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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Offers an introduction to the history, theory, and criticism of American architecture and urban planning from the mid-1600s to the 1930s. Explores the social and cultural forces that shape the built environment. Examines European influences as well as uniquely American contributions. Emphasizes the work of Louis Sullivan, H. H. Richardson, and Frank Lloyd Wright.
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6.00 Credits
Introduces architectural drawing techniques, tools, and materials. Includes lettering and dimensioning as well as orthographic, axonometric, and one- and two-point perspective.
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6.00 Credits
Introduces computer-aided design processes for two- and three-dimensional modeling for architectural design. Studies CAD techniques that support site and program analysis, concept and schematic design, and design development and construction drawing applications. Requires lab fee.
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1.00 Credits
Retired August 31, 2006. Offers additional introductory academic experience by exploring course-related topics in greater depth with the professor. Available only to courses approved by the University Honors Program.
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1.00 Credits
Retired August 31, 2006. Offers additional introductory academic experience by exploring course-related topics in greater depth with the professor. Available only to courses approved by the University Honors Program.
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1.00 Credits
Retired August 31, 2006. Offers additional introductory academic experience by exploring course-related topics in greater depth with the professor. Available only to courses approved by the University Honors Program.
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6.00 Credits
Studies how to analyze, draw, and model the built environment. Students engage in issues of program, composition, type, and material. Offers students the opportunity to think conceptually about architectural design.
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6.00 Credits
Continues ARC U310. Studies how to analyze, model, and intervene in the city. Students engage in issues of figure/ground, mass, language, and sequence, understanding the city first as pattern, then as rhetoric and image. Projects include proposed alterations to public spaces and the Boston waterfront.
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4.00 Credits
Surveys the development of modern architecture in the United States and Europe from the mid-eighteenth to the late nineteenth century. Discusses architecture and urban design in the context of their cultural responses to society's changing conditions. Includes field trips.
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4.00 Credits
Examines the forms and principles of European and American architecture of the twentieth century, emphasizing the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, Mies Van Der Rohe, LeCorbusier, and Louis Kahn; and such influential movements as the Dutch de Stijl, Russian constructivism, and American postmodernism and deconstruction. Includes field trips.
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