© Stijn Bollaert
2019's World Building of The Year. The designers of this Dutch library, which was built in a converted industrial facility, were praised by the judges for their "strong, sustainable approach." Scroll through to see all the finalists in World Building of the Year.
© Brett Boardman
Inspired by its natural surroundings, this residential property by Australian architecture firm Terroir was commended by the WAF judges for "shattering (the) boundaries between inside and out."
© Sharon Davis Design and Possible Health
A low-rise hospital complex, by Sharon Davis Design, was named winner of the in the health category.
© Nozomu Shimao
Japanese architecture firm Nikken Sekkei was recognized for this university building in central Tokyo.
© Majid Jahangiri
Cedrus Residential, designed by Nextoffice in Iran's capital Tehran, was praised by judges for "challenging the political dogma of expression while respecting social norms."
© Michael Moran
The lattice-like landmark at the new Hudson Yards development in New York was one of two buildings by Heatherwick Studio to win categories in the WAF awards.
© Guanhong Chen
FCHA was commended by WAF judges for offering a "new paradigm for the future of office buildings."
John Nye/Marsala
This wooden-arched airport terminal, by Integrated Design Associates, won the awards' transport category.
© CEBRA
Architecture firm Cebra was recognized for masterplanning, landscape design and new buildings at the Qasr al Hosn Fort, Abu Dhabi's oldest building.
© Hufton+Crow
The Coal Drops Yard project saw Heatherwick Studio transform a pair of Victorian sheds into a major retail development in London's King's Cross.
© Xu Liang Leon
The two-story Gaobu Book House, which serves a rural village in China's Hunan province, was among the community buildings recognized by WAF.
© Tomothy Soar
Architecture firm Allford Hall Monaghan Morris redeveloped a collection of "underperforming" 1960s buildings in East London.
© Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners
Renowned architecture firm Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners designed a new distillery and visitor experience center for the Scottish whisky producer, Macallan.
© studio BAUHAUS
YM Nursery was commended for accommodating the needs of young children and for embracing nature "holistically in its concept and detail."
© Enric Duch
Anna Noguera and Javier Fernandez's sports center contains a swimming pool and basketball court, and was described by award judges as "a magical place to be."
© Hufton + Crow
Oasis Terraces, by Serie and Multiply Architects, is a mixed-use development in Singapore containing housing, retail and community facilities.
PATRICK REYNOLDS
Lindis Lodge, by Architecture Workshop, is an undulating luxury lodge on New Zealand's South Island.
© Bas Princen
Munich's Villa B, by architecture firm Powerhouse Company, won in the awards' villa category.
CNN  — 

A public library in Tilburg, The Netherlands, has been named 2019’s World Building of the Year.

LocHal Public Library, designed by Civic Architects, Braaksma & Roos Architectenbureau and Inside Outside, was recognized for its versatility by a panel of almost 150 architects, designers and academics at the World Architecture Festival (WAF) on Friday.

LocHal was previously a locomotive hangar dating from 1932, but was transformed into a public space – now home to amenities shared by the library, arts organizations and co-working facilities. It also includes spaces for lectures and other public events, as well as “labs” for patrons to learn.

“The judges were impressed by the way ‘this project transformed a significant building which had been planned for demolition’ and how ‘the result has created a physical facility in which a variety of users can meet for multiple purposes. In this sense, the building has become a social condenser,’ ” the WAF said in a release announcing the winner.

From hundreds of initial entries, LocHal was selected from a shortlist comprising winners of 18 separate award categories, spanning residential, public and commercial architecture – from a sports center in Barcelona to a university building in Tokyo. Other finalists included Lindis Lodge, an undulating luxury hotel in New Zealand, and the new wooden-arched terminal at Mactan-Cebu International Airport in the Philippines.

British designer Thomas Heatherwick’s firm, Heatherwick Studio, had two structures in contention for the honor: Coal Drops Yard, which transformed a pair of Victorian sheds into a major retail development in London’s King’s Cross, and Vessel, the lattice-like landmark at the new Hudson Yards development in New York.

First held in 2008, the WAF awards are announced on the final day of the festival, which was held in Amsterdam for the second consecutive year. The evening’s ceremony saw a number of other projects recognized with awards.

Among them, Studio Link-Arc’s pavillion for children, called Lokadhatu (The World), was named Small Project of the Year. Future Project of the Year, an accolade recognizing upcoming or proposed buildings, was awarded to Oberbillwerder - The Connected City in Hamburg, Germany.

In 2018, the top prize went went to Kampung Admiralty, an innovative housing complex for the elderly in Singapore. Other previous winners of World Building of the Year include stacked apartment complex The Interlace, also in Singapore, and the Zaha Hadid-designed National Museum of XXI Century Arts in Rome.

Scroll through the gallery above to see the category winners in the WAF awards.

This article has been updated to include all the winning project’s participating architects, and Civic Architects as the lead firm.