Nov 22, 2024  
2018-2020 Graduate School Catalog 
    
2018-2020 Graduate School Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

MLA Landscape Architecture, Program Information


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Objective

The First Professional Degree Program in Landscape Architecture is a fully accredited, professional program that focuses on the design of the urban environment. The course work focuses on investigating aesthetic, ecological, and social/cultural concerns as a means of establishing sustainable urban communities. Within this philosophical context, the Program is designed to heighten the student’s sensitivity to and knowledge of the skills and values fundamental to the landscape architecture profession.

The Graduate Program in Landscape Architecture provides national leadership in the study of cultural, design and environmental issues that affect underserved urban communities. The greater Baltimore-Washington region serves as a field of inquiry and practice for faculty and students to gain real-world urban practice. Additionally, course work is enriched by field trips to significant sites in New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, and throughout the east coast area. Design studios address issues such as enriching community life in redeveloping neighborhoods, renovating the pedestrian realm, enhancing public spaces, and solving urban environmental problems within these and other urban project realms. Recent studio projects in real-world community settings have included: urban strip shopping center revitalization, transit and greenway development, community park/playground design, regional park design, public plaza design, and urban in-fill housing site design. Students are also exposed to various career avenues through contact with professional offices, public agencies, and community organizations.

The Program is dedicated to framing landscape architecture study areas (design studio, history/theory, technical skills, technology/media, environmental resources, community service) through the development of critical thinking and analysis skills. Students are challenged in both design studio and other courses to develop processes through drawing, writing, building and discussing ideas as a means of improving the communication of design studio concepts and ideas in seminar-oriented courses. In particular, the design studio sequence builds these critical thinking skills as the physical scale, human functional program, and complexity of the urban context increases from Studio I through Studio VI. A variety of software and 3-D modeling programs, including AutoCAD, AdobeSuite, SketchUp, and ArcGIS, are employed to support design studio learning and communication.

The First Professional Degree Program is intended for students who have an undergraduate degree that is NOT a professional degree in Landscape Architecture.

Accreditation

The First Professional Degree Program is a fully accredited program by the Landscape Architecture Accreditation Board (LAAB) of the American Society of Landscape Architecture (ASLA). In the State of Maryland, graduates from an accredited graduate program are eligible after three years of full-time, professionally supervised employment to take the national Landscape Architecture Registration Exam (LARE).

Program Course Requirements


 Pre-Approved School of Architecture + Planning Electives

CREP 542: Environmental Planning (3 credits)

CSUC 501: Introduction to Sustainable Communities (3 credits)

CSUC 502: Capstone Project (3 credits)

CSUC 503: The Urban Village / Sustainable Neighborhoods (1 credit)

CSUC 504: Sustainable Urban Site Design (1 credit)

CSUC 505: The Natural and Built Environment (1 credit)

CSUC 507: Social Justice as a Framework for Sustainable Urban Community (1 credit)

CSUC 509: Healthy Urban Communities (1 credit)

CSUC 516: Introduction to Urban Storm Water Management (1 credit)

CSUC 521: Sustainable Construction Practice & Management (1 credit)

CSUC 525: Urban Ecology (1 credit)

CSUC 526: Urban Soils (1 credit)

CSUC 601: Environmental Site Design for Urban Landscapes (3 credits)

CSUC 602: Green Roofs and Green Walls (3 credits)

ENST 515: Socio-Spatial Patterns of Human Settlement (3 credits)

ENST 542: Advanced Communications / 3-D Modeling (3 credits)

ENST 573: Principles of Site Planning (3 credits)

ENST 601: Historic & Cultural Preservation (3 credits)

ENST 714: Built Environment Internship I (3 credits)

ENST 715: Built Environment Internship II (3 credits)

ENST 716: Built Environment Internship Ill (3 credits)

ENST 717: Built Environment Internship IV (3 credits)

ENST 738, 740, 741, 742 and 743: Seminars in Built Environment Studies (3 credits)

ENST 771: Computer Aided Design II / 3-D Animation & Visualization (3 credits) 

ENST 788-789: Supervised Research (3 credits) 

LAAR 501: Critical Thinking in the Built Environment (3 credits)

LAAR 545: Sustainable Structures and Applications (3 credits)

LAAR 546: Storm Water Design in the Urban Landscape (3 credits)

LAAR 547: Landscape Performance Assessment Methods & Systems (3 credits)

LAAR 562: Urban Stream Restoration (3 credits)

LAAR 789: Supervised Research (3 credits)

LAAR 797: Thesis/Master’s Project Guidance (2 credits)

LAAR 799: Thesis Seminar (3 credits)

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