Architecture - ARCH


The information below lists courses approved in this subject area effective Fall 2015. Not all courses will necessarily be offered these terms. Please consult the Schedule of Classes for a listing of courses offered for a specific term.

500-level courses require graduate standing.

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105 Architectural Studio 1
5 hours. Introduction to the visual and graphic principles of architectural design and production, with emphasis on observation, process, and composition, developed under the theme of representation and visual culture. 5 hours. Field trips required at a nominal fee. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

106 Architectural Studio 2
5 hours. Introduction to materials and methods of assembly in architectural design and production, with emphasis on design process, problem-solving, and construction, developed under the general theme of representation and visual culture. 5 hrs. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 105 and approval of the department.

163 Introduction to Architecture I and II
6 hours. Introduction to visual and graphic principles of architectural design and production and relation to materials and methods with emphasis on design process, problem solving, and construction. For students transferring into the Bachelor of Science in Architecture Program from other institutions and qualifying UIC students changing majors. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the school.

200 Architecture and Society
4 hours. Provides an understanding of the issues and factors that motivate and influence architectural design and theory, and how architecture is shaped by and shapes cultural concerns and social organization. Creative Arts, and Individual and Society course.

205 Architectural Studio 3
5 hours. Principles of building design and representation explored through integrative analysis of program, site, structure, materials, mechanical systems, and composition, developed under the general theme of architectural technology. 5 hours. Extensive computer use required. Field trips required at a nominal fee. Field work required. Students will use city as a research laboratory with field work on project sites. Additional scheduled field trips will be made to significant or historical architectural buildings as part of preliminary design research and analysis. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 105 and ARCH 106; and approval of the department. Students must have earned an average grade of C or better in ARCH 105 and ARCH 106.

206 Architectural Studio 4
5 hours. Expands basic principles of building design and representation explored through integrative analysis of program, site, structure, materials, mechanical systems, and composition, developed under the general theme of architectural technology. 5 hours. Extensive computer use required. Field trips required at a nominal fee. Field work required. Students will use city as a research laboratory with field work on project sites. Additional scheduled field trips will be made to significant or historical architectural buildings as part of preliminary design research and analysis. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 205 and approval of the department.

251 Architectural Analysis
3 hours. Analysis of the form and space of the built environment beginning with experiential and empirical inquiry and expanding to formal, visual, compositional, and perceptual techniques. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 106 or approval of the department. Corequisite(s): Concurrent registration in ARCH 205. Schedule Information: To be properly registered, students must enroll in one Lecture and one Laboratory.

252 Modern Architecture
3 hours. Introduction to the concept of architectural theory as an integral part of making, understanding, and interpreting works of architecture. Prerequisite(s): BS Arch students: ARCH 205 and ARCH 251. BA Arch students: ARCH 251. Arch Minor Students: ARCH 200. Corequisite(s): BS Arch students must concurrently enroll in ARCH 206. Schedule Information: To be properly registered, students must enroll in one Lecture and one Laboratory.

331 Architecture Seminar
1 TO 6 hours. Current problems. May be repeated to a maximum of 6 hours. Prerequisite(s): Consent of the instructor.

332 Architecture Reading Course
1 TO 6 hours. Individually planned readings on selected topics under the supervision of a faculty member. Prior to registration, the student should be advised by the instructor. May be repeated to a maximum of 6 hours. Prerequisite(s): Consent of the instructor.

359 Architectural Technology 1
4 hours. Examines the architect's role in protecting the health, safety and welfare of the public through responsible and ethical building practices. Prerequisite(s): Third year standing in the Bachelor of Science in Architecture program or approval of the school. Requires concurrent registration in ARCH 365.

360 Architectural Technology 2
4 hours. Introduction to building construction processes, terminology, principles, conventions, standards, applications, restrictions and communcations pertaining to construction materials and assemblies. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 359 or approval of the school. Requires concurrent registration in ARCH 366.

365 Architectural Studio 5
6 hours. Intermediate exercises in building design and representation explored through integrative analysis of program, site, structure, materials, mechanical systems, and composition, developed under the general theme of city and environment. Extensive computer use required. Field trip required at a nominal fee. Field work required. Students will use city as a research laboratory with field work on project sites. Additional scheduled field trips will be made to significant or historical architectural buildings as part of preliminary design research and analysis. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 205 and ARCH 206; and approval of the department. Students must have earned an average grade of C or better in ARCH 205 and ARCH 206.

366 Architectural Studio 6
6 hours. Extended intermediate exercises in building design and representation explored through integrative analysis of program, site, structure, materials, mechanical systems, and composition, developed under the general theme of city and environment. Extensive computer use required. Field trips required at a nominal fee. Field work required. Students will use city as a research laboratory with field work on project sites. Additional scheduled field trips will be made to significant or historical architectural buildings as part of preliminary design research and analysis. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 365 and approval of the department.

371 Architectural Theory 1
3 hours. The emergence of the metropolis beginning in the mid-nineteenth century is examined through a survey of the forces that produced it, and the ideologies and practices that have attempted to organize, control, and simulate it. BS Arch students must be enrolled in ARCH 359 and ARCH 365.

372 Architectural Theory 2
3 hours. Discusses a diversity of critical and generative approaches to twentieth-century architecture and theory, with an emphasis on how architects invent and instrumentalize history. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 371. BS students must concurrently enroll in ARCH 366.

391 Architectural Study Abroad
0 TO 17 hours. Lectures, seminars, studio, and independent travel/study abroad. Architectural/art history, architectural elective and/or architectural theory and analysis. May be repeated to a maximum of 34 hours. Prerequisite(s): A 2.50 cumulative grade point average in architecture and approval of the school.

395 Cooperative Education
1 hours. Introduction to architectural practice. Offers students the opportunity to couple academic learning with professional experience in an off-campus placement. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. May be repeated to a maximum of 3 hours. Field work required. Prerequisite(s): Consent of the instructor. Restricted to students withthird or fourth year standing in the B.A. in Architectural Studies program.

399 Architecture Elective I
3 hours. Special topics in theory, design, building science, technology or graphic skills. May be repeated to a maximum of 12 hours. Students may register in more than one section per term. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the school.

414 Contemporary Practices
3 hours. An upper level "selective" seminar that examines specific approaches to the contemporary practice of architecture; students choose by lottery from among several options that are offered by faculty. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 252 and ARCH 371 and ARCH 372; and approval of the department. BS in Architecture students must concurrently enroll in ARCH 465.

440 Digital Design and Fabrication
3 hours. Lectures, 3D software modeling lab time, and lab time for fabricating these files into physical models and prototypes, delivers a survey knowledge of digital fabrication and production in contemporary architectural practice. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 106; and approval of the department.

443 Professional Practice I
2 hours. Legal and ethical considerations in architectural practice; operation and management guidelines. Overview of the history of the professional architectural practice. Prerequisite(s): Completion of the second plateau or approval of the school.

444 Professional Practice II
2 hours. Business and financial considerations in architectural practice; scope of services communications and marketing guidelines. Interrelationship with clients, consultants, collaborators and the manufacturing and construction industry. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 443 and approval of the school.

465 Advanced Topic Studio 1
6 hours. Advanced studio that pursues specific design and research agendas of current significance; students choose by lottery from among several options that are offered by faculty. Extensive computer use required. Field trip required at a nominal fee. Field work required. Students will use city as a research laboratory with field work on project sites. Additional scheduled field trips will be made to significant or historical architectural buildings as part of preliminary design research and analysis. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 360 and ARCH 365 and ARCH 366 and ARCH 372; and junior standing or above; and approval of the department. Students must have earned an average grade of C or better in both ARCH 365 and ARCH 366. Students with a lower grade point average for the 365/366 studio sequence are required to take an eight-week summer studio in which they must earn at least a C in order to advance to the studio sequence for the following year.

466 Advanced Topic Studio 2
6 hours. Advanced studio that pursues specific design and research agendas of current significance; students choose by lottery from among several options that are offered by faculty. Extensive computer use required. Field trip required at a nominal fee. Field work required. Students will use city as a research laboratory with field work on project sites. Additional scheduled field trips will be made to significant or historical architectural buildings as part of preliminary design research and analysis. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 465; and approval of the department. Students must have earned an average grade of C or better in ARCH 365 and ARCH 366. Students with a lower grade point average for the 365/366 studio sequence are required to take an eight-week summer studio in which they must earn at least a C in order to advance to the studio sequence for the following year.

470 Structures I: Statics
3 hours. Introduction to the analysis of structural elements. Introduction to fundamental structural planning criteria and relevant concepts of tension, compression and bending. Introduction to historical and contemporary structural precedents. Prerequisite(s): MATH 180 and PHYS 105 and PHYS 106.

471 Structures II: Strength of Materials
3 hours. Introduction to material properties; strength characteristics of building materials and material assemblies; stress and strain; rigidity and deformation; temperature effects; torsion effects; combined loading of elements and systems. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 470 and approval of the school.

486 Urban Ecologies and Infrastructures
4 hours. Introduction to dynamic relationship of ecology and infrastructure in the context of contemporary urban landscape. Built and natural environments as inseparable networks of a dynamic process. Prerequisite(s): Graduate standing in the Master of Architecture program or, for students in the Bachelor of Arts in Architectural Studies program, consent of the instructor.

494 Special Topics in Architecture
2 TO 4 hours. Current problems. May be repeated to a maximum of 8 hours. Students may register in more than one section per term. Prerequisite(s): 12 hours of history of architecture and art and graduate standing in the Master of Architecture program.

499 Special Topics
3 OR 4 hours. Special topics in theory, design, technology, or graphic skills and craft (manual or digital). 3 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. May be repeated up to 3 time(s). Prerequisite(s): Senior standing or above.

500 Best Practices: Space
3 hours. Issues of planning and programming including context awareness and analysis; site and facilities master planning; workload analysis, existing facility capacity analysis and facilities programming. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

501 Best Practices: Type
3 hours. An understanding of operations, activities and functions associated with health settings, including facilities planning and design, departmental planning and design, space planning and design, and equipment planning. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

502 Best Practices: Process
3 hours. Regulatory constraints on the design process are discussed: government and licensing agencies including review of building codes, zoning controls, Certificate-of-Need, licensing agencies, and other regulatory issues. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

503 Best Practices: Institution
3 hours. A basic understanding of health delivery organizations including funding mechanisms and economies. Topics in the supply and demand for health services, the role of insurance, public policy issues of cost and quality regulation. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

504 Ethics in Health Design
3 hours. An understanding of the ethical foundations of health design. Including multi-cultural definitions of health. Issues of sustainable design; universal design; health equity; global access to health; gender equality; and health as a human right. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

505 Introduction to Evidence Based Design
3 hours. Evidence based health design recognizes the need to be problem-oriented using, as needed, the theories and methods of related disciplines (e.g. psychology, sociology, anthropology, biology, ecology). Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

510 Advanced Architectural Design I
8 hours. Design of multiple or complex building types with emphasis on varying topics related to architectural design. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 454 and ARCH 464 and ARCH 474 or approval of the school. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

511 Advanced Architectural Design II
8 hours. Design of a comprehensive, single case study with emphasis on varying topics related to architectural design. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 491 or ARCH 510 or ARCH 512 or ARCH 514 or ARCH 516 or ARCH 518 or ARCH 551; or ARCH 554 or ARCH 596. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

512 Advanced Architectural Design I: Activist Practice
8 hours. Design of multiple or complex building types with an emphasis on the theoretical, technical, political and economic considerations relating to community activism and identity politics. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 454 and ARCH 464 and ARCH 474 or approval of the school. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

513 Advanced Architectural Design II: Activist Practice
8 hours. Design of a comprehensive, single case study with emphasis on theory and site planning, interior space, building systems and materials relating to community activism and identity politics. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 491 or ARCH 510 or ARCH 512 or ARCH 514 or ARCH 516 or ARCH 518 or ARCH 551 or ARCH 554 or ARCH 596. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

514 Advanced Architectural Design I: Architectural Technologies
8 hours. Design of multiple, public buildings with an emphasis on the relationship of aesthetics and construction methods in the making of comprehensive architecture. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 454 and ARCH 464 and ARCH 474 or approval of the school. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

515 Advanced Architectural Design II: Architectural Technologies
8 hours. Design of a single, public building with an emphasis on the relationship of aesthetics and construction methods in the making of comprehensive architecture. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 491 or ARCH 510 or ARCH 512 or ARCH 514 or ARCH 516 or ARCH 518 or ARCH 551 or ARCH 554 or ARCH 596. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

516 Advanced Architectural Design I: Digital Media
8 hours. Design of multiple or complex building types with an emphasis on the theoretical, technical, societal and economic considerations relating to digital media. Extensive computer use required. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 430 and ARCH 454 and ARCH 464 and ARCH 474; or approval of the school. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

517 Advanced Architectural Design II: Digital Media
8 hours. Design of a comprehensive, single case study with emphasis on theory and site planning, interior space, building systems and materials relating to digital media. Extensive computer use required. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 491 or ARCH 510 or ARCH 512 or ARCH 514 or ARCH 516 or ARCH 518 or ARCH 551 or ARCH 554 or ARCH 596. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

518 Advanced Architectural Design I: Landscape Urbanism
8 hours. Design of urban landscapes and public spaces as informed by large scale infrastructures, natural environments and urban systems. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 454 and ARCH 464 and ARCH 474 or approval of the school. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

519 Advanced Architectural Design II: Landscape Urbanism
8 hours. Design of public building and/or space including surrounding urban landscape with emphasis on perceptual, phenomenal and temporal aspects of design. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 491 or ARCH 510 or ARCH 512 or ARCH 514 or ARCH 516 or ARCH 518 or ARCH 551 or ARCH 554 or ARCH 596. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

520 Topics in Architectural Theory and History
4 hours. Seminar on a current topic in the criticism, theory or history of architecture and urbanism. May be repeated to a maximum of 12 hours.

521 Contemporary Theories and Practices
4 hours. Discusses a diversity of critical and generative approaches to twentieth century architecture and theory, and introduces current themes and debates in contemporary design practices and related disciplines.

522 Topics in Architectural Technology
4 hours. Seminar on a current topic in technology, structures, or digital fabrication and new media. May be repeated to a maximum of 12 hours.

523 Gender and Space
4 hours. A gendered perspective in conceptualizing and critiquing the plan and design, representation, and form of the built and designed natural environment, the distribution of spatial and physical resources, and environmental experience. Same as GWS 523. Credit is not given for ARCH 523 if the student has credit in ARCH 412 or GWS 412. Students in the Gender and Women's Studies Concentration should contact the School of Architecture to enroll in the course.

524 Digital Fabrication and Visualization
4 hours. Seminar/lab that explores architecture through the design technology of its production. Through digital techniques of production, new forms of visual discrimination, prototyping, and communication are introduced. Extensive computer use required.

531 Architectural Theory and History I
4 hours. Discusses a diversity of critical and generative approaches to twentieth-century architecture and theory, with an emphasis on how architects invent and instrumentalize history.

532 Architectural Theory and History II
4 hours. The emergence of the metropolis beginning in the mid-nineteenth century is examined through a survey of the forces that produced it, and the ideologies and practices that have attempted to organize, control, and simulate it.

535 Quantitative Methods in Evidence-Based Design
4 hours. Basic experimental and survey design for health design research and associated methods for data analysis. The unit is intended to develop students' capabilities in a range of exploratory and hypothesis-testing data analytic techniques. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

536 Critical Design Methodologies
4 hours. Introduction to current critical design methodologies in health design including integrated practice; building information modeling; GIS; and other advanced forms of visualization and imaging. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

544 Professional Practices
4 hours. An introduction to the law and business of architecture, with an emphasis on alternative models for contemporary professional practice. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

551 Architectural Design I
6 hours. Introduction to the architectural design discipline as an instigator of qualities and as a function of technique and geometry. Exercises address issues of scale, proportion, intricacy, and formal organizing systems through analog and digital media. Previously listed as ARCH 451. Corequisite(s): ARCH 531 and ARCH 561.

552 Architectural Design II
6 hours. Introduction to the architectural design discipline as an organizer of quantities and as a function of argument and scenario. Exercises confront issues of size, number, expediency, and activity through diagramming, modeling, and graphic techniques. Previously listed as ARCH 452. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 551.

553 Architectural Design III
6 hours. Addresses contemporary collective space through the development of a large, mixed-use complex on an urban site, and the communication with diverse audiences by synthesizing information and identity from multiple programs and publics. Previously listed as ARCH 453. Prerequisite(s): Advanced standing in the second year of the 3-year Master of Architecture program, or completion of both ARCH 551 and ARCH 552 with a grade point average of B or better in this course sequence. Students with a lower grade point average for the 551/552 studio sequence are required to take an eight-week summer studio in which they must earn at least a B in order to advance to the studio sequence for the following year.

554 Architectural Design IV
6 hours. Comprehensive housing design studio using building codes, structural and mechanical systems, and material lifecycles as generative design parameters to attain the scale of detail development and the level of construction documents. Previously listed as ARCH 454. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 553.

555 Design Development
4 hours. Advanced seminar that focuses on technical development and documentation of the design project from ARCH 553. Extensive computer use required. Prerequisite(s): Credit or concurrent registration in ARCH 553 and ARCH 563.

561 Architectural Technology I
4 hours. Introduction to building construction processes, terminology, conventions, standards, materials, principles of structural behavior, application of components and assemblies, and communication and specifications. Previously listed as ARCH 461. Corequisite(s): ARCH 531 and ARCH 551.

562 Architectural Technology II
4 hours. Focuses on the relationship between architecture and the environment, including the high performance, material specification, adaptive behavior, and assembly systems at their primary interface, the building's envelope. Previously listed as ARCH 462. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 561.

563 Architectural Technology III
4 hours. Focuses on the relationship between architecture and its occupant, through an analysis and integration of building and core systems: HVAC, electrical, plumbing, ADA and universal design, vertical transport, egress and life safety systems. Previously listed as ARCH 463. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 562 or advanced standing in the second year of the three year Master of Architecture program.

564 Architectural Technology IV
4 hours. An advanced seminar/lab in architectural technologies, structures, new materials, and fabrication techniques; students choose by lottery into one of several sections with diverse content. Previously listed as ARCH 464. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 561 and credit or concurrent registration in ARCH 562 and ARCH 563; and credit or concurrent registration in ARCH 573 and ARCH 574. Students who are admitted advanced standing into the second year of the three year Master of Architecure program have the option to take ARCH 562 OR ARCH 573 concurrently with ARCH 564.

565 Topic Studio
8 hours. Advanced studio that pursues specific design and research agendas of current significance; students choose by lottery from among several options that are offered by permanent and distinguished visiting faculty. Extensive computer use required. Field work; field trips required at a nominal fee. Prerequisite(s): Completion of both ARCH 553 and ARCH 554 with a grade point average of B or better in this course sequence. Students with a lower grade point average for the 553/554 studio sequence are required to take an eight-week summer studio in which they must earn at least a B in order to advance to the studio sequence for the following year.

566 Research Seminar
4 hours. The first part of a year-long design-research project, the seminar establishes the information base to be developed into publishable form in the subsequent research studio. Field work required.

567 Research Studio
8 hours. Collaborative and individual design-research, in multiple genres, that addresses concerns at the edge of the contemporary discipline and results from a year-long course of study. Extensive computer use required. Field work; field trips required at a nominal fee. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 566.

568 Advanced Design
6 hours. Design of a complex project that extends the genetic and generic material of Chicago--its history of technical invention, landscape fabrication, infrastructural ingenuity, and lifestyle production--to a current disciplinary project. Extensive computer use required. Field work; field trips required at a nominal fee.

573 Architectural Structures I
4 hours. Introduction to the analysis of elementary structures by quantitative and graphical means; introduction to historical and contemporary structural precedents. Previously listed as ARCH 473. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 561.

574 Architectural Structures II
4 hours. Introduction to the design of structural elements and systems in steel, concrete and wood including the application of computer-aided engineering software and approximate methods. Previously listed as ARCH 474. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 561 or advanced standing into the second year of the three year Master of Architecture program.

577 Health Design Preceptorship
1 TO 3 hours. Preceptor-guided field experience in health intended to promote evidence based design problem solving skills, and application of critical knowledge and skills in architecture practice. Satsifactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. May be repeated to a maximum of 7 hours. Field work required. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

579 Capstone Colloquium
4 hours. Intensive, advanced program of readings, documentation, presentations and discussion that structures and supports research activity related to individual capstone projects. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the department.

585 Architectural Theory and History III
4 hours. Focuses on ten contemporary practices through close attention to the distinct design concepts, theoretical and formal argumentation, built production, critical reception, and legacies and genealogies that those practices have sponsored. Previously listed as ARCH 485.

586 Architectural Theory and History IV
4 hours. An advanced seminar in architectural and urban criticism, theory and history; students choose by lottery into one of several sections with diverse content.

587 Pro-seminar I: Design Criticism
4 hours. Introduction to the methods and styles of design criticism, with specific attention to architectural, urban, landscape, and environmental design disciplines.

588 Pro-seminar II: Publication and Graphic Argumentation
4 hours. Revisits the archive of publications on design to liberate strategies and tactics for use in the present day, as well as to encourage the invention of new forms of evidence through diagramming and projective graphics. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 587.

589 Writing Tutorial I
4 hours. Independent research and writing, pursued under the direction of a primary advisor. Prerequisite(s): Consent of the instructor.

590 Writing Tutorial II
4 hours. Independent research and writing, pursued under the direction of a primary advisor. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 589; and consent of the instructor.

591 Architectural Study Abroad
0 TO 17 hours. Lectures, seminars, studio and independent travel/study abroad. Architectural design, planning, structures, history and technology. May be repeated to a maximum of 34 hours. Previously listed as ARCH 491. Field work required. Prerequisite(s): Completion of at least one year of architectural graduate course work; 3.00 cumulative grade point average in architecture; and approval of the school.

595 Thesis Seminar
4 hours. Thesis seminar is an intensive, advanced program of readings, documentation, presentations and discussion that structures and supports research activity related to individual thesis projects. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. Field work required. Prerequisite(s): Approval of the Department. Students who wish to take the ARCH 595/ARCH 598 thesis sequence must submit a proposal and have it approved by the program before being permitted to register.

596 Independent Study for Graduate Students
1 TO 8 hours. Individual study. May be repeated to a maximum of 16 hours. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 491 or ARCH 510 or ARCH 512 or ARCH 514 or ARCH 516 or ARCH 518 or ARCH 551; or ARCH 554; and approval of the school. Restricted to students in the final year of study in the Master of Architecture program.

597 Capstone Project
0 TO 8 hours. Comprehensive project that explores the relationship of architecture to health-care delivery, evidence-based heatlh design, facilities planning, multidisciplinary research methods, technological adaptive design, and enviornmental innovation. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. May be repeated to a maximum of 8 hours. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 579; and approval of the department.

598 Thesis Studio
0 TO 16 hours. Individual research under faculty direction. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grading only. May be repeated to a maximum of 8 hours. Prerequisite(s): ARCH 595; and approval of the department.


Information provided by the Office of Programs and Academic Assessment.

This listing is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a contract. Every attempt is made to provide the most current and correct information. Courses listed here are subject to change without advance notice. Courses are not necessarily offered every term or year. Individual departments or units should be consulted for information regarding frequency of course offerings.