Architecture after neo-liberalism: Rotterdam Study Abroad
Irenee Scalbert
Rem Koolhaas’s text, Junkspace, describes architecture as a by-product of modernity, as its waste. Junkspace…
Irenee Scalbert
Rem Koolhaas’s text, Junkspace, describes architecture as a by-product of modernity, as its waste. Junkspace…
Niklas Maak
The crisis of the city and the return of rural Utopias: Metropolitan centers have become…
Rafael Moneo
Since the establishment of the canonical narrative of mid-20th century architecture, we…
To a modern audience, the 18th-century aesthetic ideal known as the “picturesque” may seem obscure outside…
Earlier this year, Michael Murphy (MArch ’11) joined visionaries like former vice president Al Gore…
Edward Eigen, Jon Lott
The Thesis Program encourages students to take advantage of the wide range of resources and…
Jesse M. Keenan
Through the lens of climate change, this foundation course surveys the intellectual…
Salmaan Craig
In the maelstrom of geopolitical and geophysical pressures, can you see opportunities…
Grace La
This seminar will focus on an essential component of architecture, the aperture,…
The vocabulary of early nineteenth-century picturesque landscape architecture is almost entirely alien to contemporary ears. Clumps, lumps, masses, groups, belts, hollows—these are a few of a vast catalog of objects that once belonged to design and have long since been absorbed into colloquial ubiquity. While…