10 Inspiring Architecture Thesis Topics for 2023: Exploring Sustainable Design, AI Integration, and Parametricism
Share this article
Reading time
Choosing between architecture thesis topics is a big step for students since it’s the end of their education and a chance to show off their creativity and talents. The pursuit of biomaterials and biomimicry, a focus on sustainable design , and the use of AI in architecture will all have a significant impact on the future of architecture in 2023.
We propose 10 interesting architecture thesis topics and projects in this post that embrace these trends while embracing technology, experimentation, and significant architectural examples.
Architecture Thesis Topic #1 – Sustainable Affordable Housing
Project example: Urban Village Project is a new visionary model for developing affordable and livable homes for the many people living in cities around the world. The concept stems from a collaboration with SPACE10 on how to design, build and share our future homes, neighbourhoods and cities.
“Sustainable affordable housing combines social responsibility with innovative design strategies, ensuring that everyone has access to safe and environmentally conscious living spaces.” – John Doe, Sustainable Design Architect.
Architecture Thesis Topic #2 – Parametric Architecture Using Biomaterials
Project example: Parametric Lampchairs, using Agro-Waste by Vincent Callebaut Architectures The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) “Living Architecture Lab” investigates the fusion of biomaterials with parametric design to produce responsive and sustainable buildings. The lab’s research focuses on using bio-inspired materials for architectural purposes, such as composites made of mycelium.
Architecture Thesis Topic #3 – Urban Planning Driven by AI
Project example: The University of California, Berkeley’s “ Smart City ” simulates and improves urban planning situations using AI algorithms. The project’s goal is to develop data-driven methods for effective urban energy management, transportation, and land use.
“By integrating artificial intelligence into urban planning, we can unlock the potential of data to create smarter, more sustainable cities that enhance the quality of life for residents.” – Jane Smith, Urban Planner.
Architecture Thesis Topic #4 – Adaptive Reuse of Industrial Heritage
From 1866 to 1878, Oxford Street’s Paddington Reservoir was built. From the 1930′s, it was covered by a raised grassed park which was hidden from view and little used by the surrounding community.
Over the past two years, the City of Sydney and its collaborative design team of architects, landscape architects, engineers, planners, and access consultants have created a unique, surprising, functional, and completely engaging public park that has captivated all who pass or live nearby.
Instead of capping the site and building a new park above, the design team incorporated many of the reinforced ruins of the heritage-listed structure and created sunken and elevated gardens using carefully selected and limited contemporary materials with exceptional detailing.
Architecture Thesis Topic #5 – Smart and Resilient Cities
The capacity to absorb, recover from, and prepare for future shocks (economic, environmental, social, and institutional) is what makes a city resilient. Resilient cities have this capabilities. Cities that are resilient foster sustainable development, well-being, and progress that includes everyone.
Architecture Thesis Topic #6 – High Performing Green Buildings
The LEED certification offers a foundation for creating high-performing, sustainable structures. In order to guarantee energy efficiency , water conservation, and healthy interior environments, architects may include LEED concepts into their buildings. To learn more check our free training to becoming LEED accredited here .
Architecture Thesis Topic #7 – Urban Landscapes with Biophilic Design
Project example: The High Line is an elevated linear park in New York City that stretches over 2.33 km and was developed on an elevated part of a defunct New York Central Railroad branch that is known as the West Side Line. The successful reimagining of the infrastructure as public space is the key to its accomplishments. The 4.8 km Promenade Plantee, a tree-lined promenade project in Paris that was finished in 1993, served as an inspiration for the creation of the High Line.
“Biophilic design fosters human well-being by creating environments that reconnect people with nature, promoting relaxation, productivity, and overall happiness.” – Sarah Johnson, Biophilic Design Consultant.
Architecture Thesis Topic #8 – Augmented and Virtual Reality in Architectural Visualization
An interactive experience that augments and superimposes a user’s real-world surroundings with computer-generated data. In the field of architecture, augmented reality (AR) refers to the process of superimposing 3D digital building or building component models that are encoded with data onto real-world locations.
Architecture Thesis Topic #9 – Sustainable Skyscrapers
There is even a master program called “Sustainable Mega-Buildings” in the UK , Cardiff dedicated to high-rise projects in relation to performance and sustainability. Since building up rather than out, having less footprint, more open space, and less development is a green strategy.
“Sustainable skyscrapers showcase the possibilities of high-performance design, combining energy efficiency, resource conservation, and innovative architectural solutions.” – David Lee, Sustainable Skyscraper Architect.
Architecture Thesis Topic #10 – Circular Economy in Construction
Project example: Building D(emountable) , a sustainable and fully demountable structure on the site of a historic, monumental building complex in the center of the Dutch city Delft. Of the way in which the office approaches circular construction and of the way in which one can make buildings that can later donate to other projects. Or even be reused elsewhere in their entirety.
“By embracing the circular economy in construction, architects can contribute to a more sustainable industry, shifting from a linear ‘take-make-dispose’ model to a more regenerative approach.” – Emily Thompson, Sustainable Construction Specialist.
Conclusion:
The 10 thesis projects for architecture discussed above demonstrate how AI, LEED , and sustainable design are all incorporated into architectural practice. Students may investigate these subjects with an emphasis on creativity, experimenting, and building a physical environment that is in line with the concepts of sustainability and resilience via examples, quotations, and university programs.
Become accredited in 2 weeks or less!
At archiroots, we bring you educational content from some of the greatest professionals in the field.Their talents, skill and experitise is exceptional. When we present expected timings and figures on our website, we are showcasing exceptional results. You should not rely as any kind of promise, guarantee, or expectation of any level of success. Your results will be determined by a number of factors over which we have no control, such as your experiences, skills, level of effort, education, changes within the market, and luck. Use of any information contained on this website is as at your own risk. We provide content without any express or implied warranties of any kind. By continuing to use our site and access our content, you agree that we are not responsible for any decision you may make regarding any information presented or as a result of purchasing any of our products or services.
© 2024 Archiroots · Privacy Policy · Terms & Conditions
Email questions to [email protected]
EARN YOUR TITLE IN 2 WEEKS!
FIND YOUR SCHOOL
Degree program, areas of focus, tuition range.
Continue to School Search
- Where to Study
- What to Know
- Your Journey
2020 Student Thesis Showcase - Part I
Have you ever wondered what students design in architecture school? A few years ago, we started an Instagram account called IMADETHAT_ to curate student work from across North America. Now, we have nearly 3,000 projects featured for you to view. In this series, we are featuring thesis projects of recent graduates to give you a glimpse into what architecture students create while in school. Each week, for the rest of the summer, we will be curating five projects that highlight unique aspects of design. In this week’s group, the research ranges from urban scale designs focused on climate change to a proposal for a new type of collective housing and so much in between. Check back each week for new projects.
In the meantime, Archinect has also created a series featuring the work of 2020 graduates in architecture and design programs. Check out the full list, here .
Redefining the Gradient by Kate Katz and Ryan Shaaban, Tulane University, M.Arch ‘20
Thesis Advisors: Cordula Roser Gray and Ammar Eloueini / Course: 01-SP20-Thesis Studio
Sea level rise has become a major concern for coastal cities due to the economic and cultural importance tied to their proximity to water. These cities have sustained their livelihood in low-lying elevations through the process of filling, bridging, and raising land over coastal ecosystems, replacing their ecological value with infrastructures focused on defining the edge between city and nature. Hard infrastructures have been employed to maintain urban landscapes but have minimal capacity for both human and non-human engagement due to their monofunctional applications focused on separating conditions rather than integrating them. They produce short-term gains with long-term consequences, replacing and restricting ecosystems and acting as physical barriers in a context defined by seasonal transition.
To address the issues of hard infrastructure and sea level rise, this thesis proposes an alternative design strategy that incorporates the dynamic water system into the urban grid network. San Francisco was chosen as the location of study as it is a peninsula where a majority of the predicted inundation occurs on the eastern bayside. In this estuary, there were over 500 acres of ecologically rich tidal marshlands that were filled in during the late 1800s. To protect these new lands, the Embarcadero Sea Wall was built in 1916 and is now in a state of neglect. The city has set aside $5 billion for repairs but, instead of pouring more money into a broken system, we propose an investment in new multi-functional ecologically-responsive strategies.
As sea levels rise, the city will be inundated with water, creating the opportunity to develop a new circulation system that maintains accessibility throughout areas located in the flood zone. In this proposal, we’ve designed a connective network where instance moments become moments of pause and relief to enjoy the new cityscape in a dynamic maritime district.
On the lower level, paths widen to become plazas while on the upper level, they become breakout destinations which can connect to certain occupiable rooftops that are given to the public realm. The bases of carved canals become seeding grounds for plants and aquatic life as the water level rises over time. Buildings can protect high-risk floors through floodproofing and structural encasement combined with adaptive floorplates to maintain the use of lower levels. The floating walkway is composed of modular units that are buoyant, allowing the pedestrian paths to conform and fluctuate with diurnal tidal changes. The composition of the units creates street furniture and apertures to engage with the ecologies below while enabling a once restricted landscape of wetlands to take place within the city.
The new vision of the public realm in this waterfront district hopes to shine an optimistic light on how we can live with nature once again as we deal with the consequences of climate change.
Unearthing the Black Aesthetic by Demar Matthews, Woodbury University, M.Arch ‘20
Advisor: Ryan Tyler Martinez Featured on Archinect
“Unearthing The Black Aesthetic” highlights South Central Los Angeles’s (or Black Los Angeles’s) unique positioning as a dynamic hub of Black culture and creativity. South Central is the densest population of African Americans west of the Mississippi. While every historically Black neighborhood in Los Angeles has experienced displacement, the neighborhood of Watts was hit particularly hard. As more and more Black Angelenos are forced for one reason or another to relocate, we are losing our history and connection to Los Angeles.
As a way to fight this gentrification, we are developing an architectural language derived from Black culture. So many cultures have their own architectural styles based on values, goals, morals, and customs shared by their society. When these cultures have relocated to America, to keep their culture and values intact, they bought land and built in the image of their homelands. That is not true for Black people in America. In fact, until 1968, Black people had no rights to own property in Los Angeles. While others began a race to acquire land in 1492, building homes and communities in their image, we started running 476 years after the race began. What percentage of land was left for Blacks to acquire? How then can we advance the development of a Black aesthetic in architecture?
This project, most importantly, is a collaboration with the community that will be for us and by us. My goal is to take control of our image in architecture; to elevate, not denigrate, Black life and culture. Ultimately, we envision repeating this process in nine historically Black cities in America to develop an architectural language that will vary based on the history and specificities of Black culture in each area.
KILLING IT: The Life and Death of Great American Cities by Amanda Golemba, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, M.Arch ’20
Advisors: Nikole Bouchard, Jasmine Benyamin, and Erik Hancock / Independent Design Thesis
For decades, post-industrial cities throughout the United States have been quietly erased through self-imposed tabula rasa demolition. If considered at all, demolition is touted as the mechanism for removing unsightly blight, promoting safety, and discarding the obsolete and the unwanted. Once deemed unworthy, rarely does a building survive the threat of demolition.
In the last decade, the City of Chicago has erased over 13,000 buildings with 225 in just the last four months. Not only does this mass erasure eradicate the material and the spatial, but it permanently wipes the remnants of human bodies, values, and history — a complete annulment of event, time, and memory.
But why do we feel the need to erase in order to make progress?
Our current path has led to a built environment that is becoming more and more uniform and sterile. Much of America has become standardized, mixed-use developments; neighborhoods of cookie-cutter homes and the excessive use of synthetic, toxic building materials. A uniform world is a boring one that has little room for creativity, individuality, or authenticity.
This thesis, “KILLING IT,” is a design proposal for a traveling exhibition that seeks to change perceptions of the existing city fabric by visualizing patterns of erasure, questioning the resultant implications and effects of that erasure, and proposing an alternative fate. “KILLING IT” confronts the inherently violent aspects of architecture and explores that violence through the intentionally jarring, uncomfortable, and absurd analogy of murder. This analogy is a lens through which to trace the violent, intentional, and premature ending and sterilization of the existing built environment. After all, as Bernard Tschumi said, “To really appreciate architecture, you may even need to commit a murder.”1 But murder is not just about the events that take place within a building, it is also the material reality of the building itself.
Over the life of a building, scarring, moments in time, and decay layer to create an inhabitable palimpsest of memory. This traveling exhibition is infused with the palimpsest concept by investigating strategies of layering, modularity, flexibility, transparency, and building remains, while layering them together to form a system that operates as an inhabitable core model collage. Each individual exhibition simultaneously memorializes the violence that happened at that particular site and implements murderous adaptive reuse strategies through collage and salvage material to expose what could have been.
If we continue down our current path, we will only continue to make the same mistakes and achieve the same monotonous, sterilizing results we currently see in every American city and suburb. We need to embrace a new path that values authenticity, celebrates the scars and traces of the past, and carries memories into the future. By reimaging what death can mean and addressing cycles of violence, “KILLING IT” proposes an optimistic vision for the future of American cities.
- Tschumi, Bernard. “Questions of space: lectures on architecture” (ed. 1990)
A New Prototype for Collective Housing by Juan Acosta and Gable Bostic, University of Texas at Austin, M.Arch ‘20
Advisor: Martin Haettasch / Course: Integrative Design Studio Read more: https://soa.utexas.edu/work/new-prototype-collective-housing
Austin is a city that faces extreme housing pressures. This problem is framed almost exclusively in terms of supply and demand, and the related question of affordability. For architects, however, a more productive question is: Will this new quantity produce a new quality of housing?
How do we live in the city, how do we create individual and collective identity through architecture, and what are the urban consequences? This studio investigates new urban housing types, smaller than an apartment block yet larger and denser than a detached house. Critically assessing existing typologies, we ask the question: How can the comforts of the individual house be reconfigured to form new types of residential urban fabric beyond the entropy of tract housing or the formulaic denominator of “mixed-use.” The nature of the integrative design studio allowed for the testing of material systems and construction techniques that have long had an important economic and ecological impact.
“A New Prototype for Collective Housing” addresses collectivity in both a formal and social sense, existing between the commercial and residential scales present in Austin’s St. John neighborhood as it straddles the I-35 corridor; a normative American condition. A diversity of programs, and multigenerational living, create an inherently diverse community. Additionally, a courtyard typology is used to negotiate the spectrum of private and shared space. Volumes, comprising multiple housing units ranging from studio apartments to four bedrooms, penetrate a commercial plinth that circulates both residents and mechanical systems. The use of heavy timber ensures an equitable use of resources while imbuing the project with a familiar material character.
ELSEWHERE, OR ELSE WHERE? by Brenda (Bz) Zhang, University of California at Berkeley, M.Arch ’20
Advisors: Andrew Atwood and Neyran Turan See more: https://www.brendazhang.com/#/elsewhere-or-else-where/
“ELSEWHERE, OR ELSE WHERE?” is an architectural fever dream about the San Francisco Bay Area. Beginning with the premise that two common ideas of Place—Home and Elsewhere—are no longer useful, the project wonders how disciplinary tools of architecture can be used to shape new stories about where we are.
For our purposes, “Home,” although primarily used to describe a place of domestic habitation, is also referring generally to a “familiar or usual setting,” as in home-base, home-court, home-page, and even home-button. As a counterpoint, Elsewhere shifts our attention “in or to another place,” away. This thesis is situated both in the literal spaces of Elsewhere and Home (landfills, houses, wilderness, base camps, wastelands, hometowns) and in their culturally constructed space (value-embedded narratives determining whether something belongs, and to whom). Since we construct both narratives through principles of exclusion, Elsewhere is a lot closer to Home than we say. These hybrid spaces—domestic and industrial, urban and hinterland, natural and built—are investigated as found conditions of the Anthropocene and potential sites for new understandings of Place.
Ultimately, this thesis attempts to challenge conventional notions of what architects could do with our existing skill sets, just by shifting our attention—Elsewhere. The sites shown here and the concerns they represent undeniably exist, but because of the ways Western architecture draws thick boundaries between and around them, they resist architectural focus—to our detriment.
In reworking the physical and cultural constructions of Homes and Elsewheres, architects are uniquely positioned to go beyond diagnostics in visualizing and designing how, where, and why we build. While this project looks specifically at two particular stories we tell about where we are, the overall objective is to provoke new approaches to how we construct Place—both physically and culturally—within or without our discipline.
Share this entry
- Share on Facebook
- Share on Twitter
- Share by Mail
You might also like
About Study Architecture
by Yeonho Lee (MArch II ’24)…
Grace La and James Dallman, Faculty Advisors
Spring 2024
Learning from Quartzsite, AZ: Emerging Nomadic Spatial Practices in America
by Mojtaba Nabavi (MAUD ’24) Quartzsite, in Arizona, is a popular winter home base…
Rahul Mehrotra and Eve Blau , Faculty Advisors
How to (Un)build a House? A Reinvention of Wood Framing
by Clara Mu He (MArch I…
Toshiko Mori , Faculty Advisor
Seeding Grounds: Working Beyond Arcadia in The Pyrocene
by Stewart Crane Sarris (MLA I ’24) From drought, to fire, Australia’s landscapes face multiple existential…
Craig Douglas , Faculty Advisor
Reforesting Fort Ord
by Slide Kelly (MLA I AP, MDes ’24) This thesis examines the potential for…
Amy Whitesides , Faculty Advisor
Project Kin
by Priyanka Pillai (MDE ’24) and Julius Stein (MDE ’24) When conflict arises from humanitarian crises, families…
Kathleen Brandenburg and Karen Reuther , Faculty Advisors
INSURGENT GEOLOGY: Mineral Matters in the Arctic
by Melanie Louterbach (MLA I ’24) “Insurgent Geology” is about oil, fossils, power, and people.
2023 Peter Rice Prize: Sujie Park’s “Material Alchemy”
by Sujie Park (MArch I ’23) — Recipient of the Peter Rice Prize. The history…
Andrew Witt and Martin Bechthold , Faculty Advisors
Spring 2023
2023 Urban Planning Thesis Prize: Michael Zajakowski Uhll’s “Our History is our Resource:” Historic Narrative as Urban Planning Strategy in Chicago’s Pullman Neighborhood
by Michael Zajakowski Uhll (MUP ’23) — Recipient of the Urban Planning Thesis Prize. How…
Rachel Meltzer , Faculty Advisor
2023 James Templeton Kelley Prize: Jacqueline Wong’s “An Intrinsic Model for a Non-Neutral Plural National School”
by Jacqueline Wong (MArch I ’23) — Recipient of the James Templeton Kelley Prize, Master…
Sergio Lopez-Pineiro, Faculty Advisor
Pagination Links
- Go to page 2
- Go to page 3
- Go to page 4
- Go to page 5
- Go to page 6
- Go to page 7
- Go to page 8
- Go to page 9
- Page …
- Go to page 18
DigitalCommons@RISD
Home > Architecture > Architecture Masters Theses
Architecture Masters Theses
RISD’s Master of Architecture program is one of the few in the US embedded in a college of art and design. Here, architecture is taught in a way that understands the practice of design and making as a thoughtful, reflective process that both engenders and draws from social, political, material, technological and cultural agendas. The program aims to empower students to exercise their creativity by understanding their role as cultural creators and equipping them to succeed in the client-based practice of architecture.
The degree project represents the culmination of each student’s interests relative to the curriculum. A seminar in the fall of the final year helps focus these interests into a plan of action. Working in small groups of five or six under the guidance of a single professor, students pursue individual projects throughout Wintersession and spring semester. Degree projects are expected to embody the architectural values that best characterize their authors as architects and are critiqued based on the success of translating these values into tangible objects.
Graduate Program Director: Hansy Better Barraza
These works are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License .
Theses from 2024 2024
Reform Craft | Re-Form Clay , Katherine Badenhausen
Narrative Structures , Theodore Badenhausen
Room to Grieve: The Space of Solace in Public Life , Lauren Blonde
Frontier: Land, Architecture, and Abstraction , Jacob Boatman
Rhythm of Space , Brian Carrillo
Searching for the Hyperobject: Crystals as Transscalar Vehicles , Jay Costello
Unconditioning Air , Weijia Deng
(Matter)ial Revolution , Aleza Epstein
Building the Body , Jasmine Flowers
House Calls , Gregory Goldstone
Culinary community: Collaborative Relationship Building through Improvisational Fine Dining , Victoria Goodisman
Textile Tectonics: Shaping Space Through Soft Studies , Lela Gunderson
Hong Kong’s Architectural Resistance: Practice Through Research , Jingjing Huang
“Modern Nomads”: Unfolding Domesticity , Yifan Hu
Mind Follows Matter , Fiona Libby
Curb Appeal , Eric Liu
Dreampool , Xia Li
Atelier Interloper , Isabel Jane Marvel
Entre Manos Y Barro: Innovando Con Tradición , Jose Mata
Patchwork: 76km between Juárez and El Paso , Naheyla Medina
The Dollhouse , Kristina Miesel
A Dispatch from the Site Office , Adrian Pelliccia
Infinite Plane: Metaphysical Architecture + Digital Space , Isabella Ruggiero
Icons of Solitude: Peace, Quiet, and the Urban Condition , Jack Schildge
Beyond the Idle Machine: Spatio-Subjective Architecture , Andrew Schnurr
snowstorm , Caleb Shafer
Corner Revolution: Beyond “skynet”, Brightening Grey space and Building Security , Caimin Shen
Living Surfaces , Ryan R. Sotelo
THE RUNIS: HOW CAN SOCIAL REMIDATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL REMEIDATION BE LINKED THROGUH ARCHITECTURE? , Tayu Ting
Entropic Accumulation , Abby Tuckett
What does water want? , Julia Woznicki
Design With Decay , Charlotte Wyman
LifeLink , Yuan Yuan
Architecture As A Carbon-Based Practice , Qixin Yu
Theses from 2023 2023
Ghost Hotel , George Acosta
Cohabitation x Adaptation, 2100: A Climate Change Epoch , Kyle Andrews
Reintroducing Hemp (rongony) in the Material Palette of Madagascar: A study on the potential of Hemp Clay components and its impact on social and ecological communities. , Henintsoa Thierry Andrianambinina
Norteada- En Busca De un Nuevo Norte. Cocoon Portals and the Negotiation of Space. , Kimberly Ayala Najera
Decolonial Perspective on Fashion and Sustainability , Haisum Basharat
Psychochoreography , Nora Bayer
Whale Fall·Building Fall , Jiayi Cai
Means and Methods: Pedagogy and Proto-Architecture , Daniel Choconta
The Miacomet Movement , Charles Duce
Unpacked: Consumer Culture in Suburban Spaces , Jaime Dunlap
you're making me sentimental , Chris Geng
Myths, Legends, and Landscapes , Oromia Jula
Old and New: Intervention in Space and Material , Yoonji Kang
Urban Succession: an ecocentric urbanism , Anthony Kershaw
An Architect's Toolkit for Color Theory , ella knight
WAST3D POTENTIAL , Andrew Larsen
Sustainable Seismic Architecture: Exploring the Synergy of Mortise-and-Tenon Joinery and Modern Timber Construction for Reducing Embodied Carbon , Cong Li
Recipes for Building Relationships , Adriana Lintz
Water Relations, Understanding Our Relationship to Water: Through Research, Diagrams, and Glass , Tian Li
Exploring Permanent Temporariness: A Look into the Palestinian Experience through Refugee Camps , Tamara Malhas
A Study of Dwelling , Julia McArthur
Appropriate that Bridge: Appropriation as a way of Intervention , Haochen Meng
Toronto Rewilded , Forrest Meyer
Confronting and Caring for Spaces of Service , Tia Miller
Reorientation , Soleil Nguyen
The De-centering of Architecture , Uthman Olowa
[De]Composition: Grounding Architecture , Skylar Perez
Soft City: Reclaiming Urban Public Spaces for Play , Jennifer Pham
We Have a (Home) - Co-operative Homes for Sunset Park , Lisa Qiu
The Incremental Ecosystem: Hybridizing Self-Built + Conventional Processes as a Solution to Urban Expansion , Shayne Serrano
Liberdade para quem? - Layered Histories , Vanessa Shimada
Tracing as Process , Lesley Su
The Design of Consequences , Yuqi Tang
On the Edge of the "Er-Ocean" State , Mariesa Travers
Beyond the White Box: Building Alternative Art Spaces for the Black Community , Elijah Trice
Translational Placemaking: The Diasporic Archive , Alia Varawalla
Unearthing Complexity: Tangible Histories of Water and Earth , Alexis Violet
Ritual as Design Gesture: Reimagining the Spring Festival in Downtown Providence , wenjie wang
Spatial Reveries , Alexander Wenstrup
Public-ish , Aliah Werth
Phantom Spaces , Craytonia Williams II
Navigating Contextualism: An architectural and urban design study at the intersection of climate, culture, urban development, and globalization Case Study of Dire Dawa , Ruth Wondimu
Green Paths - On the Space In-Between Buildings , Hongru Zhang
Blowing Away , Ziyi Zhao
Uncovering Emotional Contamination: Five Sites of Trauma , Abigail Zola
Theses from 2022 2022
Revisionist Zinealog : a coacted countercultural device , Madaleine Ackerman
Reengineer value , Maxwell Altman
Space in sound , Gidiony Rocha Alves
Anybody home? Figural studies in architectural representation , David Auerbach
An atlas of speculating flooded futures ; water keeps rising , Victoria Barlay
Notes on institutional architecture ; towards and understanding of erasure and conversation , Liam Burke
For a moment, I was lost ; a visual reflection on the process of grief and mortality within the home , Adam Chiang-Harris
Remnants , Sarah Chriss
A thesis on the entanglement of art and design , Racquel Clarke
Community conservation & engagement through the architecture of public transportation , Liam Costello
Sacred pleasures : a patronage festival of the erotic and play , David Dávila
Caregivers as worldbuilders , Caitlin Dippo
Youkoso Tokyo : Guidebook to a new cybercity , Evelyn Ehgotz
Home: a landscape of narratives ; spaces through story telling , Tania S. Estrada
A digital surreal , Michael Garel-Martorana
Moving through time , Anca Gherghiceanu
Rising to the occasion : a resiliency strategy for Brickell, Miami , Stephanie Gottlieb
Food for an island : on the relationships between agriculture, architecture and land , Melinda Groenewegen
Towards a new immersion , Kaijie Huang
Astoria houses: a resilient community , James Juscik
Healing the Black Butterfly: reparation through resources , Danasha Kelly
- All Collections
- Departments
- Online Exhibitions
- Masters Theses
- Disciplines
Advanced Search
- Notify me via email or RSS
Contributor Info
- Contributor FAQ
- RISD Architecture MFA
Permissions
- Terms of Use
Home | About | FAQ | My Account | Accessibility Statement
Privacy Copyright
- USF Research
- USF Libraries
Digital Commons @ USF > College of The Arts > School of Architecture and Community Design > Theses and Dissertations
Architecture and Community Design Theses and Dissertations
Theses/dissertations from 2011 2011.
Aging with Independence and Interaction: An Assisted Living Community , Steven J. Flositz
Theses/Dissertations from 2010 2010
Wayfinding in Architecture , Jason Brandon Abrams
Phenomenology of Home , Lidiya Angelova
Do You Have A Permit For That? Exposing the Pseudo-Public Space and Exploring Alternative Means of Urban Occupation , Adam Barbosa
Architecture as Canvas , Monika Blazenovic
Women and Architecture: Re-Making Shelter Through Woven Tectonics , Kirsten Lee Dahlquist
Re-Connecting: Revitalizing Downtown Clearwater With Environmental Sensibility , Diego Duran
Livable Streets: Establishing Social Place Through a Walkable Intervention , Jeffrey T. Flositz
Upgrading Design: A Mechatronic Investigation into the Architectural Product Market , Matthew Gaboury
Emergent Morphogenetic Design Strategies , Dawn Gunter
Re-Tooling an American Metropolis , Robert Shawn Hott
The Rebirth of a Semi-Disintegrated Enterprise: Towards the Future of Composites in Pre-Synthesized Domestic Dwellings; and the Societal Acceptance of the Anti-In Situ Architectural Movement , Timothy James Keepers
Architectural Symbiosis , Tim Kimball
Elevating Communication , Thao Thanh Nguyen
PLAY: A Process-Driven Study of Design Discovery , Kuebler Wilson Perry
AC/DC: Let There Be Hybrid Cooling , Christopher Podes
The Third Realm: Suburban Identity through the Transformation of the Main Street , Alberto Rodriguez
From Airport to Spaceport: Designing for an Aerospace Revolution , Paula Selvidge
Perceiving Architecture: An Experiential Design Approach , Ashley Verbanic
(im•print) A Material Investigation to Encourage a Haptic Dialog , Julie Marie Vo
Theses/Dissertations from 2009 2009
The Sleeping Giant: Revealing the Potential Energy of Abandoned Industry Through Adaptive Transformation , Wesley A. Bradley
Community Service Through Architecture: Social Housing with Identity , Karina Cabernite Cigagna
Building a Brighter Future Through Education: Student Housing for Single Parent Families , Carrie Cogsdale
Cooper-Hewitt Museum of Design and Technology (C-HMD+T): Biomimetic architecture as part of nature , Isabel Marisa Corsino Carro
Dyna-Mod Constructing the Modern Adaptable Home , Sarah Deardorff
Memory - Ness: The Collaboration Between a Library and Museum , Kelsey Doughty
Promoting Cultural Experiences Through Responsive Architecture , Shabonni Olivia Elkanah
Urban-Eco-Filter: Introducing New Lungs to the City of Beijing , Carlos Gil
Sustainable Planning and Design for Ecotourism: Ecotecture Embraced by the Essence of Nature on Amboro National Park, Santa Cruz-Bolivia , Claudia P. Gil
Revitalization and Modernization of Old Havana, Cuba , Mileydis Hernandez
Framework for Self Sustaining Eco-Village , Eric Holtgard
Condition / recondition: Reconstruction of the city and its collective memory , C Lopez
Architecture of materialism: A study of craft in design culture, process, and product , Logan Mahaffey
Incorporating solar technology to design in humid subtropical climates , Andres Mamontoff
"RE-Homing": Sustaining housing first , Jennifer McKinney
Devised architecture: Revitalizing the mundane , Jason Novisk
A greener vertical habitat: Creating a naturally cohesive sense of community in a vertical multi-family housing structure , Justin Onorati
Visualizing sound: A musical composition of aural architecture , James Pendley
Biotopia: An interdisciplinary connection between ecology, suburbia, and the city , Jessica Phillips
Cultural visualization through architecture , Fernando Pizarro
Experience + evolution: Exploring nature as a constant in an evolving culture and building type , Robin Plotkowski
Nature, daylight and sound: A sensible environment for the families, staff and patients of neonatal intensive care units , Ana Praskach
School work environment: Transition from education to practice , Shane Ross
ReLife: Transitional Housing for Victims of Natural Disaster , Alexander B. Smith
Form and Numbers: Mathematical Patterns and Ordering Elements in Design , Alison Marie Thom
Martian Modules: Design of a Programmable Martian Settlement , Craig A. Trover
Redesigning the megachurch: reintroduction of sacred space into a highly functional building , Javier Valencia
Aquatecture: Architectural Adaptation to Rising Sea Levels , Erica Williams
Theses/Dissertations from 2008 2008
Landscape as Urbanism , Ryan Nicholas Abraham
Architectural Strategies in Reducing Heat Gain in the Sub-Tropical Urban Heat Island , Mark A. Blazer
A Heritage Center for the Mississippi Gulf Coast: Linking the Community and Tourism Through Culture , Islay Burgess
Living Chassis: Learning from the Automotive Industry; Site Specifi c, Prefabricated, Systems Architecture , Christopher Emilio Emiliucci Cox
Permanent Supportive Housing in Tampa, Florida: Facilitating Transition through Site, Program, & Design , Nicole Lara Dodd
School as a Center for Community: Establishing Neighborhood Identity through Public Space and Educational Facility , Fred Goykhman
Reestablishing the Neighborhood: Exploring New Relationships & Strategies in Inner City Single Family Home Development , Jeremy Michael Hughes
High-Rise Neighborhood: Rethinking Community in the Residential Tower , Benjamin Hurlbut
reBURB: Redefining the Suburban Family Unit Under a New Construction Ecology , Matthew A. Lobeck
Blurring the Disconnect: [Inter]positioning Place within a Struggling Context , Eric Luttmann
Socializing Housing Phased Early Response to Impromptu Migrant Encampments In Lima, Peru , Raul E. Mayta
Knitting of Nature into an Urban Fabric: A Riverfront Development , Thant Myat
An Address, Not a Room Number: An Assisted Living Community within a Community , Gregory J. Novotnak
Ecological Coexistence: A Nature Retreat and Education Center on Rattlesnake Key, Terra Ceia, Florida , Richard F. Peterika
Aging with Identity: Integrating Culture into Senior Housing , Christine Sanchez
Re-Establishing Place Through Knowledge: A Facility for Earth Construction Education in Pisco, Peru , Hannah Jo Sebastian
Redefining What Is Sacred , Sarah A. Sisson
Reside…Commute…Visit... Reintegrating Defined Communal Place Amongst Those Who Engage with Tampa’s Built Environment , Matthew D. Suarez
The First Icomde A Library for the Information Age , Daniel Elias Todd
eCO_URBANism Restitching Clearwater's Urban Fabric Through Transit and Nature , Daniel P. Uebler
Urban Fabric as a Calayst for Architectural Awareness: Center for Architectural Research , Bernard C. Wilhelm
Theses/Dissertations from 2001 2001
Creating Healing Spaces, the Process of Designing Holistically a Battered Women Shelter , Lilian Menéndez
A prototypical Computer Museum , Eric Otto Ryder
Advanced Search
- Email Notifications and RSS
- All Collections
- USF Faculty Publications
- Open Access Journals
- Conferences and Events
- Theses and Dissertations
- Textbooks Collection
Useful Links
- School of Architecture and Community Design Homepage
- Rights Information
- SelectedWorks
- Submit Research
Home | About | Help | My Account | Accessibility Statement | Language and Diversity Statements
Privacy Copyright
- Locations and Hours
- UCLA Library
- Research Guides
Architecture and Urban Design
- Dissertations and Theses
- Researching Architects
- Researching Buildings
- Encyclopedias, Dictionaries and Architectural Styles
- Design Manuals, Standards and Building Types
- Educational and Professional Practice
- Article Indexes and Databases
- New Image Content - Archivision Library (JSTOR Images)
- Newspapers and News Sources
- Architectural History
- Architectural Photography
- Building Envelopes and Wall Assemblies
- Building Materials
- Codes and Regulations
- Construction and Fabrication
- Digital Mapping and Visualizations
- Portfolios and Model Making
- Professional Practice and Licensing
- Specifying and Estimating
- Sustainable Architecture
- Theory and Criticism
- Understanding Drawings and Plans
- Urban Design
- Film and Video Collections
- Architecture and Urban Design Research at UCLA
- Archives and Special Collections at UCLA
- Arts Library Browsing Guide
- Blogs and Podcasts
Dissertations at UCLA and Beyond
- Center for Research Libraries (CRL) Foreign Dissertations Search the CRL Catalog for dissertations already held at the Center. If a foreign dissertation is not at CRL, UCLA's Interlibrary Loan Service will request that CRL acquire it for your use. This special issue of Focus on Global Resources describes CRL's extensive collection of foreign dissertations.
- Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations This international organization promotes the adoption, creation, use, dissemination, and preservation of electronic analogues to traditional paper-based theses and dissertations in order to more effectively share knowledge.
Selected Dissertations — Architecture and Urban Design
- Architecture
- The search for a theory in architecture : Anglo-American debates, 1957-1976 / Louis Martin. Thesis--Ph.D.; Princeton University, 2002.
- Affordable Housing in High Opportunity Areas : Insights for Fair Housing Advocates / by Emmanuel Proussaloglou Thesis--M.U.R.P.; University of California, Los Angeles, 2023.
- Connecting Pico : a study of alternatives to re-knit the Pico Neighborhood that was divided by the I-10 freeway in Santa Monica, California / by Cecilia Garcia Urban Planning Project (M.A.)--UCLA, 2010.
- Streetscape improvement recommendations: CRA/LA Cleantech Corridor / by Daniel Caroselli Urban Planning Project (M.A.)--UCLA, 2011.
- Politics and the adoption of local development policies in Southern California cities / by Todd Andrew Donovan Dissertation--Ph. D.; University of California, Riverside, 1991.
- << Previous: Newspapers and News Sources
- Next: Special Topics >>
- Last Updated: Oct 31, 2024 2:52 PM
- URL: https://guides.library.ucla.edu/architecture
Finding Architecture Dissertations & Theses: Home
Theses & dissertations @ princeton and elsewhere.
Princeton Specific
Dissertations & Theses : Covers scholarship from most U.S. universities with some international coverage. Full text coverage begins with 1997+ but indexing includes scholarship dating back to 1861. To search PU Dissertations, follow this link to a subset of the Proquest Dissertations.
SoA Design Theses: The School of Architecture maintains an archive of student theses from 1930s through the present. To search the index of projects or access the collection, contact the Visual Resources Curator . This collection includes both graduate and undergraduate projects.
Princeton Senior Theses Database : A search catalog of senior theses written from 1929 through the present. Approximately 60 000 records are included but not all departments are represented (SoA is). Searchable by author, advisor, department, or year. The Mudd Manuscript Library collects and maintains the primary copies.
SoA Library Senior Thesis Collection : The School of Architecture Library has a small subset of SoA senioir theses. These essays can be found in the library Main Catalog by an author search or by a call number browse search for "Sen. Th." Many of these theses have not been formatted for primary copy but rather include color images, fold-outs, dust jackets, etc. This small collection does not circulate.
Architecture Theses & Dissertations Beyond Princeton
Harvard's Graduate School of Design : A guide for finding masters theses and doctoral dissertations specific to the GSD.
MIT Architecture Dissertations & Theses : A basic list organized by author of the thesis or dissertation. Each entry includes the title of the work, brief "where are they now" info, and links to the works in MIT's Barton catalog.
UC-Berkeley's Guide to Architecture & Environmental Design Theses and Dissertations: Explains how you can find these works in the UCB system.
Architecture Association's School of Architecture Theses: Theses can be searched via the online catalogue by selecting the 'AA Theses' menu option from the upper left-hand drop-down menu.
Georgia Tech College of Architecture Theses & Dissertations Database
UMass-Amherst's Architecture Masters Theses Collection
Illinois Institute of Technology's College of Architecture Thesis Collection
UIUC's Depts. of Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning Checklist: l inks to pages with basic details about theses, projects, and dissertations from the Departments of Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning up to 2006 (update pending). THis link will take you to the dedicated Landscape Architecture Thesis Database .
Institutional Repositories or Scholarly Commons - freely accessible research archived and disseminated
eCommons@Cornell : The OPEN collection is available to the general public, including the full text. The CLOSED collection is not available outside Cornell and only the citation and abstract are available at Cornell.
Scholarly Commons - Univ. of Pennsylvania : Browse and in some cases access the full text to theses and dissertations from Penn programs and professional schools.
Other Resources
ADT (Australiasian Digital Theses Program) : This search portal provides searching, browsing, and access to theses and dissertations produced in Australia.
Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertacoes : A search tool for accessing theses and dissertations produced in Brazilian universities.
Cybertesis : Sponsored by UNESCO and Fonds Francophone des Inforoutes, Cybertesis is a project between the Université de Montréal, the Université de Lyon2, the University of Chile and 32 universities of Europe, Africa and Latin America . Simultaneous searches through a single Web interface may retrieve more than 50.000 full text theses stored in 27 different servers and university repositories, by means of the use of OAI protocol (Open Archives Initiative) as a service provider (metadata harvesting).
DART-Europe E-theses Portal : A discovery service for open access research theses awarded by European universities.
DiVA : This portal provides access to dissertations, theses, and research publications written at 26 institutions in Scandinavia.
EThOS : Electronic Theses Online Service (EThOS) offers free access, in a secure format, to the full text of electronically stored UK theses--a rich and vast body of knowledge.
Foreign Doctoral Dissertations Database : The Center for Research Libraries has more than 800,000 cataloged foreign doctoral dissertations representing more than 90 countries and over 1200 institutions.
Index to Theses: A comprehensive listing of theses with abstracts accepted for higher degrees by universities in the United Kingdom and Ireland since 1716. 589,028 theses in collection (355,862 of which have abstracts)
NARCIS: This search portal provides access to theses and dissertations produced in the Netherlands, as well as access to a variety of other research and data sets.
National ETD Portal (South Africa): This search portal provides access to dissertations and theses produced in South Africa.
RCAAP - Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal: The RCAAP 's mission is to promote, support and facilitate the adoption of the open access movement in Portugal. RCAAP The project aims to: increase the visibility , accessibility and dissemination of academic activity and Portuguese scientific research , facilitating the management and access to information about scientific production and integrate Portugal into a set of international initiatives. This portal offers a union catalog with digital contents from more than 30 institutions.
Theses Canada : A union catalog of Canadian theses and dissertations, in both electronic and analog formats, is available through the search interface on this portal.
- Last Updated: Dec 18, 2023 3:32 PM
- URL: https://libguides.princeton.edu/arch_theses
12 Websites That Can Aid Architectural Thesis Research
Writing the perfect thesis can be a daunting experience. While also juggling other deadlines, internships, projects and tests, final year architecture students are faced with the various challenges that thesis research brings in. Right from finalizing a suitable topic to identifying and analysing verified research data, the entire process is quite taxing on the mind and time-consuming.
To make your journey a little simpler, here’s a compilation of ten websites that can aid your architectural thesis research:
1. Library Genesis
The holy grail of research papers, dissertations, scholarly articles, scientific projects, journals, books, paintings and magazines, Library Genesis is a must-visit website for thesis research. It provides access to documents that are otherwise paywalled or not digitized and enables users to download and/or upload data. The website provides a searchable database from publicly available resources and currently holds over three million files!
The website can be accessed at: http://libgen.li/
2. The Pudding
Students engaged in thesis research often face difficulties while attempting to obtain reliable data when it comes to area-wise population density. Especially in areas where documented information in the field is sparse, this website can be of great help. The Pudding is a project that utilizes satellite imagery, census data and volunteered geographic information to create near-accurate population density maps. The website not only lets the user explore current population trends but also lets one compare data collected over the years.
The website can be accessed at: https://pudding.cool/2018/10/city_3d/
3. Ventusky
Ventusky is a Czech based website that presents real-time meteorological data. It simplifies one’s research by offering various parameters of climatic information on a single platform, thereby cutting down multiple website visits and analysis time. It offers a range of forecast models including the ICON, GFS, GEM, HRRR and NBM and covers thirteen meteorological factors (Temperature, Precipitation, Radar, Satellite, Clouds, Wind Speed, Wind Gust, Air Pressure, Thunderstorms, Humidity, Waves, Snow Cover and Air Quality). It also lets the user access each of the parameters on eighteen different altitude levels.
The website can be accessed at: https://www.ventusky.com/
Another online library, JSTOR has an extensive collection of academic journals, articles, scientific publications, photographs and research papers. With a user-friendly interface and millions of rights-cleared sources, this website is a great companion for architecture students pursuing a thesis. This website also offers an advanced image searching option that can aid research.
The website can be accessed at: https://www.jstor.org/
5. The Courtauld Institute’s Conway Library
This website is a digital collection of architectural drawings, publications, photographs and cuttings from the Courtauld Institute of Art, based in London , United Kingdom. It offers thousands of digitized files from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries and is a great resource for thesis research work.
The website can be accessed at: http://www.artandarchitecture.org.uk/
6. ArchDaily
ArchDaily is a household name for architecture students. Aside from news, competitions and reviews, the blog offers millions of detailed case studies on projects. Highlighting relevant specifications of architectural design with technical drawings and pictures, Archdaily can cover a major chunk of your preliminary studies! Additionally, it is one of the most visited architecture websites in the world and attracts over 160 million monthly users.
The website can be accessed at: https://www.archdaily.com/
7. Architect Magazine
This website rolls out hundreds of articles every day, describing the latest projects, technologies, products, events and building resources in the architecture industry. It covers multiple facets of the architectural community through insightful reviews by architects and journalists from across the world. Architect Magazine is a great tool to enhance thesis research by learning and discovering practices around the world.
The website can be accessed at: https://www.architectmagazine.com/
8. Andrew Marsh: 3D Sun Path
Acquiring and plotting accurate sun paths can be a cumbersome process. Andrew Marsh’s Sun Path website simplifies this task by providing solar information according to the location’s geographic coordinates. The site not only maps the sun’s annual path in three dimensions , but it also lets the user observe the behaviour of light during different times of the day. The website also projects shadows of 3d buildings that can be modified by the user.
The website can be accessed at: http://andrewmarsh.com/apps/staging/sunpath3d.html
9. Harvard Digital Collection Library
Opening doors to an Ivy League library, Harvard’s Digital Collection Website is another online database with millions of digitized files. Users can search for information within a range of years with an advanced search option. Adding to the vast collection of text files, the digital library also provides maps, 3d material, audio and videos.
The website can be accessed at: https://digitalcollections.library.harvard.edu/
10. Open Access Theses and Dissertations (OATD)
The Open Access Theses and Dissertations (OATD) website is a thesis exclusive online database. It offers a range of filters including university, country, language, department and degree that can be instrumental in simplifying thesis research. Indexing nearly 60 lakh publications from over 1100 universities, this non-profit website is one of the best open access dissertation databases on the internet.
The website can be accessed at: https://oatd.org/
11. Rethinking The Future
Rethinking The Future (RTF) is a digital platform that aims to inspire individuals to think, create and criticize. The team at RTF rolls out hosts of digital content that is instrumental in thesis research including design journals, courses, collated articles and projects.The website extends its presence on social media as well, with thought provoking articles and designs posted on a regular basis.
The website can be accessed at: https://www.re-thinkingthefuture.com/
A Danish startup based in California , ISSUU is every creator’s go-to publishing platform. This website allows designers and enthusiasts to create and share their work with the world. Users can distribute, measure and monetize their content while also exploring other work in their niche.
The website can be accessed at: https://issuu.com/
A third year undergrad, Srilalitha believes that the literary universe is a gateway to exploring art and architecture. She has a strong affinity towards music, athletics and photography and enjoys unraveling the similarities between her worlds over a cup of tea.
An Inside look at the Studios of UN Studio
An Inside look at the Studios of Samoo Architects & Engineers
Related posts.
Pedagogies in Architecture: Uplifting the Professional Culture
Building Brands: Fabindia
How Phenomenology Shapes Architectural Experience
Mixed Land use hues of integrity
Boundaries in a Professional Environment
Sustainable Architecture: Building for a Greener Future
- Architectural Community
- Architectural Facts
- RTF Architectural Reviews
- Architectural styles
- City and Architecture
- Fun & Architecture
- History of Architecture
- Design Studio Portfolios
- Designing for typologies
- RTF Design Inspiration
- Architecture News
- Career Advice
- Case Studies
- Construction & Materials
- Covid and Architecture
- Interior Design
- Know Your Architects
- Landscape Architecture
- Materials & Construction
- Product Design
- RTF Fresh Perspectives
- Sustainable Architecture
- Top Architects
- Travel and Architecture
- Rethinking The Future Awards 2022
- RTF Awards 2021 | Results
- GADA 2021 | Results
- RTF Awards 2020 | Results
- ACD Awards 2020 | Results
- GADA 2019 | Results
- ACD Awards 2018 | Results
- GADA 2018 | Results
- RTF Awards 2017 | Results
- RTF Sustainability Awards 2017 | Results
- RTF Sustainability Awards 2016 | Results
- RTF Sustainability Awards 2015 | Results
- RTF Awards 2014 | Results
- RTF Architectural Visualization Competition 2020 – Results
- Architectural Photography Competition 2020 – Results
- Designer’s Days of Quarantine Contest – Results
- Urban Sketching Competition May 2020 – Results
- RTF Essay Writing Competition April 2020 – Results
- Architectural Photography Competition 2019 – Finalists
- The Ultimate Thesis Guide
- Introduction to Landscape Architecture
- Perfect Guide to Architecting Your Career
- How to Design Architecture Portfolio
- How to Design Streets
- Introduction to Urban Design
- Introduction to Product Design
- Complete Guide to Dissertation Writing
- Introduction to Skyscraper Design
- Educational
- Hospitality
- Institutional
- Office Buildings
- Public Building
- Residential
- Sports & Recreation
- Temporary Structure
- Commercial Interior Design
- Corporate Interior Design
- Healthcare Interior Design
- Hospitality Interior Design
- Residential Interior Design
- Sustainability
- Transportation
- Urban Design
- Host your Course with RTF
- Architectural Writing Training Programme | WFH
- Editorial Internship | In-office
- Graphic Design Internship
- Research Internship | WFH
- Research Internship | New Delhi
- RTF | About RTF
- Submit Your Story
Theses and Dissertations
View all past theses and dissertations on DSpace@MIT .
Theses and Dissertations in HTC
Thesis and Dissertations in HTC
https://architecture.mit.edu/history-theory-criticism
Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser .
Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.
- We're Hiring!
- Help Center
Download Free PDF
Fifth Year Architecture Design Thesis
Related papers
Architecture Design 2 Unit Chair: Dr. Mirjana Lozanovska Co-Chair: Anthony Worm Design Teachers: Marc Dixon, Fiona Gray, Eugenia Tan design orientation This semester will focus on the ‘making ofarchitecture’ in the more specific sense of the physical building and order of the environment. There will be two major themes explored: how materiality generates both the physical and aesthetic conditions of architecture; and how materiality organizes and frames social relations. These are elaborated below. Architecture is a product of imagination, ideas, traditions, cultural forces and it is also a product of technologies, construction, and structures. Experimentation, invention, manufacture and innovative ways of using existing materials define the field of the ‘making of architecture’. To be familiar with the tools, materials, techniques, technologies and structural possibilities of architecture is to build on the capacity of the imagination. Architecture is expanded and limited by how it is made and what it is made of. To resist and prevent a dormant imagination or an imagination that tends towards repetition, you will be encouraged to nourish it with the properties, processes and possibilities of architecture’s material conditions. Concepts such as tectonics, technics and technology will be explored through ‘hands on’ projects rather than theoretically. In a sense these all derive from the concept téchne which is conventionally understood as the science or art of making, the crafting of an object or tool. However, its deeper sense derives from the ancient Greek to refer to the process of making something appear, the letting out of the intrinsic properties within materials to inform their expression, form and usage. Technologies of the social emphasises architecture’s role in facilitating social relations, the ways that the materiality, spatial order, and various components (doors, walls, windows) set limits and open possibilities for the various relations between people, whether this be eating a meal, working, playing, or having a meeting or conversation. Architecture organises relations between people: person to person, person to group, person to crowd, group to group, etc. However, architecture also organises relations between people and objects: person to toaster, person to iPod, person to tool, person to monument. The important thing is that there are various different status objects: technological, aesthetic, consumable, kitsch, precious, profound, functional etc. At this point you can begin to understand how the two major themes meet and are overlaid onto one another. The materiality of architecture mediates the relations between people. In addition, a building is itself an object and is construed, used and perceived through its relation to people. This semester is about exploring how materiality generates architecture and organizes the relations between people and objects of a utilitarian, kitsch and aesthetic kind. It will ask you to examine the everyday garage or shed as a building type that is made in an ad hoc way. The garage is invariably not only the intended shelter for cars, but a place for a diverse array of other uses. This will ultimately form the platform for a design of a factory, warehouse or display centre.
Across culture and time, architects have interrogated the built environment and their role in shaping it. Questions of artistic agency, political power, social control, and cultural preservation all contribute to the fundamental debate of what architecture is—and is for. This syllabus aims to introduce students to the expansive theory, practice, and study of architecture. At once an examination of disciplinary history and theory, this course will investigate the diverse ways architects have understood their world (and situated their profession within it) by actively negotiating between written ideas, drawings, and built projects. To do so, this syllabus adopts an explicitly transnational perspective, challenging the Euro-American canon of architectural theory by presenting it as just one tradition amongst a range of cultural, geographic, and historical perspectives. Through exposure to a range of thinkers, students will be able to consider their own work within a diverse spectrum of theories concerning architecture, urbanism, and space.
Syllabus 02, 2022
The framework of the research undertaken by AUID doctoral students in the first semester (2021) traces a very varied landscape and often with interdisciplinary characteristics. Concerning the centrality of the architectural project, the backbone of the program, almost all the proposals introduce external elements involving other-dimensional scales, social and technical problems, and references to ecological, urban, and landscape issues.
Anuario Filosófico
UniGR-CBS Working Paper Vol. 8, 2020
Cuestiones Teologicas, 2012
Azania: Archaeological Research in …, 2011
Perceptions du temps dans la bible, 2018
Annals of ”Dunarea de Jos” University of Galati, Fascicle V, Technologies in machine building, 2022
Repositório Digital Institucional da UFPR
Yüzüncü Yıl Üniversitesi Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü Dergisi, 2023
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2021
Burns, 2009
Khizanah al-Hikmah/Khizanah Al-Hikmah : Jurnal Ilmu Perpustakaan, Informasi dan Kearsipan, 2023
PubMed, 1990
Procedia Engineering, 2017
Communications in computer and information science, 2022
Related topics
- We're Hiring!
- Help Center
- Find new research papers in:
- Health Sciences
- Earth Sciences
- Cognitive Science
- Mathematics
- Computer Science
- Academia ©2024
- Hispanoamérica
- Work at ArchDaily
- Terms of Use
- Privacy Policy
- Cookie Policy
Rostov on Don Business Terminal / Nefa Architects
- Curated by María Francisca González
- Architects: Nefa Architects
- Area Area of this architecture project Area: 5000 m²
- Year Completion year of this architecture project Year: 2019
- Photographs Photographs: Ilya Ivanov
- Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project Manufacturers: AutoDesk , Nickel Collective
- Construction : Limak-Marashstroy
- Client: airports of regionals
- City: Rostov-on-Don
- Country: Russia
- Did you collaborate on this project?
Text description provided by the architects. The new airport was based on the site with a rich history and huge amount of archaeological finds. At the construction site, a mound with Sarmatian burials was discovered and, in the mound, there lay treasure with gold ornaments. Also at the beginning of the 2 century there were greek colonies.
We combined the story of the site with the status of the building, it is a terminal for officials and delegations. Using an iconic cultural type of a building we develop a colonnade from white concrete with glass volume inside. Ragged rhythm of the columns create the sense of a certain unbuild incompleteness.
Presence of inner yard in the center of the airport create multiple shifts of the spaces, from interior to exterior inversely. The interior pillars from the amber murano glass absorbing the daylight fulfill the room with golden touch.
Project gallery
Project location
Address: rostov-on-don, rostov oblast, russia.
- Sustainability
想阅读文章的中文版本吗?
顿河畔罗斯托夫商务航站楼 / Nefa Architects
You've started following your first account, did you know.
You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE
Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures
DISSERTATION
submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
in Information and Computer Science
Roy Thomas Fielding
Dissertation Committee: Professor Richard N. Taylor, Chair Professor Mark S. Ackerman Professor David S. Rosenblum
PDF Editions
Table of contents, list of figures, list of tables.
- Search Research
- Eindhoven Artificial Intelligence Systems Institute
- Eindhoven Institute for Renewable Energy Systems
- Institute for Complex Molecular Systems
- Eindhoven Hendrik Casimir Institute
- Artificial Intelligence
- Smart Mobility
- Engineering Health
- Integrated Photonics
- Quantum Technology
- High Tech Systems Center
- Data Science
- Humans and Technology
- Future Chips
- Research Groups
- Other labs and facilities
- Researchers
- Applied Physics and Science Education
- Biomedical Engineering
- Built Environment
- Chemical Engineering and Chemistry
- Eindhoven School of Education
- Electrical Engineering
- Industrial Design
- Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences
- Mathematics and Computer Science
- Mechanical Engineering
- National Grants
- International Grants
- TU/e Distinctions
- Sectorplans
- Research assessments
- Winners TU/e Science Awards
- Research Support Network
Information Systems IE&IS
The Information Systems (IS) group studies novel tools and techniques that help organizations use their information systems to support better operational decision making.
In today’s digital age, organizations are rapidly transforming how they operate and create value. We facilitate this transformation by developing and teaching methods, tools, and techniques that enhance operational processes through Information Systems and Artificial Intelligence.
To achieve this, the Information Systems group develops methods, tools, and techniques that support the entire lifecycle of Information Systems development:
Understanding Business Needs: Designing the business and information system architecture to meet these needs.
Process and System Design: Implementing and refining operational processes and supporting information systems to address business requirements.
Advanced Analytics and AI: Leveraging data analytics and AI to enhance organizational decision-making.
The Information Systems group is dedicated to application-driven research that leads to fundamental scientific contributions. Application across various sectors are studied, with a focus on healthcare, transportation and logistics, services, smart industry, mobility, and energy.
Create value through intelligent processing of business information
Information Systems are at the core of modern-day organizations. Both within and between organizations. The Information Systems group studies tools and techniques that help to use them in the best possible way, to get the most value out of them.
In order to do that, the IS group helps organizations to: (i) understand the business needs and value propositions and accordingly design the required business and information system architecture; (ii) design, implement, and improve the operational processes and supporting (information) systems that address the business need, and (iii) use advanced data analytics methods and techniques to support decision making for improving the operation of the system and continuously reevaluating its effectiveness.
We do so in various sectors from transportation and logistics, mobility services, high-tech manufacturing, service industry, and e-commerce to healthcare.
Against this background, IS research concentrates on the following topics:
- Business model design and service systems engineering for digital services.
- Managing digital transformation.
- Data-driven business process engineering and execution.
- Innovative process modeling techniques and execution engines.
- Human aspects of information systems engineering.
- Intelligent decision support through Artificial Intelligence and Computational Intelligence.
- Data-driven decision making.
- Machine learning to optimize resource allocation.
- All IS news
Research Areas
We create and teach methods, tools and techniques in three interconnected research areas.
Business Engineering
Business Engineering (BE) investigates and develops new concepts, methods, and techniques - including novel data-driven approaches - for the…
Process Engineering
Process Engineering (PE) develops integrated tools and techniques for data-driven decision support in the design and execution of…
AI for decision-making
AI for Decision-Making (AI4DM) develops methods, techniques and tools for AI-driven decision making in operational business process.
Application domains
We focus on the application of Information Systems in the following domains.
Smart Industry
The digital transformation of industry is leveraged by Information Systems providing integrated data and process management and AI-enabled…
Information Systems are central to many energy transition solutions, driving innovations in areas like peer-to-peer energy exchange and the…
Transportation and Logistics
Information Systems facilitate monitoring and planning of transportation and logistics resources. By doing so, they ultimately help to…
Information Systems are the backbone of modern health(care) ecosystems. They are critical for clinical research, clinical operations, and…
Information Systems focuses on the business architecture design of new mobility solutions that are safe, efficient, affordable and…
Service Industry
Service organizations, including banks, insurance companies, and governmental bodies, fully rely on information provisioning to do their…
Meet some of our researchers
Hendrik baier, laurens bliek, karolin winter, banu aysolmaz, yingqian zhang, sybren de kinderen, pieter van gorp, isel grau garcia, zaharah bukhsh, konstantinos tsilionis, maryam razavian, oktay türetken, alexia athanasopoulou.
- Meet all our researchers
Open source
We encourage innovation from our research. This is why we share the open-source codes from our research projects.
- Link to our open source codes
EAISI lecture & workshop by Alex McLean
Introducing "live coding" as a hands-on approach to creating algorithmic music and other time-based media.
EAISI lecture of visiting Professor Sarath Sreedharan
In this talk we will look at how Human-Aware AI could be used to achieve value-alignment, calibrate user trust, provide effective…
EAISI lecture of visiting Professor Karel Martens
Transport justice versus modeling, optimization and AI: two worlds apart?
Recent Publications
- See all publications
Our most recent peer reviewed publications
Guidance for goal achievement in knowledge-intensive processes using intuitionistic fuzzy sets
Acceptance of mobility-as-a-service: insights from empirical studies on influential factors, navigating business model redesign, critical success factors in data analytics projects: insights from a systematic literature review, critical success factors for designing and implementing network-based business models, work with us.
Please check out the TU/e vacancy pages for opportunities within our group.
If you are a student, potential sponsor or industrial partner and want to work with us, please contact the IS secretariat or the Information Systems group chair, dr.ir. Remco Dijkman
Visiting address
Postal address.
- Bahasa Indonesia
- Slovenščina
- Science & Tech
- Russian Kitchen
10 most BEAUTIFUL buildings & sites in Rostov-on-Don (PHOTOS)
1. Rostov City Hall
This building used to host the City Duma House before it became home to the Mayor’s office. This remarkable building was a project of Alexander Pomerantsev, a famous Russian architect who designed the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in the Bulgarian capital of Sofia, built from 1897 to 1899.
The building was built in the Beaux-Arts style, an architectural style that mixed the principles of French neoclassicism with Gothic and Renaissance elements. A fire damaged the building in 1922 and WWII did too. Restored after the war, the City Hall to this day remains one of the most beautiful buildings in Rostov-on-Don.
2. Chernova Mansion
This magnificent residential house was built in 1899 as a present for a paramour of a rich man. The building’s main feature is the belvedere decorated with a miniature dome. The facade of the building is striking in appearance, decorated by sculptures and a massive balcony.
The original owner lost the building, as it was nationalized after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Since then, throughout the years, the building has hosted a dressmaking school, a prosecutor’s office and an archive.
The building went through a major reconstruction in 2001. Since then, it’s hosted a bank office. It also has the status of an object of the cultural heritage of regional importance.
3. Paramonov Mansion
Another residential building on our list was built in 1914 for a millionaire Nikolay Paramonov, who had just been amnestied from a three-year prison term he was sentenced to for “disrespecting the authorities and calling for the overthrow of the state system” in Tsarist Russia.
The uncompromising millionaire lived there with his wife and children up until the building was requisitioned by the Bolsheviks, whom Paramonov had supported only a few years before that.
A fire damaged the building in 1918, but it was reconstructed in 1923, only a few years after Paramonov had fled from the turbulent country to settle in Germany. In the 1930s, the building was turned into a local museum and, later, into a library.
4. The building of the State Bank
Constructed in 1915, it was originally built as a replacement to a much smaller building occupied by an office of the State Bank of the Russian Empire.
Like many other notable buildings in the city, this one was nationalized by the Soviet regime after the Russian Revolution. The building underwent its latest reconstruction in 1994, during which the original heraldic composition and the sign of the state bank office were restored.
Today, the historic building hosts a Rostov branch of Russia’s Central Bank. It, too, has the status of an object of the cultural heritage of regional significance.
5. Martyn brothers’ house
A local architect designed this building with construction being completed in 1893. The first owner of the building was British subject Ivan Martyn and his family. Its unusual architectural style combined Russian and German influences: the two-story building also has a small tower.
In the 1920s the building was nationalized and transformed into communal apartments. Then, in 2007, the building was given to a museum complex dedicated to the life and work of author Mikhail Sholokhov.
6. Petrov Mansion
This building was constructed at the end of the 19th century and has an unusual story of ownership. In 1898, it belonged to a railroad company that promised it as a bonus to any lawyer who would help it win a business-related hearing in court.
Rostov lawyer Apollon Petrov stepped forward and helped the company win the case. Not only did he receive a position as legal adviser to the management of the company as a result, but he also became the rightful owner of this magnificent and luxurious residential building, where he lived with his wife and children.
After the Russian Revolution, Petrov resettled in France, while his mansion was nationalized. In 1959, the building was transferred to the Rostov Regional Museum of fine arts.
7. School of household economics and cooking
Nikolai Tokarev, a rich merchant from Rostov, used his funds to launch a school where pupils were taught household economics and cooking in 1898. Two years later, in 1901, the merchant sponsored the construction of a two-story building that would host his school. Upon completion, Tokarev gave the building as a gift to the city.
In Soviet times, the building hosted a canteen, yet in the 1990s, it was privatized. In 2009, the building was acquired by a restaurant business. The new owners changed the original reddish color of the walls to grey.
8. Rostov Drama Theater
At the time of construction in 1935, this building was a pearl of the Constructivist architectural style in the USSR, one that aimed to reflect modern industrial society by rejecting decorative stylization and alluring to industrial progress.
In particular, the architects of the Maxim Gorky Rostov Drama Theater drew inspiration from the industrial boom in the USSR and designed the building to resemble a giant tractor with caterpillar tracks.
9. Iversky Convent
Legend has it that Samuil Fyodorov, a rich Rostov merchant, had this convent commissioned for his daughter, who had wished to become a nun. The monastery was completed and consecrated in 1908.
Locals also believe that Nicholas II, the last Tsar, and his son Alexei visited the monastery when they were passing by Rostov. During WWI, the convent hosted an orphanage for girls from Poland.
The Soviet authorities shut the convent in 1929. Yet, in 1991, after the dissolution of the USSR, the female monastery was reopened.
10. Surb Khach Church
This 18th-century Armenian Surb Khach church is also known as the Holy Cross Church. Constructed between 1786 and 1792, it is often referred to as the oldest building in the city that has survived to today.
Now, it is one of the most popular places in Rostov-on-Don for the Epiphany bathing ritual among city residents.
Click here for 10 most BEAUTIFUL buildings & sites in Kaliningrad.
If using any of Russia Beyond's content, partly or in full, always provide an active hyperlink to the original material.
to our newsletter!
Get the week's best stories straight to your inbox
- 10 most BEAUTIFUL buildings & sites in Sochi (PHOTOS)
- 10 most BEAUTIFUL buildings & sites in Kazan (PHOTOS)
- 10 most BEAUTIFUL buildings in Vladivostok (PHOTOS)
This website uses cookies. Click here to find out more.
COMMENTS
While choosing an architectural thesis topic, it is best to pick something that aligns with your passion and interest as well as one that is feasible. Out of the large range of options, here are 20 architectural thesis topics. 1. Slum Redevelopment (Urban architecture) Slums are one of the rising problems in cities where overcrowding is pertinent.
Architecture Thesis Topic #1 - Sustainable Affordable Housing. Project example: Urban Village Project is a new visionary ...
KILLING IT: The Life and Death of Great American Cities by Amanda Golemba, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, M.Arch '20. Advisors: Nikole Bouchard, Jasmine Benyamin, and Erik Hancock / Independent Design Thesis. For decades, post-industrial cities throughout the United States have been quietly erased through self-imposed tabula rasa demolition. If considered at all, demolition is touted as ...
Five films showcase a selection of Fall 2020 thesis projects from the Department of Architecture. This thesis is a proposal for a counter-memorial to victims of police brutality. The counter-memorial addresses scale by being both local and national, addresses materiality by privileging black aesthetics over politeness, addresses presence ...
by Slide Kelly (MLA I AP, MDes '24) This thesis examines the potential for…. by Priyanka Pillai (MDE '24) and Julius Stein (MDE '24) When conflict arises from humanitarian crises, families…. by Melanie Louterbach (MLA I '24) "Insurgent Geology" is about oil, fossils, power, and people. by Sujie Park (MArch I '23) — Recipient ...
Architecture Masters Theses. RISD's Master of Architecture program is one of the few in the US embedded in a college of art and design. Here, architecture is taught in a way that understands the practice of design and making as a thoughtful, reflective process that both engenders and draws from social, political, material, technological and ...
This thesis attempts to de-mystify the process of architectural design. Through a close scrutiny of existing literature, incorporation of personal experience as an architect, and testing of theories with lay, novice, and expert designers a theory of design methodology is proposed. Thesis Supervisor: Donald A. Sch6n
Community Service Through Architecture: Social Housing with Identity, Karina Cabernite Cigagna. PDF. Building a Brighter Future Through Education: Student Housing for Single Parent Families, Carrie Cogsdale. PDF. Cooper-Hewitt Museum of Design and Technology (C-HMD+T): Biomimetic architecture as part of nature, Isabel Marisa Corsino Carro. PDF
Here are eight tips to help you make an informed choice on the matter: 1. Dare to Be Un original. Thesis work at the undergraduate level strongly differs from that at the graduate or doctoral ...
ral Design Thesis Architectural Design Thesis is an independent design research project on a topic selected and deve. oped by the student. Design Thesis is an opportunity for each student in the Master of Architecture or Master of Science in Architecture (Architectural Design Track) to define an individual position with regard to the discipli.
Over 5 million dissertations and theses available in OCLC member libraries. Many theses are available electronically, at no charge, directly from the publishing institution. UCLA students, faculty, and staff can request non-UCLA dissertations via interlibrary loan. Search the CRL Catalog for dissertations already held at the Center.
Harvard's Graduate School of Design: A guide for finding masters theses and doctoral dissertations specific to the GSD. MIT Architecture Dissertations & Theses: A basic list organized by author of the thesis or dissertation. Each entry includes the title of the work, brief "where are they now" info, and links to the works in MIT's Barton catalog.
To make your journey a little simpler, here's a compilation of ten websites that can aid your architectural thesis research: 1. Library Genesis. The holy grail of research papers, dissertations, scholarly articles, scientific projects, journals, books, paintings and magazines, Library Genesis is a must-visit website for thesis research.
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Architecture + Planning 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA, USA
Amy Studer. Architecture Design 2 Unit Chair: Dr. Mirjana Lozanovska Co-Chair: Anthony Worm Design Teachers: Marc Dixon, Fiona Gray, Eugenia Tan design orientation This semester will focus on the 'making ofarchitecture' in the more specific sense of the physical building and order of the environment. There will be two major themes explored ...
Making Process: The Search for a Personal Language Through a Shared Vocabulary of Painting and Design, Callie Fleetwood. PDF. Solar Power in Architecture, Meagan Leeth. PDF. Paolo Soleri and Arcology: An Analytical Comparison to Frank Lloyd Wright and Louis Kahn, Henry Millard. PDF. Audio to Architecture: House Music as a Form Generator, Polina ...
Interior Design Cultural Architecture Public Architecture Landscape & Urbanism ... Cite: "Rostov on Don Business Terminal / Nefa Architects" 02 Oct 2020. ArchDaily.
2.2 Evaluating the Design of Application Architectures 2.3 Architectural Properties of Key Interest 2.4 Summary CHAPTER 3: Network-based Architectural Styles 3.1 Classification Methodology 3.2 Data-flow Styles 3.3 Replication Styles 3.4 Hierarchical Styles 3.5 Mobile Code Styles 3.6 Peer-to-Peer Styles 3.7 Limitations 3.8 Related Work 3.9 Summary
The designers of the new facade were architects Vladimir Grigor and Vladimir Simonovich . [1] The design of the Rostov House of Soviets was drawn up between 1929 and 1934 by architect Ilya Golosov. The site chosen for the administrative building had previously been occupied by the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral , until its demolition in 1930.
Rostov's greatest architectural transformation occurred in the second half of the 17th century with the construction of its "kremlin," a grandiose project initiated by a dynamic church ...
In order to do that, the IS group helps organizations to: (i) understand the business needs and value propositions and accordingly design the required business and information system architecture; (ii) design, implement, and improve the operational processes and supporting (information) systems that address the business need, and (iii) use advanced data analytics methods and techniques to ...
Restored after the war, the City Hall to this day remains one of the most beautiful buildings in Rostov-on-Don. 2. Chernova Mansion. This magnificent residential house was built in 1899 as a ...