For inquiries about admission to Architecture programs, please contact the Admissions Office.
The Department of Architecture
The Department of Architecture offers dynamic engagement with a rich diversity of creativity and scholarship about the built environment. Guided by a distinguished international faculty prominent across the breadth of the field, students pursue design excellence on all levels.
The program leading to the Master of Architecture (MArch) is an accredited professional degree intended for individuals who have completed the bachelor’s degree with a major other than one of the design professions or with a pre-professional undergraduate major in one of the design professions.
Individuals who have completed a pre-professional four-year Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degree with a major in architecture or environmental design may be eligible for admission with advanced standing, reducing the required course of study to two-and-one-half years.
The program leading to the Master of Architecture II (MArch II) is a post-professional degree intended for individuals who have completed a five-year undergraduate professional program in architecture or its equivalent.
“Greetings from Cambridge, where today we celebrate more than 150 years of architectural education at Harvard. The Architecture department at Harvard GSD has prepared generations of dedicated graduates to lead in shaping the built environment. As new complexities emerge within the practice of architecture – from climate stress to AI, intense urbanization to rapid social change – today’s students continue our tradition by developing robust responses to timely and ever-emerging challenges.”
Grace E. La Professor and Chair, Department of Architecture
Faculty collaborate with visiting practitioners, critics, and theorists from around the world to bring students into engagement with pressing issues in contemporary architecture. We cultivate the skillful manipulation of form while drawing inspiration from a broad body of knowledge. A thorough grounding in arts and sciences, along with intelligence, vision, inventiveness, and social awareness, all are essential to achieving distinguished architecture.
Students present architectural drawings in a studio class.
Architectural models on display in Gund Hall’s Druker Design Gallery.
A comprehensive curriculum strengthens students’ understandings of the discipline while expanding the boundaries of the field. The department’s research-based instruction also encompasses design theory, visual studies, history, technology, and professional practice. The Harvard GSD’s diverse offerings, resources, and research initiatives expose students to technological, ecological, and social agendas, positioning design as a source of potential to transform the global quality of life and the future of human habitation.
Pier Paolo Tamburelli on the “hardscrabble, repressed, and perverted” American Gothic psyche.
With Mass Timber and the Scandinavian Effect, Jennifer Bonner and Hanif Kara speculate how wood might recapture the American architectural imagination.
“Resolution Grounds: Designing with the Fragmented Survey” by Paris Bezanis (MArch I ’25)
“Block Edit” by Chandler Caserta (MArch I ’25)
Our dynamic environment provides a foundation for design exploration and communication, offering students new ways to model buildings, access design references, and present ideas. The educational experience at the Harvard GSD is enriched and broadened by close interaction among the departments of Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning and Design, all of which work in a single, open space of the sunlit “trays.” A shared culture of mutual respect maintains an atmosphere in which studio instruction, creative production, and a free exchange of ideas can thrive. A wide range of resources at Harvard University, and throughout the Boston area, are richly supplemented by a robust departmental lecture program: nearly all Pritzker Prize-winning architects have spoken at the GSD, many before they were awarded this honor.
The Trays in Gund Hall are a collaborative and creative learning environment.
Students, faculty, and visitors gather in Gund Hall’s courtyard.
As new ways of thinking emerge within the profession, demands on design grow increasingly complex and require new interpretation. Architects draw upon knowledge and experience gained from the past while adapting to the changing needs of the modern world, leading to innovations in design and building. The Harvard GSD has prepared generations of dedicated graduates for leadership in shaping the built environment. Today’s Architecture students continue in this tradition by applying their learning from the GSD toward the urgent design challenges of contemporary societies and the global future.