
Architectural Digest has unveiled its
annual AD100 list, highlighting the top 100 design and architecture firms in the world.
AD also announced it hit single-day subscription records this year. Its
May issue, which featured singer Drake on the cover, set the single-day record for print subscription sign-ups from ArchDigest.com on April 8, the day the issue was released.
AD’s September issue, featuring model Kendall Jenner, set the second-most single-day subscriptions record for the brand, on July 29.
The AD100 list is featured in Architectural Digest’s January 2021 issue, which hits
newsstands Dec. 15.
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This year’s list features more women, more people of color and more firms from different geographical locations than past lists, editor in chief Amy Astley
told Publishers Daily.
“This is the most diverse list we’ve ever produced,” she said.
When Astley became AD's top editor over
four years ago, AD100 shifted to an annual franchise, instead of publishing every other year. And every year, Astley has made an effort to spotlight a more diverse pool of design and
architecture firms.
Women and people of color are often underrepresented in the design world, she said.
“Design was like a closed club for a long time,”
she said. This year “just accelerated” her efforts, “with everyone on board in the industry and the world.”
For example, 5 Sólidos is a firm on the
2021 AD100 list based in Colombia. They designed the house of reggaeton singer J Balvin, which was featured on AD’s July/August 2020 cover.
“We are making
a concerted effort to not be eurocentric … It’s intentional that we are casting a wide net,” Astley said.
The list evolves every year, she said, opening up spots
for more people to be included. Twenty-two firms made the list for the first time this year.
Astley believes the AD100 list should function like the Oscars: “You
don’t have to win every year to say you’re an Oscar winner.”
The annual “Hall of Fame" was added to the AD100 by Astley in 2017, to give the
world’s biggest firms a permanent place in the franchise each year.
For the 2021 list, six design firms were added to the Hall of Fame.
“This list is
most deeply meaningful for the industry,” Astley said. “I think they want to see fresh new talent.”
Joy Moyler Interiors, for example, is featured for the first
time on the AD100. Moyler is a Black designer based in New Rochelle, New York — one of the five homes spotlighted in the issue is designed by her.
In October,
AD debuted a 360-degree shoppable virtual show house, in partnership with nonprofit organization Black Interior Designers Network, and featured 16 Black interior design and architecture
firms.
These efforts are not “one-offs,” Astley stressed — more projects and collaborations are in the works.
Earlier this year, Architectural
Digest’s subscription sign-up records were thanks to the influence of celebrities like Drake and Jenner, “younger and fresher” faces to AD.
“The
print magazine will survive a very long time,” Astley said. She sees the magazine as “the center spoke of the wheel of AD.” Print subscriptions are up about 2% this year,
she added. Architectural Digest has over 800,000 print subscribers.
This year also marked Architectural Digest’s 100-year anniversary.
Though
the pandemic “was tough for business in many ways, all of our digital operations have exploded,” Astley said. People are stuck at home, looking for design inspiration and escapism, she
said.
The brand experienced “record growth” on social platforms, digital traffic and ecommerce from Clever, the vertical ADrelaunched in May. Clever,
which focuses more on DIY content with project guides and advice, drives 30% of AD’s traffic, Astley noted.
Architectural Digest has 17.3 million social
followers, including 7 million followers on Instagram — second only to Vogue of the Condé Nast brands.