Collaborative Design Engineering Studio I (with SEAS)
Elizabeth Christoforetti, James Weaver, Siqi Zhu, Andrew Witt
The first semester studio is a project-based introduction to a range of ideas, methods, and…
Elizabeth Christoforetti, James Weaver, Siqi Zhu, Andrew Witt
The first semester studio is a project-based introduction to a range of ideas, methods, and…
Peter Rowe, Yun Fu, Dana McKinney White, Alex Yuen, Mark Heller, Michael Manfredi, Rahul Mehrotra
Elements of Urban Design is the advanced core studio for the post-professional Urban Design program.
Danielle Choi, Claire Fellman, Francesca Benedetto, Craig Douglas, Mark Heller, Rosalea Monacella, Alex Wall, Amy Whitesides, Min Yeo
From Off-Shoring to Near Shore: Littoral Landscapes at Work This studio will explore the complex…
Michelle Chang, Aaron Forrest, Ellie Jungmin Han, Eric Howeler, Grace La, Ajay Manthripragada, Angela Pang, Emmett Zeifman, Paul Kassabian, Nat Oppenheimer
Integration is the agenda for the third-semester architecture design studio. Architecture is fundamentally a part-to-whole…
Ann Forsyth, Hannah Teicher, Anne-Marie Lubenau, Jeana Dunlap, Lourdes Germán, Carole Voulgaris, Lindsay Woodson, Dana McKinney White
First Semester Core Urban Planning Studio introduces students to the fundamental knowledge and technical skills…
Pablo Pérez-Ramos, Gary R. Hilderbrand, Tomas Folch, Matthew Girard, Montserrat Bonvehi Rosich, Kira Clingen, Alistair McIntosh
WHAT IS PUBLIC ABOUT A PUBLIC SPACE? STU-1111 is the first in a sequence of…
Sean Canty, Carl D’Apolito-Dworkin, Jenny French, Helen Han, Hyojin Kwon, Ritchie Yao, Paul Kassabian
PROJECT is the first core studio of the four-semester sequence of the MArch I program.
Rachel Meltzer
This course introduces economic frameworks for understanding both the benefits and challenges of living in,…
Carole Voulgaris
We can define transportation infrastructure to comprise all the physical objects that provide mobility: including…
Michael Herzfeld
Planners’ understanding of social process and cultural values is often woefully inadequate, and their thinking…