48-100: Architecture Design Studio - Poiesis Studio 1
Instructor: Eddy Man Kim
MWF • 2:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 15 units
This studio will investigate the role and process of architectural design as different forms of practice.
48-104: Shop Skills
Instructor: Jon Holmes
MW • 10:00-10:50am • In-Person • 3 units
This course introduces basic material assembly methods and the use of shop machinery, hand and power tools, preparing students to participate in a wide range of subsequent building and fabrication projects.
48-025: First Year Seminar: Architecture Edition I
Instructor: Heather Workinger Midgley
R • 12:30-1:50pm • In-Person • 3 units
The main objective of this first-year seminar course is how students learn, develop, and make decisions as they transition into architecture education.
62-125: Drawing I
Instructor: Doug Cooper
T • 9:00-11:50am • In-Person • 6 units
This is an introductory course in free-hand architectural and general drawing. Its central learning objective is building a capacity for visualizing three-dimensional space through freehand drawing.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Representation and Visualization, Architecture (non-majors)
62-122: Digital Media I - Fundamentals of Digital Production
Instructor: Matthew Huber
R • 9:00-11:50am • In-Person • 6 units
This is the first in a two-course sequence that introduces students to cultures of digital drawing and image production.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Representation and Visualization, Architecture (non-majors)
62-104: Design Ethics & Social Justice in Architecture
Instructor: Valentina Vavasis
T • 12:30-1:50pm • In-Person • 3 units
This course is aimed at first year architecture students as an introduction to social justice and design ethics, and SoA’s pedagogy around these issues.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architecture (non-majors)
48-200: Architecture Design Studio - Poiesis Studio 3
Coordinator: Laura Garófalo
MWF • 2:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
This studio explores how architectural and landscape design can respond to a local biome. With a focus on climate and ecology, it highlights the use of precedent and the relevance of context in how architecture takes shape – how it develops its morphology.
48-215: Materials & Assemblies
Instructor: Gerard Damiani
MWF • 10:00-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
This course introduces and examines the fundamentals between design intent and construction materials, and the science of materials (performance) and their assemblies.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Technology (non-majors)
48-116: Introduction to Building Performance
Instructor: Nathan Sawyer
T • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 3 units
This course will introduce fundamental concepts of building physics. The knowledge and skills obtained from this course can be applied to studio projects and beyond, improving building design and performance through standard methods of evaluation and simulation tools.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Technology (non-majors)
62-225: Generative Modeling
Instructor: Joshua Bard
Asynchronous • 9 units
This course introduces students to the fundamentals of generative modeling using computer aided design as practiced in the field of architecture.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Computational Design
48-300: Architecture Design Studio - Praxis Studio 1
Coordinator: Heather Bizon
MWF • 2:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
The Steel Necklace: Event, Housing, Infrastructure: In this studio, the design research part of the semester will become the project itself. Students will think critically about how we construct the identity of a place through its cultural, social, and ecological systems, and develop procedures for doing so.
48-315/48-635: Environment 1 - Climate and Energy in Architecture
Instructor: Vivian Loftness
TR • 3:30-4:50pm • In-Person • 9 units
This course introduces architectural design responses for energy conservation and natural conditioning, human comfort, and the site-specific dynamics of climate.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Technology (non-majors)
48-250: Urbanism and the Social Production of Space
Instructor: Jongwan Kwon
TR • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
48-400: Architecture Design Studio - Praxis Studio 3
Instructors: Gerard Damiani (Coordinator), Erica Cochran Hameen, Steve Lee
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
The objective of this studio is to go beyond the typical studio project and to demonstrate the necessary integration within the structural system, building envelope, environmental control systems and life safety system while providing the measurable outcomes of building performance as part of the design process.
48-432/48-655: Environment II - Design Integration of Active Building Systems
Instructor: Nina Baird
TR • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
This course focuses on active systems in commercial buildings and their integration with passive design elements: envelope, ventilation and lighting.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Technology (non-majors)
48-525: Thesis Seminar
Instructor: Francesca Torello
MW • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
This seminar is designed to prepare students planning to work on a thesis project in the B.Arch or M.Arch programs. The seminar will help you refine the scope of the thesis argument, define appropriate research methods, and sharpen communication about thesis work in all of its phases.
48-500/48-650: Builder’s Bodies
Instructor: Mary-Lou Arscott
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
Using narrative forms of drawn, modeled and cinematic media the design work will disrupt contemporary expectations with a new set of paradigms. The aim is to expand gender definitions, particularly in relation to workers engaged in construction and to bring new insights to the production of the built environment.
48-500/48-650: Rematerializing the American House
Instructor: Jeremy Ficca
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
This studio examines a defining feature of the American landscape, the house, to explore alternative materializations, spatial configurations, and models of living in the face of climate change and economic inequality.
48-500/48-650: Data Dump
Instructor: Daragh Byrne
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
This studio examines how we might { break down; undo; rethink; dismantle; discard } the { visions; systems; objects; infrastructures; landscapes; junk; detritus } of { smart; connected; intelligent } technology. Using a design research approach, we'll examine and unpack the wasteful, material and resource intensive, cycles of innovation found within modern technology.
48-500/48-650: Common Imaginaries
Instructor: Tommy CheeMou Yang
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
This studio explores the possibilities for an architecture for and of the people, using Chiang Mai, Thailand to contextualize and co-speculate through on-site fieldwork, film, and visual storytelling.
48-500/48-650: Building the Unbuilt: The Model Metropolis
Instructor: Anne Chen
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
The studio proposes to design and model a city creating an imagined urban landscape of geographic features, plots and circulation pathways, with experimental zoning rules to guide the placement of structures and spaces.
48-774: MAAD Pro-Seminar I
Instructor: Kai Gutschow
MW • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 3 units
This course explores several evolving topics of material and digital culture in contemporary architectural design, research, and practice in order to provide foundational knowledge necessary for the establishment of the MAAD thesis proposal.
48-785: MAAD Research by Design Project
Instructors: Jeremy Ficca, Joshua Bard
Day TBD • Time TBD • In-Person • 9 units
48-772: MAAD Advanced Synthesis Options Studio I (MAAD ASOS I)
Instructor: Jeremy Ficca
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
48-630: M.Arch Studio - Praxis I
Instructors: Sarosh Anklesaria, Jonathan Kline
MWF • 2:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
48-634: Architectural Theory & Contemporary Issues
Instructor: Kai Gutschow
MW • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 6 or 9 units
This graduate seminar explores important writings and ideas being discussed in architecture today in relation to “Design Ethics,” one of the central pedagogies of the SoA and the M.Arch program.
48-635/48-315: Environment I - Climate and Energy in Architecture
Instructor: Vivian Loftness
TR • 3:30-4:50pm • In-Person • 9 units
This course introduces architectural design responses for energy conservation and natural conditioning, human comfort, and the site-specific dynamics of climate.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural Technology (non-majors)
48-655/48-432: Environment II - Design Integration of Active Building Systems
Instructor: Nina Baird
TR • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
This course focuses on active systems in commercial buildings and their integration with passive design elements: envelope, ventilation and lighting.
48-525: Thesis Seminar
Instructor: Francesca Torello
MW • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
This seminar is designed to prepare students planning to work on a thesis project in the B.Arch or M.Arch programs. The seminar will help you refine the scope of the thesis argument, define appropriate research methods, and sharpen communication about thesis work in all of its phases.
48-607: Architecture, Labor, Agency: Dig Where You Stand!
Instructor: Theodossis (Theo) Issaias
W • 9:00am-11:50am • In-Person • 6 units
In this course, we take heed from the Dig Where You Stand movement and dig where we stand; we locate agency across a broad range of stories, processes, events, sites, ideas, contexts, practices, and buildings.
48-705: Urban Design Studio 1 - Urban Places
Instructor: Christine Mondor
MWF • 2:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
As the first semester of the design studio sequence in the Master of Urban Design program, the Urban Places Studio introduces students to the fundamentals of urban design.
48-707: MUD Graduate Seminar 1
Instructor: Paul Ostergaard
W • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 3 units
This MUD Graduate Seminar introduces students to the practice of urban design. Six elements of practice will be examined including multi-disciplinary teams, public participation, engagement of major stakeholders, context and heritage, design communication, and implementation tools.
48-753: Introduction to Urban Design Media
Instructor: Jared Abraham
M • 9:00am-10:50am • In-Person • 6 units
The methods and media used to represent the urban environment are essential tools for documenting existing conditions, proposing new interventions, illustrating suppressed or hidden characteristics, and communicating ideas to fellow practitioners as well as the broader public.
48-740: Urban Design Methods & Theory
Instructor: Jonathan Kline
F • 9:00-11:50am • In-Person • 9 units
The course explores core urban design methods and theories organized into three themes intended to give students a foundational understanding of urban design, examine key critiques of urbanization, and explore emerging modes of design agency.
48-718: Urban Design Studio III (MUD STUDIO III)
Instructor: Stefan Gruber
TR • 1:00-4:50pm • In-Person • 18 units
Commoning the City is a yearlong research‐based design studio on social justice and community‐led urban transformations. Here, students explore design as an agent of change and how to support citizens in claiming their Right to the City. The first semester, taught by Stefan Gruber, provides a theoretical framing and case study research as a steppingstone toward the development of an individual thesis proposal.
48-742: Planning and Public Policy for the Future of Urbanism
Instructor: TBD
T • 7:00-9:50pm • Asynchronous • variable units
48-743/62-709 : Introduction to Ecological Design Thinking
Instructor: Dana Cupkova
W • 10:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
The Introduction to Ecological Design Thinking is a graduate-level seminar that provides an overview of scholarly, design- and research-based approaches addressing ecology, technology, and climate change in architecture and urban design.
48-733: Environmental Performance Simulations
Instructor: Tian Li
TR • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 or 12 units
EPS course refreshes essential building physics concepts, such as building thermodynamics, photometric quantification of light and luminous environment, human visual and thermal comfort, thermal modeling, and the principles of generating electricity from sunlight. The course emphasizes understanding, analyzing, and simulating these underlying thermodynamic principles and processes to provide immediate or in-depth quantitative feedback for informed exploration of various design alternatives.
48-798: HVAC & Power Supply for Low Carbon Buildings
Instructor: Nina Baird
TR• 12:30-1:50pm • In-Person • 9 units
This graduate course focuses on heating, cooling, ventilation, and power supply systems for new and future commercial buildings.
62-225: Generative Modeling
Instructor: Joshua Bard
Asynchronous • 9 units
This course introduces students to the fundamentals of generative modeling using computer aided design as practiced in the field of architecture.
48-731: MSSD Synthesis Prep
Instructor: Azadeh Sawyer
F • 9:00-11:20am • In-Person • 12 or 18 units
Synthesis Prep is an intensive course designed to help students refine their research plan and prepare for their synthesis project.
48-729: Sustainability, Health and Productivity to Accelerate a Quality Built Environment
Instructor: Vivian Loftness
TR• 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 or 12 units
This course explores the relationship of quality buildings, building systems, infrastructures and land-use to productivity, health, well-being and a sustainable environment.
48-769: MSBPD Thesis/Project
Instructor: Vivian Loftness
Day TBD • Time TBD • In-Person • Variable Units
The culmination thesis project for the Master of Science in Building Performance & Diagnostics includes individual and collaborative dissertations on the integration of advanced building and urban technologies for environmental sustainability, human health and productivity, and organizational change.
48-725: Graduate Real Estate Development
Instructor: Valentina Vavasis
TR • 8:00-9:20am • In-Person • 9 or 12 units
This course teaches the fundamentals of real estate development in the U.S. Students learn about the real estate development process and the social, economic and regulatory context in which land use and real estate development take place.
48-763: Protean Systems - Sustainable Solutions for Uncertain Futures
Instructor: Joshua Lee
MW • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 or 12 units
Uncertainty perpetually plagues the built environment. The inability of our buildings and cities to adapt to shifting circumstances has led to an enormous amount of waste. We will explore various forces and scales of change and review various strategies through a wide array of built precedents and products that have attempted with varying degrees of success to respond to these forces over time.
48-768: Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ); Energy, Health and Productivity (IEQ)
Instructor: Nihar Pathak
MW • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 12 units
Americans now spend 95% of our time indoors, but under what conditions? How can we design our buildings to be energy efficient and promote healthy, safe, productive, and inspiring environments? To answer these questions and more, the course focuses on the fundamentals and concepts of Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ).
48-765: AECM Synthesis Project
Instructor: Joshua Lee
MWF • 2:00-3:20pm • In-Person • 12 units
This course is designed to apply the diverse knowledge and skills that AECM students have acquired during the program to a critical public interest issue related to Pittsburgh’s built environment.
48-767: Transdisciplinary Thinking
Instructor: Steve Quick
MWF • 3:05-4:25pm • In-Person • 12 units
Transdisciplinary Thinking is a compendium of Architectural, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) practice, methods, and management with an emphasis on how the AEC professions can more effectively work together by understanding each other’s roles, responsibilities, and professional perspectives.
48-727: Inquiry into Computational Design
Instructor: Daniel Cardoso Llach
W • 9:00-11:50am • In-Person • 9 units
This graduate-level course examines the emergence of computation as a pivotal concept in contemporary architecture and design through a selection of design theories and practices responding to the so-called “computer revolution”.
48-724: Scripting and Parametric Design
Instructor: Jinmo Rhee
TR • 4:00-5:50pm • In-Person • 10 units
This course prepares students for modeling geometry through scripted development of parametric schemes primarily for design applications—that is, to introduce students to basic scripting in geometrical modeling environment with a focus on algorithms relating to form making and to reinforce and extend basic concepts of parametric modeling.
48-568: Advanced CAD, BIM, and 3D Visualization
Instructor: Kristen Kurland
TR • 9:30-10:50am • Remote • 9 units
This course is designed to introduce a student to 3D software tools, including AutoCAD 3D, Revit Architecture, and 3D Studio MAX.
48-555/48-755: Introduction to Architectural Robotics
Instructor: Joshua Bard
MW • 2:00-3:50pm • In-Person • 9 units
This course provides a practical, hands-on introduction to the application of industrial robotics in architectural and related construction domains.
48-675 A2: Designing for the Internet of Things
Instructor: Daragh Byrne
TR • 10:10am-12:00pm • In-Person • 6 units
Thermostats, locks, power sockets, and lights are all being imbued with ‘smarts’ making them increasingly aware and responsive to their environment and users. This course will chart the emergence of the now ‘connected world’ to explore the possibilities for future products and connected spaces with the Internet of Things.
48-676 A1: Connected Communities: Technology, Publics, Politics, and Participation
Instructor: Daragh Byrne
TR • 10:10am-12:00pm • In-Person • 6 units
This seminar examines how smart and connected technologies can be designed for neighborhoods, what considerations are involved, and what effects such technologies create for communities. We will introduce and critically examine the relationships between smart systems with the places, infrastructures, histories, politics, publics and problems that surround them.
48-716: MSCD Pre-Thesis II
Instructor: Daniel Cardoso Llach
R • 10:00-11:50am • In-Person • 6 units
With the notion of “critical technical practice” as a touchstone, this graduate-level seminar draws from across design, media, and science and technology studies to cultivate an awareness of the discursive and political dimensions of technology in design, and to guide participants in the formulation of a graduate thesis in computational design.
48-356: Color Drawing
Instructor: Doug Cooper
W • 8:00-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
Color Drawing provides practice in the use of color to depict architectural surroundings. Following preliminary exercises using pastels, watercolor is used for most of the course. A central objective is that by the end of the course, students will have good judgement in evaluating color hue, value, and temperature and have gained confidence in the use of watercolor.
48-689: Design Skills Workshop
Instructors: Eddy Man Kim, Matthew Huber
Day TBD • Time TBD • Remote • 3 units
DSW is a summer course for incoming SoA graduate students to establish a baseline of technical skills appropriate to the expectations of the design culture at SoA. There will be a series of workshops, assignments, and tutorials on digital design skills.
48-734: IDeaTe: Possibilistic Design
Instructor: Sinan Goral
TR • 7:00-8:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
Design often favors probability. Rather than just problem solving, design should exploit curiosity, creativity, and criticality. Possibilistic Design is a project-based design seminar that concentrates on how critical design theory and powerful storytelling might pave the way for a more responsible, equitable, and exciting future.
48-386 A1 Mini: Portfolio & Resume Prep
Instructor: TBD
F • 10:10-11:00am • In-Person • 3 units
48-786 A2 Mini: Portfolio & Resume Prep
Instructor: Heather Bizon
F • 9:05-9:55am • In-Person • 3 units
48-222/48-622: Explorations in Craft - Soft Forms | Stable Structures
Instructor: Laura Garófalo
WF • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
While learning through making, students will develop their own expression of softness. Presentations, demonstrations, and workshops on craft will inform experiments focused on material qualities and their formal affordances.
48-434: Aztec to Zacatecas - Mesoamerican & Spanish Colonial Architecture of Mexico & Guatemala
Instructor: Diane Shaw
TR • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
This architectural history course surveys the built environment of Mexico and Guatemala during the Mesoamerican and Spanish Colonial eras.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural History
48-560/48-750: Histories of Urban Design
Instructor: Diane Shaw
TR • 3:30-4:50pm • In-Person • 9 units
This architectural and urban design history course examines the cultural histories of the design and redesign of world cities. The scale of urban interventions we will look at varies greatly, from the macro-scale of designing totally new capitals to the micro-scale of altering small nodes within a city.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural History
48-699: Design Ethics - Environmental Racism, Injustice, & Unfreedom: Lessons for Architects and Designers
Instructor: Nida Rehman and Morgan Newman
F • 2:00-3:50pm • In-Person • 9 units
In this seminar we will examine the histories of environmental racism and injustice. We will ground our conceptual understandings through a closer look at ongoing environmental justice issues in Braddock and North Braddock, including through dialogue with local advocates and community members. Students will develop a case study focusing on air pollution in the Mon Valley region, working collaboratively to produce an annotated bibliography of atmospheric pollution and community action.
48-374: History of Architecture in the Islamic World
Instructor: Francesca Torello
MW • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
An introduction to the architecture of the lands where Islam spread over the centuries, this course aims to provide a basic understanding of major epochs and regional variations. We will learn the function and meaning of the most important building types, examine how these types changed over time to adapt to the needs of changing societies and consider influences and exchanges with other traditions.
Fulfills minor requirements for: Architectural History
48-313/48-613: Prototyping Stories
Instructor: Tommy CheeMou Yang
M • 11:00-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
This design research course explores the current developments in hybrid, multi-platform design and communication mediums to prototype new ways of creative storytelling in architecture, visual development, and concept design. Research methods around oral storytelling, ethno-ecology, radical mapping, and the children's book can allow for the exploration of subjects in ways not available to typical architectural and urban research conventions.
48-433/48-633: Afrofuturism and Othered Ways of Seeing & Being in the World
Instructor: Jackie McFarland
W • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 units
The intent of this course is to explore how Afrofuturism allows one to shift perspectives out of a Eurocentric, white, patriarchal, heteronormative perspective to give agency to those who see and experience the world through different eyes.
48-620: Graduate Seminar: Situating Research
Instructor: Sarosh Anklesaria
F • 9:30-10:50am • Remote • 3 units
48-531/48-771: Fabricating Customization: Prototype
Instructor: Jeremy Ficca
MF • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 9 units
This course builds upon the rich history of production and manufacturing in architecture and foregrounds architectural component customization to explore prototyping and customization within the context of contemporary practice. It introduces students to a range of prototyping and design for manufacturing frameworks.
48-314/48-614: Co-designing an Indigenous Biodiversity Knowledge Learning Space for the Vertical University project in Nepal
Instructor: Priyanka Bista
WF • 9:30-10:50am • In-Person • 12 units
The seminar emerges from the instructor's work while co-founding the "Vertical University" project in Nepal. As a subversion to the traditional way we understand knowledge, the "Vertical University" builds on the learning potential inherent in the place-based, deep-seated indigenous knowledge of farmers living in biodiversity-rich landscapes.
48-409/48-709: History and Future of Interaction Design
Instructor: Paul Pangaro
MW • 11:00am-12:20pm • In-Person • 9 or 12 units
The history of Interaction Design (IxD) is far richer than what is commonly known among students and teachers, practicing designers and entrepreneurs. Understanding IxD’s origins and evolution helps us realize the promises and possibly avoid some of the pitfalls of IxD’s future.
48-763: Protean Systems - Sustainable Solutions for Uncertain Futures
Instructor: Joshua Lee
MW • 10:10-11:30am • In-Person • 9 or 12 units
Uncertainty perpetually plagues the built environment. The inability of our buildings and cities to adapt to shifting circumstances has led to an enormous amount of waste. We will explore various forces and scales of change and review various strategies through a wide array of built precedents and products that have attempted with varying degrees of success to respond to these forces over time.
48-307 A1: Carnival Pavilion Schematic Design
Instructor: TBD
W • 7:00-8:20pm • In-Person • 3 units
48-307 A2: Carnival Pavilion Design Deveopment
Instructor: TBD
W • 7:00-8:20pm • In-Person • 3 units
62-315/62-715: Shaping Environments: Experiments in Geometry and (Waste)Matter
Instructor: Dana Cupkova
TR • 11:00am-12:50pm • In-Person • 12 units
Shaping Environments is a design-research seminar that explores alternative material formations beyond our current petrochemical reality. Using digital environments and computational tools, such as photogrammetry, depth-map texture modeling, AI workflows, and 3D printing, we will experiment with shaping new hybrid material systems.
48-749: Special Topics in Computational Design: Rethinking Automation in Architecture
Instructor: Daniel Cardoso Llach
F • 2:30-4:20pm • In-Person • 6 units