4.246
11.246

DesignX Accelerator

Students continue to work in their venture teams to advance innovative ideas, products, and services oriented to design, planning, and the human environment. Presented in a workshop format with supplementary lectures. Teams are matched with external mentors for additional support in business and product development. At the end of the term, teams pitch their ventures to an audience from across the school and MIT, investors, industry, and cities. Registration limited to students accepted to the MITdesignX accelerator in the fall.

Spring
2024
2-4-6
G
Schedule
F 9-1
Location
9-451
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 30
Preference Given To
Students in DesignX program
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.244
11.333

Urban Design Seminar: Perspectives on Contemporary Practice

Examines innovations in urban design practice occurring through the work of leading practitioners in the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, and urban planning. Features lectures by major national and global practitioners in urban design. Projects and topics vary based on term and speakers but may cover architectural urbanism, landscape and ecology, arts and culture, urban design regulation and planning agencies, and citywide and regional design. Focuses on analysis and synthesis of themes discussed in presentations and discussions.

David Gamble
Spring
2024
2-0-7
G
Schedule
W 9-11
Location
10-401
Restricted Elective
PhD Adv Urb
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.241
11.330

The Making of Cities

Examines the complex development of cities through history by tracing a diachronic accumulation of forms and spaces in specific cities, and showing how significant ideas were made manifest across distinct geographies and cultures. Emphasizes how economic, spiritual, political, geographic and technological forces have simultaneously shaped and, in turn, been influenced by the city. 

Spring
2024
3-3-6
G
3-0-9
G
Schedule
W 5-8
Location
5-233
Prerequisites
4.252J or 11.001J or permission of instructor
Required Of
MArch, SMArchS Urbanism
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.229
11.228

COLLECTIVES: New Forms of Sharing

Cancelled

Class canceled for Spring 2024

Spring
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
W 2-5
Location
1-136
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 15
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.227

Landscapes of Energy

Spatializes large technological systems of energy, analyzes existing and speculative energy visions, and imagines energy futures in relation to concerns of ecology, politics, and aesthetics. Identifies different scales of thinking about the territory of energy from that of environmental systems, to cities, regions, and global landscapes. Readings and students' research projects draw on critical geography, history of technology, environmental history to synthesize energy attributes within the design disciplines.

Spring
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
M 1-4
Location
5-231
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 10
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.215
11.309

Sensing Place: Photography as Inquiry

Explores photography as a disciplined way of seeing, and as a medium of inquiry and of expressing ideas. Readings, observations, and photographs form the basis of discussions on landscape, light, significant detail, place, poetics, narrative, and how photography can inform research, design and planning, among other issues. Recommended for students who want to employ visual methods in their theses. 

Spring
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
W 2-5
Location
10-401
Enrollment
Limited
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.213
11.308

Ecological Urbanism Seminar

Weds the theory and practice of city design and planning as a means of adaptation with the insights of ecology and other environmental disciplines. Presents ecological urbanism as critical to the future of the city and its design, as it provides a framework for addressing challenges that threaten humanity — such as climate change, rising sea level, and environmental and social justice — while fulfilling human needs for health, safety, welfare, meaning, and delight. Applies a historical and theoretical perspective to the solution of real-world challenges.  

Spring
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
M 2-5
Location
9-451
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.189

Preparation for MArch Thesis

Preparatory research development leading to a well-conceived proposition for the MArch design thesis. Students formulate a cohesive thesis argument and critical project using supportive research and case studies through a variety of representational media, critical traditions, and architectural/artistic conventions. Group study in seminar and studio format, with periodic reviews supplemented by conference with faculty and a designated committee member for each individual thesis.

4.189 Syllabus (MIT Certificate protected)

Spring
2024
3-1-5
G
Schedule
W 2-5
Location
7-429
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
MArch
Open Only To
MArch
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.185 (formerly 4.181)

Architectural Design Workshop — ODDS & MODS Castaways Workshop

Note 12/8/23: The subject number for this class has changed from 4.181 to 4.185

The ODDS & MODS Castaways Workshop in Spring 2024 will address research, and fabrication of prototypes for scalable material circularity in architecture, focusing on the use of up-cycled and re-used clay and earth brick. Graduate students in the MArch program may elect to take this workshop together with the ODDS & MODS Option Studio or independently.

Spring
2024
3-0-6
G
Schedule
R 9-12
Location
5-216
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 12
Preference Given To
MArch, SMArchS
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.154

Architecture Design Option Studio — The Umayyad Route (Nahleh)

When the Balfour Declaration was signed on November 2, 1917, its promises echoed across the globe, ultimately shaping the world we have inherited today. These echoes resonated more loudly in one particular room than in any other, bouncing across its arches of black basalt quarried from the surrounding volcanic landscapes. For this was no ordinary room, but the military headquarters of Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence, the future Lawrence of Arabia, during his mission to arm Arab Forces against the Ottoman Empire. His promise of Arab independence, of course, would later prove short-lived. Lawrence’s chamber was situated within the ancient al-Azraq fortress, originally built by the Romans in the third century, and later expanded by the Umayyads, the first Muslim dynasty, in the seventh century. The al-Azraq fortress is among the many desert castles either constructed or modified by the Umayyads across Greater Syria. And our focus in this studio will be on a tight cluster of seven castles located in present-day Jordan. 

These castles, known as qusur in Arabic, are connected today by a multi-lane highway originally designed to unite them. But it has, paradoxically underscored their isolation, effectively severing them from the broader history of the Arabian desert. This sense of isolation has been further deepened by the architectural typologies employed to engage with them—a combination of parking lot and an air-conditioned visitor center, deployed either in the middle of the desert or awkwardly adjacent to other towns or large-scale infrastructures. Amidst increasing global temperatures, these visitor centers have become customary, enabling the occasional tourist to comfortably capture images of the qusur.  But while this inability to imagine alternative forms of engagement with the qusur has been worsened by the highway and the effects of climate change, its underlying cause is different. Although we are well-informed about the events surrounding the castles in the last century or so, the original motivations behind their construction and operation remain mysterious. 

Scholars have put forward several theories about the origin of the qusur. Some have argued that they served as hunting retreats for the Umayyad aristocracy, private havens where princes could indulge in the pleasures of intimacy, music and wine amidst the arid wilderness. Others suggest that the qusur are best understood as part of a network, particularly serving as waystations to facilitate desert travel, with locations on major lines of communication that existed between Syria and Arabia. Other interpretations propose that the qusur served as fortified residential settlements, with a typology reminiscent of earlier Roman fort plans or villas. This typology features a portico surrounded by apartments, all part of a larger complex for individual leaders and their extended families, militaries, and employees. Others have positioned the qusur as extensions of pre-Islamic buildings and economies, or as temporary residences to control tribes in the Syrian and Jordanian deserts. Others have even declared them as prosperous centers for agricultural exploitation, with evidence of extensive irrigation systems, canals, and aqueducts, as well as storage and distribution cisterns, all aimed at generating a surplus of marketable crops. The conflict among these theories is substantial, yet it is also remarkably rich with potential, especially for architecture and its allied fields.

Our studio is organized into three main parts. In the first part, our goal is to test the various theories concerning the function of the Umayyad qusur. This will involve employing methods such as drawing and model-making, as well as combining archival research with building simulations to construct a compelling argument. Moving on to the second part, we will embark on a journey to Jordan to collaborate with colleagues and students at the University of Petra. During this visit, we will have the opportunity to explore the different castles firsthand and work towards identifying commonalities and intersections among their seemingly conflicting origins. Finally, in the third and central section of the studio, our focus will shift towards imagining alternative futures for the qusur, integrating both technical and historical arguments into the design proposals. This studio, then, follows the tradition of ‘cross’ studios in our department, with the primary objective of building connections among various discipline groups. The Umayyad Route represents a joint effort between AKPIA and A+U. It is also dedicated to establishing links with the BT group and exploring responses to the climate crisis that encompass technological, aesthetic, and cultural dimensions—at both the architectural and the urban scales. To fortify these connections, the studio will run concurrently with a seminar led by Professor Nasser Rabbat, who serves as the director of the AKPIA program, and will draw upon the insights of Professor Christoph Reinhart, director of the BT group.

Mandatory lottery process.

Spring
2024
0-10-11
G
Schedule
TF 1-5
Location
3-415 studio
Prerequisites
4.153
Required Of
MArch
Enrollment
mandatory lottery process
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
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