation)
β Bjarke Ingels (Pragmatic utopian, social, sustainable)
β Louis Kahn (Monumental, geometric, uses light)
β Oscar Niemeyer (Curvilinear, modernist, Brazilian landscapes)
β Peter Zumthor (Atmospheric, materiality, detailed craftsmanship)
β Alvar Aalto (Humanistic, organic forms, functionality)
β Eero Saarinen (Neo-futuristic, sweeping forms, innovative)
β Daniel Libeskind (Angular, dramatic, memory-invoking)
β Richard Rogers (Structural expressionism, colorful, modular)
β Rafael Vinoly (Bold, simplicity, civic projects)
β Thom Mayne (Dynamic forms, challenging conventions)
β Kazuyo Sejima (Light, transparent, modernist)
β Rem Koolhaas (Theoretical, provocative, urban)
β Herzog & de Meuron (Material experimentation, texture, context)
β Jeanne Gang (Innovative, responsive, ecological)
β David Adjaye (Cultural, narrative-driven, material-rich)
β Ieoh Ming Pei (Geometry, light, symbolic)
β Louis Sullivan (Father of skyscrapers, ornamental)
β Antoni GaudΓ (Catalan Modernism, nature-inspired)
β Toyo Ito (Lightweight structures, organic forms)
β Cesar Pelli (Skyline defining, elegant glass)
β Moshe Safdie (Habitat 67, humanistic design)
β Norman Foster (Technological, sustainable, futuristic)