Templates
Architecture & Design
Religious & Cultural Architecture
Atrium - Manifesto-Driven Cultural Center Architecture Landing Page Template
Atrium is a storybook landing page template built for cultural center architecture practices. It combines a manifesto-driven scroll structure, an animated isometric campus illustration, and a deep obsidian-and-gold visual identity to position your practice as the definitive design voice for civic arts buildings. A built-in lead form drives downloads of your Cultural Space Playbook PDF.
by Rocket studio
Atrium is a single-page architecture landing page template designed for practices that create libraries, performing arts centers, and museums. It follows a manifesto-driven editorial structure, where each scroll section delivers a conviction statement backed by project evidence. The page culminates in a role-first lead form that drives Playbook PDF downloads and case study access.
This template serves architecture practices that work in the civic and cultural sector. It speaks directly to the clients those practices need to win, and it positions the firm's philosophy before credentials.
Architecture practices that design civic arts buildings often struggle to communicate philosophy online. A portfolio grid alone does not explain why the atrium of a building matters more than its facade. Institutional clients need to understand a firm's worldview before they schedule a conversation.
Atrium delivers a complete storybook landing page structure ready to adapt to your practice's projects, voice, and visual assets. Every section follows a deliberate rhythm: statement, evidence, breath.




Theme
Playful Geometric
Creative direction
Manifesto
Color system
Obsidian & Gold
Style
Storybook/Full-Page
Direction
Content/Resource
Page Sections
Animated Isometric Campus Hero
Manifesto-driven Scroll Structure
Filterable Portfolio Bento Grid
Role-first Playbook Lead Form
Horizontal Testimonials Section
Scroll-linked Geometric Reveals
What kind of architecture practice is Atrium built for?
How does the lead capture form work?
Can I customize the manifesto statements and project panels?
Is this template suitable for a practice with international projects?
Does the animated hero require custom development?
Atrium is built around six core design and conversion features. Each one reflects a considered approach to how institutional clients explore, evaluate, and engage with an architecture practice online.
The header features a sprawling isometric campus drawing rendered in gold linework on an obsidian background. On page load, rooflines rise, doors swing open, and light beams fan out across the illustration. The manifesto headline then lands in oversized serif text, giving visitors an immediate sense of scale and design conviction.
The page is structured as a declaration of belief. Each full-page section presents a single conviction in large display text, paired with a project that proves it. This stage-by-stage rhythm helps visitors understand the practice's values through evidence, not claims.
An asymmetric bento grid displays five architecture projects with hover states that reveal key details. Visitors can filter projects by building type, making it straightforward to find relevant work. Each project panel shows building type, scale, and a visual that rewards attention.
The Playbook download form opens with a role selector: architect, municipal leader, foundation director, or educator. It then asks for an email and an optional field inviting the visitor to describe what kind of space their community is missing. This approach segments leads and creates a genuine value exchange.
A horizontally scrolling testimonials section displays quotes from institutional clients, including municipal officials and university chancellors. Testimonials from users and partners enhance the perceived impact of the work and help new visitors analyse the practice's track record quickly.
Geometric illustrations thread between manifesto sections. As visitors scroll, abstract tessellations transform into recognizable building forms. This narrative-driven design approach rewards attention and reinforces the practice's commitment to architecture as a storytelling medium.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Illustration | Introduces the practice with animated isometric campus art and manifesto headline |
| Manifesto Statements | Presents three conviction statements paired with project proof panels |
| Portfolio Bento Grid | Displays five projects in a filterable asymmetric grid with hover states |
| Testimonials Scroll | Horizontal scroll of institutional client quotes and project metrics |
| Playbook Form | Role-first lead form driving Playbook PDF download and case study access |
| Footer | Linear single-row footer with practice navigation |
The Atrium template uses a Playful Geometric visual identity built on an Obsidian and Gold color system. Every design decision is defined to feel like a contemporary arts museum during an evening gala: dark walls making gilded type glow, warm spotlights pooling on open spaces.
The template is desktop-first by design. Institutional clients reviewing proposals during board presentations or procurement research expect a large-screen experience. The layout is structured to display the isometric illustration and bento grid at full fidelity on wide screens.
Atrium is built around a content-led conversion model. The primary goal is earning a download, not forcing a click.
Atrium is a Webflow template, making it ideal for architecture and interior design studios that want a published, production-ready website without extensive coding knowledge. The template is designed for creative professionals who want to present their work sublimely, and it can be customized to match your practice's projects, typography, and assets.
The template's design approach aligns with broader practices in manifesto-driven architecture, where the atrium serves as a symbolic and social center of a building. Atriums are defined in cultural architecture as spaces that connect varied programmatic elements, encourage encounters between artists, visitors, and researchers, and reflect the cultural identity of the community they serve.
From a digital research perspective, the template's content model is informed by how institutions understand and share knowledge. Platforms in the arts and humanities world, including discovery portals that pool resources for research communities, use structured content to help users navigate topics across geography and discipline. The Atrium template brings a similar clarity of information architecture to a practice's landing page, helping visitors follow the practice's work through a series of curated views.