Study Areas

Design and Visualization 2

1216
Spring 2015
Ornament Theory and Design
Kent Bloomer
1222b
Spring 2015
Diagrammatic Analysis: The Diptych as a Topological Diagram
Peter Eisenman, Miroslava Brooks

Technology and Practice 2

2215
Spring 2015
Architecture as Building
Thomas Beeby
2299b
Spring 2015
Independent Course Work
Phillip Bernstein

History and Theory 13

3213b
Spring 2015
Architecture and Capitalism
Peggy Deamer
3214b
Spring 2015
The Construction of Exactitude: Classicism and Modernism
Karla Britton
3217b
Spring 2015
Writing on Architecture
Carter Wiseman
3220
Spring 2015
Contemporary Architectural Discourse Colloquium
Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen
3222b
Spring 2015
Venice: Urban and Architectural Histories of a Maritime Republic
Daniel Sherer
3223a
Spring 2015
Parallel Moderns: Crosscurrents in European and American Architecture, 1880–1940
Robert A.M. Stern
3225b
Spring 2015
Religion and Modern Architecture
Karla Britton
3237b
Spring 2015
Human/Nature
Joel Sanders
3239b
Spring 2015
Launch: Architecture and Entrepreneurialism
Keller Easterling
3264b
Spring 2015
XS: “micro” in Japanese Architecture and Urbanism
Sunil Bald
3266b
Spring 2015
Building China Modern 1919-1958: Experiments for a New Paradigm
Amy Lelyveld
3268b
Spring 2015
Reinterpreting the Enlightenment: Order and Chaos in the Long Eighteenth Century
Anthony Vidler
3299b
Spring 2015
Independent Course Work
Mark Foster Gage

Urbanism and Landscape 5

4011
Spring 2015
Introduction to Urban Design
Alan Plattus, Andrei Harwell
4235b
Spring 2015
Credentials: The Professions of Urbanizing
Todd Reisz
4237b
Spring 2015
Reinforcing Urban Tissue: Finding Strategies to Reactivate Public Space and Integrate Community
Tatiana Bilbao
4299b
Spring 2015
Independent Course Work
Alan Plattus, Alexander Garvin, Bimal Mendis
4299b
Spring 2015
Independent Course Work
Pier Vittorio Aureli, Peggy Deamer

University Courses Outside of YSoA

This site contains all courses offered by Yale University in the current term, with the exception of courses in the School of Medicine. Accessible up-to-date information includes the course title, name of instructor(s), meeting time, and meeting place. Courses offered elsewhere in the University may be taken for credit with permission of the instructor.

Students who would like to take a non-School of Architecture course to satisfy an area elective requirement must obtain permission of the study area coordinator(s).