The review of projects and the selection of award recipients is the responsibility of an independent Master Jury specially appointed for each award cycle. Each jury is multidisciplinary, bringing together specialists in such fields as history, philosophy, art, engineering and architectural preservation, in addition to practising architects, landscape architects and urban planners. The members of the Master Jury of the 2023-2025 Award cycle will be announced during Autumn 2024.
For the 16th cycle, the Master Jury will hold two meetings before arriving at its final decisions.
The projects shortlisted by the Master Jury are announced to the public at a press conference. Information on the projects is also disseminated through a broad campaign organised by the Award office. The shortlisted projects are featured in the Award’s cyclical monograph and are presented at the Award seminar, which is held at the end of the triennial cycle.
The Award recipients selected by the Master Jury are announced a month prior to the ceremony that honours the winning projects and marks the close of each triennial cycle. Award ceremonies have always been held in places selected for their architectural significance:
the Hall of Musical Arts of the Royal Opera House in Muscat (2022).
Following each Award ceremony, the Steering Committee organises a seminar. Here the winning and shortlisted projects are presented to a wider public, providing a forum for the participants to debate the pressing concerns of the contemporary built environment. Post-ceremony events, in the form of lectures and exhibitions, are also held in the countries where the winning projects are located.
A major monograph containing descriptions and illustrations of the winning and shortlisted projects, reflections by Master Jury members on the decision-making process, and essays by members of the Steering Committee, is published on the occasion of the Award ceremony.