
DSCENE Magazine joins the NYCxDESIGN Festival 2026 as an official media partner, supporting the 2026 edition with dedicated editorial coverage across its print and digital platforms, with a focus on exhibitions, designers, and conversations shaping this year’s program.
EVENTS
Returning from May 14 to 20, 2026, NYCxDESIGN Festival unfolds across all five boroughs of New York City, bringing together more than 163,000 designers, innovators, cultural leaders, and enthusiasts through a dense and varied program of events. Established in 2012 as the city’s official design week, the festival has developed into one of the most influential platforms for contemporary design, with a structure that reflects the scale and diversity of New York itself. Participants include global brands, universities, independent studios, cultural institutions, and emerging practices, all contributing to a shared calendar that spans exhibitions, installations, talks, tours, and public programming.

The 2026 edition operates under the theme Design Connects Us, placing emphasis on collaboration across disciplines and the ways design functions as a connector between industries, communities, and ideas. This approach shapes both large-scale presentations and smaller, independently organized events, encouraging dialogue between architecture, product design, technology, fashion, and art. The festival structure allows visitors to navigate between commercial showcases and experimental work, with each borough offering a distinct perspective on the city’s creative output.
Among the central highlights, the NYCxDESIGN Festival Opening Night Party on May 14 sets the tone for the week, gathering designers and industry figures in a setting built around exchange and visibility. The Design Pavilion in Times Square, presented by Lexus, returns with an immersive installation that integrates design, craft, and technology into a public-facing experience. At The Seaport, the SHINE exhibition presents original light objects by 70 designers, focusing on the relationship between function, material, and personal expression. Each of these projects reflects a different scale of engagement, from high-traffic public installations to curated exhibition formats.

Villa Albertine’s Oui Design! program continues its role as a key international component of the festival, presenting a series of exhibitions, talks, and open studios that highlight French design and craft within a New York context. The program includes a week-long exhibition at the Payne Whitney Mansion, featuring residency laureates presenting their work in the United States. On May 16, DSCENE Magazine will host the launch event for its Design Under Pressure issue at Villa Albertine, bringing together a curated group of creatives, designers, and industry figures for an evening aligned with the festival’s broader agenda.
Across the city’s design districts, including SoHo, TriBeCa, NoMad, Flatiron, and DUMBO, the festival extends into showrooms, galleries, and public spaces through coordinated evening programs such as Friday Night on the Town. These events activate commercial and cultural spaces simultaneously, offering visitors access to new collections, installations, and informal gatherings. The structure encourages movement across neighborhoods, positioning the city itself as part of the experience, rather than a neutral setting for events.

The professional program expands through keynote talks, panel discussions, and the introduction of the NYCxDESIGN Salon Series, which brings smaller, studio-based conversations into focus. Highlights include a keynote by architect Santiago Calatrava and a series of curated gatherings hosted by leading design studios. The Future Now AI Summit at Cornell Tech further extends the scope of the festival, addressing the role of artificial intelligence in creative practice and its impact on authorship, production, and design thinking.
Trade-focused events remain central to the week, with ICFF returning to the Javits Center under the theme Common Ground, presenting a global perspective on design and shared values. Alongside ICFF, the Afternoon Light Design Fair gathers a curated selection of exhibitors, while the NYCxDESIGN Awards recognize projects and products across the region. These platforms connect commercial design with editorial and experimental work, reinforcing the festival’s layered structure.

Beyond major venues and institutional programming, NYCxDESIGN continues to integrate tours, student initiatives, and community-led projects into its schedule. From guided explorations of Harlem Sculpture Gardens to student tours across design schools, the festival positions education and accessibility as core components of its framework. This approach supports emerging talent while maintaining engagement with established figures and organizations.
Through its scale, diversity, and structure, NYCxDESIGN Festival 2026 maintains its role as a central meeting point for the global design community, offering a program that reflects both the complexity of the city and the range of disciplines it brings together.
NYCxDESIGN Festival runs from May 14 to 20, 2026, across New York City, setting the pace for a week shaped by design, ideas, and exchange.

















