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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Addresses advanced models associated with the estimation, prediction, and prescription of conditions and trends in population, employment, land use and transportation. Examines orchestrating analytic studies that inform all phases of a project, including effective methods for engaging the public, presentation techniques, etc.
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3.00 Credits
Examines urban spatial patterns and processes. Considers city as system. Major topics: defining urban/spatial/analysis; economic theory of city origin; urban land value; social space; industrial and retail structure; economic base/urban growth, sustainable development; city of mind.
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3.00 Credits
Focuses on the legal setting for urban and regional planning in the United States and major constitutional issues in the effectuation of planning policy. Contemporary controversies are put into the larger context of attempts by the judicial system to redefine the balance between individual rights and governmental power in an increasingly weakened society.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the use of geographic information systems for environmental, economic, and physical planning. Focuses on what a GIS is and how it works, data issues, and using a GIS to improve planning and decision making.
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6.00 Credits
Focuses on plan design in urban and regional planning and explores basic concepts, techniques, and issues related to urban planning, urban design, site planning, and environmental awareness.
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6.00 Credits
Focuses on plan-making related to urban and regional planning. An understanding of the plan-making process is emphasized. Students have direct experience with the various steps in planning, including data-gathering, goal-setting, identification of alternatives, analysis, synthesis, and presentation of the plan. The plan may be for a city sector, a neighborhood, an entire community, a region, or it may be a policy plan. Where possible, students work with an actual client. Prereq: URPL 6630.
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3.00 Credits
Focuses on historical and contemporary relationship between regulatory policy and urban form. Course views zoning and land use regulations as ways of intervening in built environment’s production, providing analytical methods for evaluating morphological outcomes suggested by given zoning codes.
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3.00 Credits
An analysis of social, economic, political and cultural forces shaping historical and contemporary production of urban form. Course examines crucial links between design and society, and theories areevaluated according to practicality of their strategies for implementing their ideal.
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3.00 Credits
Philosophical questions in preservation practice; balancing significance in the environment with natural decay and demands for change. Policy issues as well as preservation and adaptation design.
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3.00 Credits
Examines changing norms in city planning and design from 1800 to the present and the production of the built environment by a variety of actors. Discussions of zoning, land use regulation, management, and the creation of ordinary/everyday urban space.
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