Competition: five Landmarks and Elevations posters to be won
Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with Gothenburg-based Studio Esinam to give readers the chance to win one of five monochrome prints showing elevations of iconic structures from different cities.
Congratulations to the winners! Avery Guthrie from Canada, My Holmberg from Sweden, Jonathan Croissant from Germany, Oliver Garvey from the UK and Mingtong Zhuang from Singapore all won a poster from the Landmarks and Elevations series.
Studio Esinam's Landmarks and Elevations series of prints show architectural elevations of buildings that typify the urban centres they are located in.
Thin black line drawings on white paper are used to depict the architectural icons, illustrated by art director Josefine Lilljegren and architect Sebastian Gokah who set up the studio together in 2013.
"We portray architecture with the ambition to convey its qualities to an audience with a genuine interest for interior and exterior spaces," said the duo.
"Whether the unique feeling of a city, the texture of a facade or the balance of an interior space, our aim is to explore and communicate the deeper qualities of architecture by looking at it from new angles and presenting it in fresh and engaging ways."
Cities currently included in the set are Tokyo, Berlin, Paris, Brooklyn, Stockholm and Gothenburg – all available as the smaller Landmark prints and some of which come as larger Elevations posters.
The smaller Tokyo poster features three buildings by well-known Japanese architects: Kazuyo Sejima of SANAA's Shibaura House, Kenzo Tange's twin-towered Tokyo Metropolitan Government building and Toyo Ito's Tama Art University Library.
The larger version is filled with the facades of the Nakagin Capsule Tower by Kisho Kurokawa, SIA Aoyama building by Jun Aoki, House H by Sou Fujimoto, Bloomberg Pavilion by Akihisa Hirata and Tod's Omotesando store – another Toyo Ito project.
To represent Berlin's landmarks, Studio Esinam chose to depict the towering structures of Berliner Siegessäule memorial monument in the Tiergarten park, the partly destroyed Kaiser Wilhelm Gedächtniskirche and the 1960s Fernsehturm Tower.
The Brandenburger Tor gate, Mies van der Rohe's Neue Nationalgalerie and David Chipperfield's Am Kupfergraben 10 gallery replace the church tower for the bigger print.
Paris is represented by historic icons including the Sacré-Cœur basilica, the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame cathedral.
The larger version swaps the last two for the city's Palais Garnier – used as its Opera House – the Arc de Triomphe, the Pont Marie bridge and the newer Centre Georges Pompidou, by architects Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers.
Traditional buildings in Stockholm's Stortorget square and the Swedish capital's City Hall feature on both of the prints for the city. The Kaknästornet TV tower, the City Library and the Concert Hall are included in the Elevations selection, while the Landmarks print features the dome-shaped Globen arena.
A tower of Brooklyn's namesake bridge is shown alongside the Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower and a townhouse typical of the New York borough – only currently available in the smaller format.
Also only a smaller version, the Gothenburg graphic features the Kopparmärra rider and horse statue, the skyscraper nicknamed Läppstiftet – which translates as "lipstick" – and Göteborgs Konstmuseum art museum.
The Landmarks prints have been produced as a limited edition of 1,000 copies each, while 2,500 editions of each Elevations posters are available. All the designs can be purchased from Studio Esinam's website.
Winners can select which 50 by 70-centimetre or 65 by 100-centimetre design from the series they would like to receive.
This competition is now closed. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners' names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.