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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

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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

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SURFACE at Syracuse University

Home > Colleges, Schools, and Departments > School of Architecture > School of Architecture Dissertations and Theses > Senior Theses

Architecture Senior Theses

Artificially Alternate Bauhaus: Gremlins of Function, Body, and Pattern , Madeline Alves and Erin Zearfoss

White Picket Possibilities: Socially, Economically and Environmentally Reshaping Suburbia , Brendan Carroll

Assemblage Dwelling: A Radical Migrant Domesticity in Urbanity , Protik Choudhuri

Paradigms of the Post-Natural: Depicting Alternative Futures , Andrea De Haro and Charlotte Bascombe

Weathering with: Afterlife Treatment of Architecture , Tianhui Li

Toxic Glacier: Confronting Our Society's Consumerism Culture , Valeria Otero Lopez

The Way of Water: A Cultural Revival , Mariana Munoz

Museum of the Mechanical Eye: The Phenomenology of Perception in Architecture , Isabela Sierra

Mela: Vessels of Ephemeral Architecture , Neha Tummalapalli

Threshold Tectonics: Reclaiming Space through Geomorphological Design , Amreeta Verma

Linear Waltz with Nature: A Self-supporting Infrastructure in Nature , Shangkun Zhong

Material Contentions; Negotiating the Image of Civic Space , Emmei Gootnick and Coumba Kante

Remembered Spaces: Reframing Architecture from Body to Building , Shaan Lyngdoh Lakshmanan

CIRCUIT CITY: From Wasteland to iLand , Tina Lim and Jiuye Yan

Radicalization of the Spectacle: Fostering Free Artistic Expression Through Architecture , Mackenzie Lubin

Maps!: Living with Ghosts , Ximeng Luo and Shihui Zhu

Unearthed: Architect Invades Time Square with Soil , Megha Murali

Vesseled Cultures; Figures of Diasporic Comforts , Ying Na Li, Rachel Ly, and Skylar Sun

DEBRISIA , Alice Rong, Jing Ying Chin, and Tanya Tungkaserawong

Composite Cohousing: Hacking Colonial Vernacular , Heather Skinner

Contaminated Mycoscapes: designing with living organisms , Maria Gutierrez and Elise Zilius

Hip Hop Urbanist Reconstructions: Strategies & Tactics for Spatial Reparations , Isaac Howland

Dissolving Realities: An Endless Domestic Landscape , Hanzang Lai and Phang Lim

Living Memories: Rethinking Remembrance , Timothy Mulhall

Terra Dispositions: A Lithospheric Investigation of Wet-Matter , Alec Rovensky

MORE THAN JUST A FANTASY: LITERARY FANTASY AS AN ARCHITECTURAL TOOL , Kae Schwalber

Socializing Vacancy: An Architectural Thesis , Greg Winawer

Incu-Bus: A live-working internet incubator , Muci Yue

Neo Collectivism: Public Space Design for the Intergenerational Community , Shu Zhang

Hidden Realities , Nashwah Ahmed and Prerit Gupta

Uncomfortably numb , Camila Andino and Daniela Andino

Alternative Shelters , Sukhmann Kaur Aneja

Alternative Americanisms , Ella Michelle Arne

Folie a Cinq: Performative Systems Exhibited through Theatrical Means. , Madison Cannella

Occupy , Nitya Charugundla

Subterranean Intermission , Yiwen Dai

Architecture of Narrative , Yinem Day

ReThinking Home Waste , Elena Echarri Myers

15th Ward North , Baxter Hankin

Manifested Tectonic 'In Search of Theatricality' , Ching Huen Leung

Continuous Interior Space Architecture , Natasha Liston-Beck

Spatializing Erasure: Forging a New Commemorative Typology , Sarah Quinn and Isabel Munoz

Bunker Reclamation , Demosthenes Sfakianakis

An Agricultural Ruin , Patrick Smith

Truth Games , Hanneke Van Deursen

re-designing gentrification , Elena Whittle

Building Reconfigurations , Alex Allen and Scott Krabath

Territories of Matter: Revealing the Economies and Ecologies of Aluminum , Noah Anderson

Towards a Floating Urbanism: Adapting to Water as a New Ground , Chris Autera

Dwellings for a Digital Nomad: Radical Mobility , Tala Ayoubi

Growing above the city: Application of open-source urban agriculture system to different boroughs in NYC , Jiyoon Bae

But Soft! Fabricating Adaptive Urbanism , Caroline Barrick, Arezo Hakemy, and Sabrina Logroño

Casting Contradictive Landscapes: The objects of an Obsolescent* Future , Sarah Catherine Beaudoin

Embracing the American Atlantis: Designing for a Post-Disaster New Orleans , Mikayla Beckwith and Katherine Truluck

Blurring the Divide: Architecture that Encourages Socially Inclusive Urban Environments , Erin Benken

Your Second Home: Re-thinking of Post-disaster Housing , Evelyn Brooks

Death of a PostHuman , David Bullard and Carolina Hasbun Elias

Learning from Wes Anderson: On Artificial Memory and Detail , Abigail Campion

Activating Place: America’s Former Beer Capital , Elise Chelak

Adaptive Layers: Preservation in high speed urbanism , Yuanyue (Alex) Chen

Re*Presenting Dharavi: Activism and Agency of Architecture in Informal Settlements , Ahnaf Chowdhury and Anuradha Desai

Paintings without Frames: The Role of Augmented Reality in Art Galleries , Laura Clark

Finding a New Center: A Study of Neo-Industrial America , Juliet Domine and Virginia Paulk

Speculative Spoliation: Spolia as an instrument of locus making & identity mediation , Amelia Gan

On Nothing , Rutuja Ganoo

Reconceptualizing the Urban Artifact , Ricardo Rodriguez Huerta

A Material Affair: The Intimacy between Materials and Affective Space , Rex Hughes and John Mikesh

Mediating Propagated Consumption: Integrated Shielding for a Wireless World , Olivia Humphrey

Re-Imagine Air: Transforming Zoning Around Landmarks , Brian Hurh

Getting There: The Return of a Public Infrastructure , Yun Qing Hu and Sizhe Wang

Built in Weather: Architecture in Ephemeral Landscape , Hanseul Jang

Atmospheric Architecture: Virtual Possibility of the Picturesque , Yuqi Jin

Eldgos: The Terra-Forming Earth , Sangha Jung and Young Joon Yun

playingGround: Towards a Seriously Playful Architecture , Anita Lamisi Karimu

re-Treeting Detroit: Return of a blighted city back to nature , Nivedita Keshri and Shreeya Shakya

EncyclAPPedia: Confronting SideWalkLabs Digital Physical Community , Katharina Elisa Körber

Material Density: A Radical Approach to Adaptive Reuse , Madeline Laberge

Building Industry: Relinking Tangible and Intangible , Weibin Lao and Xiaobai Zhao

Falling Ground: Underground Osmosis , Byungryoung Lee

The Denuded Image: A Critique of the After-Image , Danya Li

The Treachery of Architectural Matter , Weiqiao Lin

2047 City: Hong Kong’s Identity in a Space of Disappearance , Mike Liu and Raul Sadhwani

Spatial Agency for Migrant Workers: Rethinking the Dynamics of Urban Villages in China , Yan Liu

The PostModer Hermits , Xuechen Li

Political Archipelago: Repoliticizing Post-Umbrella Revolution Hong Kong , Dora Yui Kei Lo

Amazon Vertical City: The fulfillment center of the future , Jessica Casero Lopez

Fantasy Park: Mode of Reality , Sai Lyu

False Actually: Constructing the False-Hyper-Real in the Quotidian American Landscape , Rose Maalouf

Topologies of Historic Typologies: Radical Transformations to Historic Preservation , Ian Masters

Architectural Ecotone: The Edge Effect , Holly Metzger and Tara Nuqul

Emoji Disorder , Doria Miller and Irving Shen

P.E.T.S.: Personal. Empathic. Topological. Series. , Ian Mulich and Jose Sanchez

Territorial Transgressions: The (New) New Jersey , Ryan Oeckinghaus

Public Space with Character: A Late, Late, Entry- Chicago Library Competition , Kokeith Perry II

Vimana: A Crisis of Translation , Apoorva Rao

Urban Rangers: The Scope of Medellin through Informal Waste Collection , Christina M. Rubino

Sunset.zip: A new proposal in architectural reconstruction , Ethan Russell-Benoit and Wilson Slagle

An Intelligent Smart City , Erik Sanchez

Sinoconn: Merchandising of Architecture and Rearmament of Labor , Furui Sun

The Disputed Territories: An Alternate History , Rasan Taher

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  • Architecture Competitions

Architecture Thesis Of The Year | ATY 2022

Architecture Thesis Of The Year | ATY 2022 - Image 1 of 1

  • Published on July 06, 2022

ARCHITECTURE THESIS OF THE YEAR | ATY 2022

The most amazing Architecture Thesis of 2022!

After the overwhelming response from the first two editions, Charette is elated to announce the third edition of ‘Architecture Thesis of the Year Competition - ATY 2022’.

‘Architecture Thesis of the Year 2022’ is an international architecture thesis competition that aims to extend appreciation to the tireless effort and exceptional creativity of student theses in the field of Architecture. We seek to encourage young talent in bringing their path-breaking ideas to the forefront globally.

PREMISE Academic Design endeavours allow the free flow of unfettered ideas – experimental, bold, promising, and unconventional. An intensive architectural discourse and a collaborative design process are essential to developing ingenious solutions to complex problems of the future.

An Architecture Thesis is considered the avant-garde – pushing the boundaries of what is accepted as the norm in the architectural realm. It is the outcome of months of painstaking research and an excruciating design process yet it hardly gets any recognition beyond the design studio. It is imperative to share such revolutionary ideas with the entire fraternity to open up new possibilities for dialogue.

Competition Brief - https://thecharette.org/architecture-thesis-of-the-year/

AWARDS Exposure and recognition is the key to success for any designer. The ATY 2022 competition provides students with the opportunity to showcase their work on a global stage.

TROPHIES Custom Designed Trophies will be awarded & shipped to the Top 3 Winners.

CERTIFICATES Sharable and verifiable certificates of achievement will be awarded to the Winners, Honorable Mentions & Top 30.

INTERVIEW The Top 3 Winners will get an exclusive interview in both – written and video formats. Photos, interviews, and more information about the winners will be published on our website.

PUBLICATIONS The winning entries shall be published on Charette’s website & social media platforms and other international architecture websites partnered with us.

ELIGIBILITY ATY 2022 is open to architecture students of all nationalities and institutions. All Undergraduate/Bachelors and Graduate/Masters Thesis conducted in the calendar year 2017 – 2022 are eligible to participate. Group, as well as individual entries, are allowed.. The official language of the competition is English.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES A total of 5 sheets of size 30 cm x 30 cm are to be submitted as a combined PDF document, which shall not exceed 5 MB.

Sheets 1 to 4: Graphic Representation Sheet 5: Text Summary

For more details visit - https://thecharette.org/architecture-thesis-of-the-year/

KEY DATES Advance Entry: 15 June - 15 July 2022 Early Entry: 16 July - 15 Aug 2022 Standard Entry: 16 Aug -15 Sep 2022 Last-Min Entry: 16 Sep -15 Oct 2022 Submission Deadline: 16 Oct 2022 Results: 15 Nov 2022

REGISTRATION FEE $25 - $55

Registration Deadline

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This competition was submitted by an ArchDaily user. If you'd like to submit a competition, call for submissions or other architectural 'opportunity' please use our "Submit a Competition" form. The views expressed in announcements submitted by ArchDaily users do not necessarily reflect the views of ArchDaily.

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Architectural Thesis: Inclusive Centre for Learning in context of a Dargah of Budaun

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Related Papers

Contributions to Indian sociology

Seng Guan Yeoh

architecture thesis pdf

Jeet Pandey

The chapter titled Contested, Legitimizing and Integrating Carnival Spaces first defines social, cultural, and religious spaces critically, in terms of continuity, post-coloniality, multi-culturalism, sub-culture studies, cultural change, and post-modern hyperspace with an objective of capturing the stability-dynamism dialectic of space and its inseparability with discourses of different epochs of history and power. Space presents the evidences of contest between the dominant and the dominated classes and it remains in the state of flux. It creates the disposition for action among both—the dominant and dominated. Any cultural study has to take into account the history of physical and perceptual space in which the carnival introduces the contact between the urban-rural-tribal communities. Both Kumbha Mela and Medaram Jatra appear to be contested spaces although the nature and scope of contests present in them does vary. The object of contest is share in cultural capital. This share manifests in the form of performance rights. The Kumbha Mela space, at present, is defined and controlled by three different entities—ascetic orders, ‘Temple complex’, and ‘Dharmshala Complex’. Out of these, ascetic orders, represented by All India Akhada Parishad, have overriding rights. Temple Complex is, historically, controlled by priest community and it contributes to the stability factor. Dharmshala Complex is the only entity in which other communities can perform. Ujjain is unique, in terms of Dharmshalas, out of the four Mela centres. Here, low-caste communities also have their own Dharmshalas and accordingly, they have some performance rights as well. This uniqueness is,obviously, a product of history. Medaram Jatra is solely controlled, at present, by Tribal Research Institute, Hyderabad. Other government agencies, including the Endowment Department are in supportive role. There exists a Jatra organizing committee also but its role, at present, is mostly decorative. Because of this historically created organizing power structure, the community identities get dissolved although all individuals, irrespective of their community identity have certain performance rights. The locus of performance rights, otherwise, is solely within the Koya priests. In Kumbha Mela, the contest is driven by the integration of identities of different communities sharing similar traditional profession while in the Jatra, the objective is to achieve social affinity within a tribal community as well as with other associated (tribal- and caste-) communities sharing same geographical identity, and of course, subjected to the same power structure throughout history. There is a clear contest for cultural and religious autonomy at both the carnival sites. At Simhastha, the tribal communities are learning from the struggle of low-caste communities who have evolved the Valmiki narrative and are contesting fiercely for more physical and autonomous space. As a result of this contest, a new Valmiki Dham and a separate Valmiki Ghat have been created in Ujjain. In the Kumbha Mela space, social affinity has been constructed by direct violence and matrimonial alliances (Rajput, Bhil, and Meena). In the Jatra space, the internal segmentation of lineages and diffusion of identities through Jogini system have evolved territorial social affinities that are yet to be integrated into a cohesive whole (Koya-Konda, Reddy-Chenchu-Naikapod). The greatness achieved by the Jatra space, despite similar antiquity, is not as comprehensive as the Mela space due to their differential integrating strengths. Traditionally, the legitimization of cultural practices and social status of communities wrested upon the urban priestly elite community, i.e., the Brahmins. With emergence of democratic state, the privileges accorded to the Brahmin in determining the social status of a community have eroded and have been replaced by other religious or quasi-religious institutions. Ascetic orders in Mela Space have taken over the role of traditional, state-patronized, urban, priestly elites. This autonomy has not been achieved by the jatara space which still depends on the local Tribal Research Institute for the purpose.

Samson Lankeshwar

Folk religion is a part of every religious tradition. Folk religion paves way for innumerable people to express their longing towards particular gods, goddesses, favourite heroes, saints and so on, in ways in which they feel comfortable, but which depart from the path that orthodoxy prescribes. Followers of folk religion are large in number and so it is always difficult, if not impossible for those who adhere to orthodox doctrines to check effectively such heterodox groups. That is true with both monotheistic as well as polytheistic religions. The focus of this study is to discuss the folk religious practise of shrine veneration (dargah-parastish) within the Sufi mystical tradition of South Asian Islam. Specifically, we will look at one particular shrine (dargah) in the city of Pune – the tomb of Qamar Ali Darvesh – and its socio-religious and economic impact on the people there, based on interviews with devotees from various social strata. METHODOLOGY:-Survey Questionnaire Methodology-The Methods Researchers have available to them include qualitative and quantities methodologies, in the broader sense. Specifically, these methodologies may exhibit themselves as focus group research method, written questionnaires, executive interviews, and one-to-one interviews and so on. This research is based on a questionnaire and interview based-survey of 125 devotees of varying social and economic status, gender and age to test the hypothesis that dissonance exists in the informants' experience. The interviewees were Hindus as well as Muslims and both men and women. Two separate questionnaires were formed for Muslims and non-Muslims. Shrine Veneration One method of reaching God for Muslims has been the practise of shrine veneration. While visiting the graves of Muslims and reciting surah from the Quran there to transfer merit to the dead have always been considered meritorious acts, 1 many Muslims attach a greater significance to visiting the tombs of Sufi saints. Sufis showed such intense love for God that their lives became an inspiration to many, who, in order show their love for such Sufis began to honour and remember them by venerating their tombs. Many believe that because the Sufi saints are holy persons and closely associated with God, the places where they are buried become holy ground. So visitors approach the shrines with reverence and respect, removing their footwear while entering a shrine compound, and when they want to convey something to others, they talk in hushed voices. Today we find such tomb shrines (dargahs) all over India. Saint veneration is generally performed by all social classes of South Asian Muslims, but more so among the lower classes. According to Troll, the shrines have played a vital role in society by transcending the boundaries of class and caste structures and have helped to integrate local culture with the Muslim environment. The shrines receive income in the form of donations,

Tourism: An International Interdisciplinary Journal

Kiran Shinde

This paper examines the spatial and temporal contexts that contribute to the fostering of communitas in contemporary South Asian religious travel, with particular attention to the influence of ritual performances and the mediation of social actors engaged in the cultural economy of religious tourism. It is based on the case studies of two sites located in the western Indian state of Maharashtra – Tuljapur and Shirdi. While the first is a site where hereditary lineages of priests perform rituals that are integral to pilgrimage practice, the second is associated with Sai Baba, a 20th century guru, whose spiritual-magical charisma continues to attract millions of visitors and the pilgrimage activity is managed by a centrally administered trust. Hence, they represent a spectrum of pilgrimage sites; at one end are the sites that are managed through social and informal networks (Tuljapur) and at the other are those managed by a public organization (Shirdi). A diverse range of religious functionaries including gurus, priests, and temple managers assist visitors in performing pilgrimage rituals and facilitate arrangements for lodging and boarding in Tuljapur. In Shirdi, these functions are handled by a charitable public trust that administers the shrine, and guides and tour operators and hotels that mediate movement and experience of visitors. The paper highlights how the different spatial modes of engagement with pilgrimage rituals and the mediation by religious specialists through distinct socio-spatial relationships play a significant role in creating the situations for fostering of communitas.

History and Anthropology

Mukesh Kumar

This article explores the making and unmaking of a shared shrine culture at an integrated religious site in north India, known for the entanglement of Hindu and Islamic religious figures. In particular, what prompts Hindu devotees to protect ‘the otherness’ of two Muslim saints from the attacks of right-wing Hindus who, after recent political developments in India, began to challenge the religious others’ presence next to Hindu sacred figures, Shiva and Hanuman. Following Carla Bellamy, it is shown that Muslim saints represent power ready to be used and harnessed by Hindus if they are willing to transcend their religious boundaries, which in turn, following Levinas, creates an ethics of responsibility for ‘the other’ demanding protection of the Muslim saints’ ontological being and their symbolism of devotion and unique power among Hindus. Hindu devotees, it is argued, exercise cooperative segregation and emphasize the importance of distinction to save the religious culture associated with the two Muslim saints and preserve the symbolism of otherness.

Mathew A Varghese

The article is based on ethnographic fieldwork the author has been engaged with a few years back (2004-2006) in the south western Indian state of Kerala. This is more a summary of a work grounded on the author’s own research with brief statements or notes on the field, the problems, and the methods; followed with an extrapolation into possible conclusions and theorisations. The major concern of the work was the transformation of spaces with a focus on public space and new religiosities. It enquired into the dialogues between the two processes and the significance of such dialogues.

AMPS CONFERENCE 15. Issue 1 Tangible–Intangible Heritage(s) - Design, social and cultural critiques on the past, the present and the future

Vinod Chovvayil Panengal

The idea of secularism in India has taken a different direction after independence when religion became a reason for a great divide in, otherwise harmonious society. Since then the religious spaces became protected and more sacred and not shared. However there is a larger threat on beliefs, rituals, and the spirituality of these religions in the form of technology, tourism and globalisation. In a way they weaken the importance of religion from our society over a period of time. The importance of religion to a sense of place has been overlooked or diminished. Religion provides symbolic meaning to places which distinguishes certain physical environments from otherwise similar ones. The rapid transformation of urban spaces, eliminating the territorial differences of sense, spirit and identity have started creating urban centers rooting out this genre of unique urban spaces from our cities. Indian cities, with a strong identity created by rich and colourful overlays of culture through its evolution, have been threatened by this de-territorialization. This paper enquires the relationship of the symbol of the identity and religiosity of a place, through spatial form, rituals and activity, and accommodating the technology and the changing social structure within the bounds of that relationship. The subjects for this enquiry are Sufism and the Sufi city- Ajmer. The internal transformations in the ideologies of Islam & Sufism and the changes in the society surround it triggered the phenomena of de-territorialization. The need for establishing a symbiotic relationship between the spiritual content and the social life, through the manifestation of space, time and activity derived from this concern on abated territory of Sufism inside the city. Redirecting transformation catalyst such as tourism, technology, etc., towards the improvement of physical and social conditions, preservation of the heritage and the expansion of the notional idea of religion over the city will help to re- territorialize city as a Sufi city.

Meenaxi Barkataki-Ruscheweyh

Purna Sati Chandrala

Haywantee Ramkissoon (PhD)

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Popular pages, for prospective students:, for current students:, curtis roth appointed interim architecture section head.

Curtis Roth poses for headshot against marble wall.

The Knowlton School at The Ohio State University is pleased to announce that Associate Professor Curtis Roth has been named interim section head of the Architecture Section. Roth was the 2012–13 Richard W. Trott ’61 Distinguished Visiting Professor and the 2013–14 Howard E. LeFevre ’29 Emerging Practitioner Fellowship before joining the Knowlton School as an assistant professor in 2014.

“I am delighted that Curtis Roth has accepted to serve as the interim section head of the Architecture Section at the Knowlton School,” said Interim Knowlton School Director Ann Pendleton-Jullian . “His commitment and care as a teacher and his strength as a creative researcher whose work integrates science, art, engineering, and architecture with both information and making technologies as affordances have well positioned him within the architecture section as one of its contemporary forces. He bridges the section’s historical strengths with exciting new directions in the field.”

“The Architecture Section is in transition, which presents both challenges and opportunities. Curtis is a thoughtful and generous colleague—a care-full listener. And he has demonstrated that he is extremely good at vision, strategy, and puzzles under pressure, which he seems to enjoy. I am confident these will serve him well in the role of section head, and I really look forward to working with him in this role.”

Roth’s research consists of writing texts that examine emerging networks of computation, labor, and distance and designing tools that speculate on new ways of working together. He is a leading authority on the history of bubbles and is currently developing a book exploring the Fernley Hypothesis, a lesser-known theory of logistics.

In addition to his role at the Knowlton School, Roth was previously a resident fellow at the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart, a partner of OfficeUS during the 14th Venice Architecture Biennale, a Howard E. Lefevre Emerging Practitioner Fellow and the 2022 WOJR/Civitella Ranieri Prize Fellow . In 2017, he outsourced Some Dark Products , an art book about offshoring design labor. His scholarship has been published in e-flux , Thresholds , LOG , and Perspecta . His creative work has been exhibited internationally at the ZKM Karlsruhe, the Venice Biennale, and elsewhere.

Roth earned a Master of Architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he was awarded the AIA Henry Adams Medal and the Ralph Adams Cram Thesis Prize.

Some Dark Products: A Travelogue of Nine Instruments For Architecture

Curtis Roth Publishes Some Dark Products: An Interview

  • Architecture

Soap bubble showing a swirl of rainbow colors

Baumer Conversations, Eyal Weizman with Curtis Roth

  • 275 West Woodruff Avenue
  • Columbus, Ohio 43210

©2024 The Ohio State University

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    See Full PDFDownload PDF. Mirjana Lozanovska. 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.

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    If you are an Architecture student who needs help submitting your thesis to this collection, please review the submission guide [PDF], or contact the Library. The material featured on this site is subject to copyright protection unless otherwise indicated. The portions of the documents may be reproduced for study, research, or non-commercial ...

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    MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE IN URBAN DESIGN (MAUD) 2023 Alshayeb, AbdulAziz. "Repair in Spaces of Exception: The Encampment of Refugees in Jordan." (Advisor: Malkit Shoshan) Asahi Baptista, Liene Kaori. "Gendered São Paulo: Toward an Equal City for All." (Advisor: Malkit Shoshan) Boujane, Saad.

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    1 Architectural Thesis 2015 BLURRING BOUNDARIES 'Inclusive Centre for Learning' (In context of Dargah of Hazrat Sultan Arifin) Budaun, Uttar Pradesh Thesis Report 29th May, 2015 5th Year, Bachelor of Architecture A/2272/2010 Prof. Mandeep Singh Prof. Suneet Mohindru School of Planning and Architecture New Delhi 2 Declaration 20th April, 2015 This thesis entitled: Blurring Boundaries ...

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  20. Curtis Roth Appointed Interim Architecture Section Head

    The Knowlton School at The Ohio State University is pleased to announce that Associate Professor Curtis Roth has been named interim section head of the Architecture Section. "I am delighted that Curtis Roth has accepted to serve as the interim section head of the Architecture Section at the Knowlton School," said Interim Knowlton School Director Ann Pendleton-Jullian.