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  • 3.00 Credits

    Given the importance of sustainability in facing the environmental challenges of the contemporary built environment, those considering a career in architecture and associated environmental design fields must have an understanding of the basic principles that describe how the physical world works. The course begins with a brief introduction to the basic, physical concepts noted above, explaining each through abstract and empirical methods. Historic and contemporary case study examples are used to contextualize the concepts, demonstrating how, taken together, they can provide an explanation of the specific design response. Basic concepts such as heat transfer, structural efficiency and the nature of materials are used to explain how humans have adapted to a wide range of physical environments through the design of shelters and their environmental contexts. Prerequisites: Full Major status in Architecture.
    General Education Course
  • 5.00 Credits

    Architectural design studio with projects introducing greater programmatic and site complexity, and emphasizing the theory and practice of architecture and their impact on the design process. Students collaborate with campus and community partners in the region to develop meaningful design responses to conceptualize and then propose critical solutions to address architectural problems. Students must concurrently enroll in ARCH 4850 and ARCH 4375. Prerequisites: "C-" or better in ARCH 3011.
  • 5.00 Credits

    This capstone undergraduate studio experience offers students a choice of projects that integrate technological, contextual and/or theoretical issues to design increasingly complex architecture. An emphasis on synthesis, process, and intention results in the development of a student's own methodology. Issues of urban architecture and building typology are considered along with the interrelationships among process, site, precedent, and tectonics as designs response to programmatic requirements. Prerequisites: "C-" or better in ARCH 4010.
  • 1.50 Credits

    The course provides an in-depth focus on a specific material used in architectural construction or craft and/or a particular communication method.
  • 1.50 Credits

    The course provides an in-depth focus on a specific material used in architectural construction or craft and/or a particular communication method.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Evaluating and utilizing advanced digital modeling for the design, development and construction of architecture. The course focuses on laboratory based digital modeling for BIM modeling, energy and construction simulation, sustainable quantification, digital design to fabrication or CAD/CAM, and other advanced modeling subjects in architecture.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class covers architectural issues pertaining to a building's site and context. Urban and suburban environments are addressed.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Examination of the historical development of architecture and related cultural trends in Japan from ancient times to the present as a means to evaluate the role of history and tradition in contemporary Japanese architecture.
  • 3.00 Credits

    An introduction to modern and contemporary theory and criticism of architecture. Students develop a thorough and critical understanding of modern to contemporary theory and criticism in architecture and its related fields (art, philosophy, technology, etc.). Emphasis placed on the analysis and construction of written thought in the development and communication of architecture. Fulfills Undergraduate Studies Upper Division Communication/Writing.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Continues the investigation of the fundamentals of statics and mechanics of materials; two dimensional structural systems including shear, and bending elements; basic methods of graphical and analytical analysis. Discusses the role of the architect in seismic design. Prerequisites: "C-" or better in ARCH 3310.