702-503 Architectural Design 5A

Note

Formerly available as 702-503 Architectural Design and Practice 5. Students who have completed 702-503 are not eligible to enrol in this subject.

Credit Points

25

Coordinator

Steve Whitford

Prerequisites

702-404 Architectural Design 4B

Semester

1 (view timetable)

Contact

Six hours of seminars and tutorials per week; up to one hour of lectures per week; additional studio work as required

Subject Description

Students will undertake a series of studio-based exercises directed to the design of a large-scale building complex that is responsive to its urban setting, the resolution of its programmatic environmental and technical requirements and the graphic representation of this design. This will also include part of the detailed design development and documentation and a project report that describes and illustrates the design proposal and its response to the urban, environmental, programmatic and technical issues, and in all the above, demonstrate the design skills commensurate with those required by the architectural profession of a graduate architect.

On completion of the subject students should be able to:

  • Integrate the diverse requirements of larger scale architecutral projects.

  • Communicate at a level expected of a graduate of architecture regarding design decisions and building details.

  • Communicate design and building decisions by using correct and appropriate notational representations.

  • Assess the efficiency of their design decisions against possible alternatives.

  • Incorporate notions of daily, seasonal and life-cycle dynamic behaviour in the environment designed.

  • Effect the life-cycle of the artefact envisioned.

  • Relate their work to specific intellectual traditions.

  • React to external constraints and meet the competency requirements of the ARBV (academic qualification)

  • Evaluate the results of their own work.

  • Develop performance based design.

  • Evaluate the practical implications of theoretical urban frameworks.

Generic Skills

On completion of the subject students should have developed the following skills and capabilities:

  • Ability to convey design intentions through specific technical descriptions.

  • Evaluation of design decisions against industrial environmental conditions, building scale and program requirements.

  • Designing within specific timeframes.

  • Adaption of individual problems to general strategies.

  • Identification of performance differences and mutual impacts within the spatial program developed.

  • Testing theoretical propositions at different scales.

Assessment

Assessment will be based on a major design project and a review as required of a portfolio of all assignments set during the semester. Project, studio test, exercises, reports and tutorial presentations to the equivalent of 10,000 words.



Status:                   Official 2007
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