This intensive five-week summer workshop takes place in Rome and is designed to provide a broad overview of that city’s major architectural sites, topography, and systems of urban organization. Examples from antiquity to the present day are studied as part of the context of an ever-changing city with its sequence of layered accretions. The seminar examines historical continuity and change as well as the ways in which and the reasons why some elements and approaches were maintained over time and others abandoned. Hand drawing is used as a primary tool of discovery during explorations of buildings, landscapes, and gardens, both within and outside the city. Students devote the final week to an intensive independent analysis of a building or place. M.Arch. I students are eligible to enroll in this course after completing at least three terms. This course does not fulfill either the History and Theory or the Urbanism and Landscape elective requirements. Limited enrollment.


All Semesters

1291
Summer 2019
Rome: Continuity and Change
Bimal Mendis, Joyce Hsiang, George Knight, Elisa Iturbe
1291
Summer 2018
The Robert A.M. Stern Summer Rome Program
George Knight, Miroslava Brooks, Kyle Dugdale, Stephen Harby
1291
Summer 2016
Rome: Continuity and Change
Bimal Mendis, Joyce Hsiang, George Knight, Miroslava Brooks, Brennan Buck
1291
Summer 2015
Rome: Continuity and Change
Stephen Harby, Joyce Hsiang, Bimal Mendis, Alexander Purves, Bryan Fuermann