A bamboo-inspired sky forest in northeast India, a giant lotus flower seemingly floating above Mumbai, a Cambodian canopy of towering trees—these are just some of the architectural features found inside the world’s most beautiful airports.
Seven airports and terminals were selected for the 2026 Prix Versailles World’s Most Beautiful Airports List, unveiled in Paris on Monday, June 15. The annual architecture awards—which recognize outstanding contemporary design around the world—chose terminals in China, Germany, India, Cambodia, and the United States. According to the organization, the winners demonstrate how airports are evolving into destinations in their own right.
The list spans from Guangzhou’s flower-inspired Terminal 3 and Frankfurt’s vast city-sized expansion to Pittsburgh’s mountain-shaped roofline and San Diego’s glass-wrapped waterfront gateway. Three of the seven projects will go on to receive additional world titles for architecture interior or exterior design later this year, per Prix Versailles.
According to the judges, the selected airports are modern terminals that efficiently balance the demands of fast, high-volume travel while also reflecting a meaningful sense of place—rather than functioning solely as transit infrastructure. Jérôme Gouadain, Secretary General of the Prix Versailles, said contemporary airports had become “innovative, inescapable hallmarks of their regions and their eras.”
He added: “They are innovative, because they resolve the apparent conflict between the increasing frequency of travel and the need for speed—both central to an airport’s purpose—on the one hand and, on the other, the singularity of a form of tourism that aims to be accessible and that values people’s time in places that, in this day and age, can no longer be described as mere ‘transfer’ spaces.
“And they are inescapable, in that this infrastructure leaves a lasting environmental footprint on the land but also on the history of humanity: in the amalgamation of architecture that they display, airports are becoming attractive settings, emblems of economic, cultural, and social dynamics that will continue to shape the societies of tomorrow, draw them together and unify them.”
But don’t just take their word for it—see for yourself. Below, the world’s most beautiful airports for 2026.
Prix Versailles
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, Terminal 3
Guangzhou is known as China’s City of Flowers, and its new Terminal 3 combines clouds, water, and blossoms into a sequence of curves, terraces, gardens, and light-filled atriums set in one of the world’s largest transport buildings. Designed by Artelia in collaboration with the Guangdong Architectural Design and Research Institute, the terminal draws heavily on Lingnan culture, the southern Chinese tradition shaped by Guangzhou’s subtropical climate and long history as a trading port. The building’s organic forms help steer passengers through the terminal, while gardens and open spaces break up its monumental scale. Its most dramatic outdoor feature is said to be the highest open-air public observation deck at any Chinese airport, giving travelers a rare chance to step outside and watch aircraft moving across the runways below.
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