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Master of Architecture
Overview
Columbia GSAPP’s Master of Architecture program is a three-year accredited professional degree program and is regularly ranked one of the top architecture graduate programs in the country. At GSAPP, architecture is understood as a form of knowledge inextricably linked to a broader context of environmental and global action—one that is oriented not towards what architecture is but towards what it could be. Today, the Master of Architecture program pushes this understanding of architectural experimentation and re-invention forward, with faculty and students weaving together critical discourse with technological skill, disciplinary expertise with expanded modes of practices, and design speculation with engagement in the issues of our time.
Building on the School’s recent commitment to advancing architecture alongside more global and contemporary perspectives, GSAPP’s Master of Architecture program has focused on expanding its design capacities, building practices, and discursive potentials. The program finds its strength in the diversity of its faculty and their approaches to architecture. Its pedagogy is, simultaneously, rigorously structured and constantly re-examined to respond to ever-changing contexts—welcoming the openness, inquisitiveness, and intellectual generosity that enable and foster new avenues for individual development and collective directions for the field.
The Master of Architecture is a designated STEM program eligible under the CIP (Classification of Instructional Programs) Code 04.0902: Architectural and Building Sciences/Technology. Learn more about STEM designation.
All Master of Architecture students must complete prerequisites before the start of the program. Please review the M.ARCH Prerequisites webpage for full details.
Curriculum
The Master of Architecture program is centered on the Architecture Design Studio and the three curricular sequences that orbit it: History and Theory, Visual Studies, and Building Tech. While the sequences run in parallel, they are also designed to be brought together at critical junctures: through the intersection of specific exercises and through broader project integration. Supplementing these main pedagogical tracks is an Elective sequence and a required Professional Practice course. Prior to graduation, students are required to submit a portfolio of representative work from each semester, which is evaluated by all studio faculty. Portfolio reviews are a hallmark event at the school and the top portfolios are awarded the most prestigious prizes at the annual Commencement Ceremony.
The Architecture Design Studio sequence is divided between Core and Advanced Studios. The Core Studios consists of the first three semesters. It is structured to build knowledge on the fundamentals of architectural design through the theme of “Architecture and the City” and through an inclusive and expansive understanding of history, cities, typology, and performance. Core I focuses on acquiring analytical and drawing skills; Core II tackles the design of an institutional building; and Core III concludes the sequence with the Housing Studio.
Advanced Studios consists of the last three semesters, with the last two composed of nearly eighteen studios that together explore new instruments, techniques, and formats of design across a multiplicity of existing realities. The studios function as laboratories for discussion, where students and critics practice new ways of mobilizing architectural concepts, programs, tools, and methods to intervene on specific layers of the everyday. After focusing on the problem of architectural practice and its agency in the world, from spring 2019, the sequence focuses on “Architecture and Environment” as a fundamental question for the field.
The History and Theory curriculum stresses a broad social and cultural approach to architectural history, with particular attention to emerging global concerns. Architectural history is seen in terms of a rich matrix of parameters—political, economic, artistic, technological, and discursive—that have had a role in shaping the discipline. Students are introduced to a range of subjects broadly distributed in both space (geography) and time (chronology), and are encouraged to think and work across categorical East-West and North-South distinctions and the asymmetries these binaries often reproduce, and to consider both continuity and change across 1800 as the threshold that marks the end of the European Enlightenment and the beginning of worldwide industrialization.
The Visual Studies curriculum registers how the visual in design has multiplied exponentially, especially by way of computation, and invites students and faculty to rethink how it intersects with pedagogy, projects, and practices. Through a careful survey of drawing’s new temporal nature, students discover methods to harness the potential of drawing, engage with today’s visual diversity, and communicate extraordinary visions. The sequence offers a wide range of tools and techniques designed to expose students to the potentials and limits of these tools and techniques and is divided into three broad sets of workshops: analysis/representation, design environments, and fabrication. This variety of possible trajectories promotes individual approaches to visualization and fosters invention.
The Building Tech curriculum is founded on the belief that the realities of building technology are integral to design exploration and experimentation, especially as computational power and data have become ubiquitous, and changes in manufacturing, materials, and information technologies are shaping new modes of thinking and making. Recognizing how performance—its measurement and verification—has become not only a primary function of architectural “solutions,” but also a generator of architectural concepts, the sequence aims to encourage critical and creative approaches to data and measurement and the discovery of new design opportunities and paradigms.
Core Design Studios
Mireia Luzárraga, Core I Coordinator
Marc Tsurumaki, Core II Coordinator
Hilary Sample, Core III Coordinator
At the GSAPP, the Core Design Studios introduce students to architecture through an inclusive understanding of history, cities, typology, and performance. Today, students engage the world through the increasingly global information on buildings, materials, structures, digital processes, media, and communications. These digital processes and networks that were once theorized have become a commonplace part of our contemporary world. As a result, architecture is less and less of an exclusive and autonomous profession. These social aspects are perhaps the hardest things to teach within a school, but remain a critical part of the Columbia GSAPP pedagogy.
The Core Studios are structured through a sequence of carefully constructed design studios where students increasingly gain new knowledge through making, implementing ideas and experimenting with the problems of architecture: from form to materials, from small to large scale, and from comfort to environment. Studios explore architecture within urban contexts from New York City and other cities around the world, situating experimental architectural thought within the world-at-large.
Rather than moving from the extra small to the large, the Core sequence builds in the small and the large in relation to one another throughout the first three semesters of the Master of Architecture sequence. After the first semester’s focus on acquiring analytical and drawing skills, Core II takes as a project the design of an institutional building, and Core III culminates in the housing studio. This semester serves not only as a conclusion to the core sequence but also as a transition to the Advanced Studios, specifically transitioning to the Advanced Studio IV: Scales of Environment.
While the studios are structured to present knowledge about fundamentals of architecture as they apply to design, from the scale of a house to that of a building or housing project, the core sequence aims to inspire a shift in thinking about architecture in relation to the world.
Advanced Design Studios
Ziad Jamaleddine, Advanced IV Coordinator
Mario Gooden, Advanced V & VI Coordinator
Lydia Kallipoliti, Advanced V & VI Coordinator
The Advanced Studios build on the ideas and skills developed in the Core Studios, and bring together students in the Master of Architecture and Master of Sciences in Advanced Architectural Design programs. These studios, which take place during the students’ final two semesters at the School, have always explored the future of architecture in a diversity of ways. Each studio creates its own world—with its own intersection of social, cultural, formal, material, economic, and environmental concerns—and students have almost 20 worlds to choose from. After selecting a studio, students conduct experiments and develop projects through concepts and massings, programs and forms, drawings and models, materials and atmospheres, metrics and narratives.
At the same time, the various students and faculty of the Advanced Studios engage in a shared discussion about the most interesting research, practice, ideas, and design of the built environment. Most recently, this shared discussion focused on the theme of “Global Practice,” and during the following spring it focused on “Architecture and Environment.” Global Practice covered design as the distinctive tool of architects in contributing to the construction of the future. It investigated the field’s extraordinary accumulation of essays and research that can be considered a cross-section of the present. Architecture and Environment built on the hypothesis that climate change is ground zero for a shared discussion about architecture’s engagement with the world. Responding to climate change involves not only technical aspects (such as energy consumption and carbon footprint) but also social and political aspects (such as inequality and public policy). In this context, the Advanced Studios were framed as a unique opportunity to address climate change at the scale of the building and to address climate change through design.
Throughout each semester, studio-wide sessions involve a series of conversations and resources for the studios to draw on, including external guest lectures, faculty project talks, and paired studio exchanges. This concludes with a Super-Crit session during which each studio shares a single student project and guest critics respond to the studio-wide themes and issues.
Building Tech
Lola Ben-Alon, Sequence Coordinator
Today, more than ever before, we realize the extent to which the design of healthier built environments by means of architectural design is critical for occupant-related outcomes. We spend more than 90% of our lives within architectural spaces, designed to create situated interactions between people, the environment, and the materials that surround them. With emerging global challenges of social and environmental equity that arise from resource scarcity and public health emergencies, novel approaches to making buildings more resource-efficient, comfortable, and affordable for all, are critical.
To this end, the Building Tech sequence is geared towards creating novel and radical experimental forms of technology, while celebrating the tactile interaction between people, materials, structures, and the built environments. The sequence covers a range of topics, from fabrication technologies and emerging healthy assemblies, through supply chain mechanisms of low-carbon and readily available building materials, to net zero and passive housing. The Building Tech elective course selection not only provides tools for performance analysis, but also to crafting new ways of understanding and imagining socially equitable and environmentally sound futures.
Also awaiting your discovery are the sequence event series. From the Tech Walks to the Tech Shops, the sequence offers events that converge lectures, street walking, software learning, and architecture technology and ecology in the local context of NYC. Focusing on the social and environmental impacts of building and urban technologies and narratives, the sequence event series include creative interventions with a revised outlook on social, cultural, and economic forces on building and ecological systems.
History and Theory
Reinhold Martin, Sequence Coordinator
The History and Theory of Architecture curriculum at Columbia GSAPP aims to develop a critical, historical consciousness among students preparing for diverse forms of architectural practice. Central to this is a worldly understanding, in depth and in breadth, of a complex cultural, social, ecological, and technological past. The bearing of that past on contemporary debates and practices is an important focus, as is the relation of architectural history to other disciplines. From the outset, the curriculum equips students with questions suited to ongoing inquiry into “global” or planetary history, with an emphasis on both continuity and change.
The process of critical inquiry begins in the first year, with the two-semester core sequence, “Questions in Architectural History,” focused on the interaction of architecture and modernity across two centuries and taught by a group of senior history and theory faculty. In addition to introducing students to key examples, themes, and relationships, the course asks whose history is being studied, how, and why. The sequence continues into the second and third years with a series of distribution requirements that allow students to pursue selected topics in greater depth, while ensuring exposure to a range of geographically, culturally, and historically diverse contexts and subject matter. Students may also take related courses in humanities departments across the University to meet or supplement these requirements.
Computation and Representation
Laura Kurgan, Computation Sequence Coordinator
Amelyn Ng, Representation Sequence Coordinator
Visualization is never just presentation—it is a way of thinking, designing, and drawing spaces at all scales. In a series of courses across all programs, the Computation and Representation sequences expose students to a wide range of tools and techniques and foregrounds both their uses and their limits. The sequences seek to initiate interdisciplinary dialogues across the school and address the dynamic nature of our visual culture.
The courses and workshops are divided into two broad sets of methods in representation and computation. The variety of trajectories possible within the sequence of classes—required and elective—promotes an individual exploration of visualization, fostering innovation and creative methods. Courses are either full semester (3 credits) or half semester (7 weeks, 1.5 credits). Teaching generally follows a “flipped classroom” format with students acquiring skills in tutorials outside of class and devoting class work to methodological and creative discussions exploring the limits and underlying concepts which guide those techniques.
Course | Semester | Title | Student Work | Instructor | Syllabus | Requirements & Sequence | Location & Time | Session & Points | Call No. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ARCH4001‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Core Architecture Studio I
|
Mireia Luzárraga |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery North
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
9 Points
|
10603 | ||
ARCH4003‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Core Architecture Studio III
|
Hilary Sample |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
9 Points
|
13269 | ||
ARCH4023‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architectural Drawing & Representation I
|
Amelyn Ng, Ray Wang, Zachary White, Mae Dessauvage |
M.Arch Only |
113 Avery + 504 Avery, 505 Avery, Ware Lounge, 200 Buell North, 300 Buell North
M 9 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10669 | ||
ARCH4101‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Virginia Black |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10614 | ||
ARCH4101‑2 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Kevin Hai Pham |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10615 | ||
ARCH4101‑4 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Oscar M. Caballero |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10617 | ||
ARCH4101‑5 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Emma Sumrow |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10618 | ||
ARCH4101‑6 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Galen Pardee |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10619 | ||
ARCH4101‑7 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Mireia Luzárraga |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10620 | ||
ARCH4101‑8 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio I
|
Carlos Medellín |
M.Arch Only |
500 North Avery
M , W, F 2 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10621 | ||
ARCH4103‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Hilary Sample |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10622 | ||
ARCH4103‑3 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Wonne Ickx |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10623 | ||
ARCH4103‑4 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Lindy Roy |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10624 | ||
ARCH4103‑5 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Jelisa Blumberg |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10625 | ||
ARCH4103‑6 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Nina Cooke John |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10626 | ||
ARCH4103‑7 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Galia Solomonoff |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10627 | ||
ARCH4103‑8 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Eric Bunge |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10628 | ||
ARCH4103‑2 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Studio III
|
Mara Eskinazi |
M.Arch Only |
500 Avery South, 114 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
13275 | ||
ARCH4111‑1 | Fall 2025 |
TECH I: Environments in Architecture
|
Lola Ben-Alon |
M.Arch Only |
114 Avery
TU 9 AM - 12 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10682 | ||
ARCH4113‑1 | Fall 2025 |
TECH III: Materials + Assemblies
|
Gabrielle Brainard, Katherine Chan |
M.Arch Only |
114 Avery
TH 9 AM - 12 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10683 | ||
ARCH4114‑1 | Fall 2025 |
TECH IV: Integrated Building Systems
|
Berardo Matalucci |
M.Arch Only |
114 Avery + 408 Avery, 504 Avery, 505 Avery, 300 Buell North, 203 Fayerweather
TU 2 PM - 5 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10684 | ||
ARCH4348‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Questions in Architectural History I
|
Mabel O. Wilson |
M.Arch Only |
115 Avery
W 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10648 | ||
ARCH4348‑2 | Fall 2025 |
Questions in Architectural History I
|
Lucia Allais |
M.Arch Only |
Ware Lounge (600 Avery)
W 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10649 | ||
ARCH4348‑3 | Fall 2025 |
Questions in Architectural History I
|
Chelsea Spencer |
M.Arch Only |
300 Buell South
W 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10650 | ||
ARCH4560‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Professional Practice
|
Alessandro Orsini |
M.Arch Only |
113 Avery
F 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10668 | ||
ARCH4005‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Mario Gooden, Lydia Kallipoliti |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
9 Points
|
10629 | ||
ARCH4105‑14 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Gary Bates |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10463 | ||
ARCH4105‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Phu Hoang |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10630 | ||
ARCH4105‑2 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Amale Andraos |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10631 | ||
ARCH4105‑3 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Michael Bell |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10632 | ||
ARCH4105‑4 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Ziad Jamaleddine |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10633 | ||
ARCH4105‑5 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Joseph Henry |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10634 | ||
ARCH4105‑6 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Sumayya Vally, Adnan Kasubhai |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10635 | ||
ARCH4105‑8 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Mario Gooden |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10637 | ||
ARCH4105‑9 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
David Benjamin |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10638 | ||
ARCH4105‑10 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Ricardo Flores, Eva Prats, Pimchid Chariyacharoen |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 PM - 6:30 PM, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10639 | ||
ARCH4105‑11 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Gordon Kipping |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10640 | ||
ARCH4105‑12 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Michael Wang |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10641 | ||
ARCH4105‑13 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Sebastián Adamo , Javier Alberto Flores |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 PM - 6:30 PM, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10642 | ||
ARCH4105‑15 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Marc Tsurumaki |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10644 | ||
ARCH4105‑16 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V + Clinic
|
Imani Jacqueline Brown, André Santos |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
700 Avery
M, TH 1:30 PM - 6:30 PM, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10645 | ||
ARCH4105‑17 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V + Clinic
|
Jorge Otero-Pailos, Mark Rakatansky |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 PM - 6:30 PM, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10646 | ||
ARCH4105‑18 | Fall 2025 |
Advanced Studio V
|
Leslie Gill, Khoi Nguyen |
AAD + M.Arch Only |
600 + 700 Avery, 113 Avery
M, TH 1:30 - 6:30, W 1:30 PM - 3:30 PM
|
Full Semester
0 Points
|
10647 | ||
ARCH4050‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Arch Elective Internship
|
Karen Cover |
With approval only via application |
NA
NA
|
Full Semester
1.5 Points
|
10664 | ||
ARCH6784‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Conservation of Brick, Terra Cotta & Stone
|
Norman Weiss, John Walsh |
Preservation Technology Lab (655 Schermerhorn)
M 10 AM - 1 PM
|
Session B
1.5 Points
|
10746 | |||
ARCH6900‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Research I
|
Danielle Smoller |
Individual Study |
NA
NA
|
Full Semester
2 or 3 Points
|
10667 | ||
ARCH4341‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Traditional American Architecture
|
Andrew Dolkart |
209 Fayerweather
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10737 | |||
ARCH4385‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Arab Modernism(s): Experiments in Housing, 1945-present
|
Yasser Elsheshtawy |
200 Buell North
TH 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
19935 | |||
ARCH4388‑1 | Fall 2025 |
(Re) Inventing Living: Modern Experiments in Latin American Housing
|
Luis E. Carranza |
114 Avery
M 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10651 | |||
ARCH4427‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture Apropos Art
|
Steven Holl, Dimitra Tsachrelia |
412 Avery
TH 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10665 | |||
ARCH4441‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Interlaced Existence: Death, Life, Liminality
|
Karla Rothstein |
200 Buell North
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10666 | |||
ARCH4442‑1 | Fall 2025 |
If Buildings Had DNA
|
Christoph Kumpusch |
Ware Lounge (600 Avery)
TU 1 PM - 3 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
16429 | |||
ARCH4469‑1 | Fall 2025 |
The History of Architecture Theory
|
Mark Wigley |
114 Avery
W 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10652 | |||
ARCH4597‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Extreme Design
|
Mark Wigley |
412 Avery
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10653 | |||
ARCH4625‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Tensile/Compression Surfaces in Architecture: Tactile Methods for Architects
|
Robert Marino |
409 Avery
TU 2 PM - 4 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10685 | |||
ARCH4715‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Re-Thinking BIM
|
Joseph Brennan |
409 Avery
M 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10673 | |||
ARCH4845‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Generative Design I
|
Danil Nagy |
Ware Lounge (600 Avery)
TU 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10681 | |||
ARCH4866‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Modernism + The Vernacular
|
Mary McLeod |
409 Avery
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10654 | |||
ARCH4874‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Construction Ecologies in the Anthropocene
|
Tommy Schaperkotter |
409 Avery
M 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10699 | |||
ARCH4892‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Data Visualization for Architecture, Urbanism and the Humanities
|
Jia Zhang |
409 Avery
F 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10675 | |||
ARCH4894‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Spatial UX
|
Violet Whitney |
115 Avery
TH 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10676 | |||
ARCH4987‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architectural Photography: From the Models to the Built World
|
Michael Vahrenwald |
115 Avery
F 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10670 | |||
ARCH4988‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Coding for Spatial Practices
|
Celeste Layne |
Ware Lounge (600 Avery)
TU 7 PM - 9 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10677 | |||
ARCH6510‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Neighborhood Preservation and Zoning
|
Carol Clark |
Ware Lounge (600 Avery)
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Session B
1.5 Points
|
10742 | |||
ARCH6682‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Subject+Object
|
Suchi Reddy |
300 Buell South
F 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10708 | |||
ARCH6756‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Make
|
Ada Tolla, Giuseppe Lignano |
Ware Lounge (600 Avery)
F 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10671 | |||
ARCH6768‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Conservation of Architectural Metals
|
Richard Pieper |
Preservation Technology Lab (655 Schermerhorn)
M 10 AM - 1 PM
|
Session A
1.5 Points
|
10745 | |||
ARCH6801‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Structural Daring & The Sublime In Pre-Modern Architecture
|
Rory O'Neill |
412 Avery
W 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10657 | |||
ARCH6830‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Difference and Design
|
Justin Moore |
All GSAPP |
412 Avery/ Online
TU 4 PM - 6 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10439 | ||
ARCH6917‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Seed Bombs: Technologies in Ecological Design
|
Emily Bauer |
115 Avery
TU 11 AM - 3 PM
|
Session A
3 Points
|
10710 | |||
ARCH6921‑1 | Fall 2025 |
AI for Existing Buildings
|
Kivanc Kose |
Preservation Technology Lab (655 Schermerhorn)
W 6 PM - 8 PM
|
Session B
1.5 Points
|
13583 | |||
ARCH6930‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Women, Gender + Modern Architecture
|
Mary McLeod |
408 Avery
TH 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10663 | |||
ARCH6934‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Traditional Building Technology
|
Tim Michiels |
Preservation Technology Lab (655 Schermerhorn)
TH 9 AM - 11:30 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10748 | |||
ARCH6938‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Rendering Systems
|
Seth Thompson |
300 Buell North
TU 7 PM - 9 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10678 | |||
ARCH6939‑1 | Fall 2025 |
GIS for Design Practices
|
Dare Brawley, Mario Giampieri | Syllabus |
408 Avery
F 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10680 | ||
ARCH6941‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architectural Acoustical Ecology
|
Ethan Bourdeau |
408 Avery
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10705 | |||
ARCH6942‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Daylight, Metabolism
|
Elliot Glassman |
200 Buell North
TH 7 PM - 9 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10706 | |||
ARCH6953‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Invis-abilities: Enhancing Accessibility in Design for Mind and Body
|
Zarina Farmer-George |
203 Fayerweather
M 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
13590 | |||
ARCH6962‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Environment, Built: Episodes from an Elemental History of Architecture
|
Enrique Ramírez |
408 Avery
W 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
14757 | |||
ARCH6964‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Information Richness: Architecture, Media, Politics
|
Amelyn Ng |
408 Avery
W 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
13851 | |||
ARCH6967‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Cities of Knowledge: Orientalizing Manhattan
|
Ziad Jamaleddine |
934 Schermerhorn
TU 2:10 PM - 4 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10662 | |||
ARCH6988‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Fortifications and Other Infrastructures of the British Empire
|
Hannah Kaemmer |
409 Avery
F 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
18407 | |||
ARCH6814‑1 | Fall 2025 |
New Towns After Smart Cities
|
David Smiley |
All GSAPP |
412 Avery
TU 1 PM - 3 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10475 | ||
ARCH6840‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Archives of Toxicity
|
Mark Wasiuta |
300 Buell South
TH 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10658 | |||
ARCH6861‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Environments of Governance
|
Felicity Scott |
300 Buell South
TU 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10659 | |||
ARCH6927‑1 | Fall 2025 |
Architecture, Technology & the Environment
|
Albena Yaneva |
All GSAPP |
412 Avery
M 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
13599 | ||
ARCH6929‑1 | Fall 2025 |
The Reimagining of Lower Manhattan Post-Sandy
|
Michael Kimmelman |
All GSAPP |
408 Avery
TU 9 AM - 11 AM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10600 | ||
PLAN6272‑1 | Fall 2025 |
New York Rising: How Real Estate Shapes a City
|
Kate Ascher |
ALL GSAPP |
114 Avery
F 11 AM - 1 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10438 | ||
PLCE4444‑1 | Fall 2025 |
The Future City: Transforming Urban Infrastructure
|
Kate Ascher, Andrew Smyth |
All University |
113 Avery
TU 1 PM - 3 PM
|
Full Semester
3 Points
|
10890 |
Architecture News