MASTER OF ADVANCED STUDIES IN URBAN DESIGN
The Master of Advanced Studies in Urban Design ETH is a research and design laboratory for testing new models for the pro-active development of urban territories of a globalized world.
As the making of the city is increasingly fractured by competing interests, the development of new modes of urban production becomes a prerequisite for considered action.
The MAS in Urban Design produces a new generation of design professionals — one equipped to deal with topics beyond the discipline.
01: About the program
The MAS in Urban Design is a one-year postgraduate master program in research and design. Study is structured around an investigation of urban conditions as they pertain to global phenomena and the development of practical tools for operating within such domains. As global economics rapidly reshape urban conditions and population movements caused by economical, ecological, or political crisis—at a speed seemingly beyond the control of planning— the pace of urbanization has rendered nearly impossible the provision of habitation in formal manners. The MAS program aims to link social, economic and ecological circumstances to create new, resilient ways of shaping urban territories. The MAS works with strategies as much as with tactics to redefine the role of the architect and planner in the making of the city today and to find new territories for design to engage.
The MAS program seeks design professionals interested in the investigation and development of tools for use in complex conditions. A culture of inquiry within the studio encourages the development of strong outlooks on the development of urban scenarios. Emphasis is put on method, incremental design, and tools of communication with the aim of preparing participants for interdisciplinary work within design offices, academic teams, or municipal agencies.
Title: Master of Advanced Studies in Urban Design (MAS ETH UD).
Start: Each fall semester
Duration: 12 months
Language of instruction: English
Tuition: 15.000 CHF (12.000 CHF invoiced directly by ETHZ plus 3.000 CHF including costs of excursion and other expenses of the studio invoiced in two parts at the end of each semester).
Application: Jan. 1–April 30, yearly
(late applications are accepted on a case-by-case basis)
02: Design and Research Laboratory
After 3 cycles of investigation in Ethiopia, Brazil and Egypt – the current cycle is focusing on another exemplary context for the design and research of urban development in a globalized world: Europe.
In addition to the studio forming the central component of the course, fieldwork, a theory seminar, workshops with municipal actors and experts, and the production of a publication provide a wide introduction to the multiple facets of contemporary urban design. These core classes provide the requisite number of credits (600 hours, 65 ECTS credits) necessary for graduation.
The studio that forms the main component of the course, takes a site as the foundation for both research and design proposals. Engagement with communities, urban actors, and municipal planning authorities in the location provides insight into the possibilities and challenges of urban design within a culture of dispersed and opposing agendas and decision-making power.
Divided into a fall- and a spring semester, the studio’s program focusses in a first phase on developing the participants’ practical tools. A strong emphasis will be put on critical comparative analysis, communication methods and process design on an architectural level within the framework of a site. By means of incremental research, the second semester will tackle the lager scale of urban strategies with a continuous effort to provide an inclusive response to the socio-political conditions of the housing market.
Within this framework, the MAS program is in this cycle focusing on the effects of globalization and inclusivity on the various territories in Europe: Increasing mobility of financial and natural resources, commodities and people.
Thematic Focus
Inclusive Urbanism III : Migration
” Migration is not a new phenomenon. While our era is based on a mythology of geographical mobility and global migratory circulations, history reveals that migration is not a modern condition. In the quest for a better, safer life, people have always moved. But in the wake of Europe’s refugee crisis, it has never been such a pressing topic. These movements are unlikely to slow down in the near future, with enduring armed conflicts, economic hardships, and predicted climate change-induced mass migration. Crises have shed a dramatic light on movement of people as a rapid, ubiquitous, complex, and eminently spatial phenomenon. Circulations of people, goods, and capital, as much as their resettlement, have a visible, transformative impact upon space, at various scales.
Territories of Movements
The territorial scale is contained in the physical act of going from one place to another: crossing legal borders and national frontiers, oceans and water bodies, mountain ranges and manmade obstacles. From a countryside to another, flows of people transiting through productive landscapes imprint the intermediary scale of hinterlands and peripheries. But as migrants overwhelmingly aim for urban areas as entry point into new destinies, it is at the urban scale that the most impact of flux is felt. The economic, political, and social influence of migration shaped cities in many ways and continues to do so, with visible effects on architecture and urban forms.
Urban Design for ‘Staying’
Within the framework of ‘Inclusive Urbanism,’ and after exploring the ‘Arrival City’ theme, the MAS program is tackling questions of migration and urban space, coined by the ‘Staying’ concept. Arguing that urban design is an innovative, resilient, and politically powerful tool for architects and planners to address such complex matters, and moving away from emergency solutions (e.g. refugee camps, transit centers), we explore that notion of ‘staying’ somewhere.
Inspecting the political, economic, and social reasons behind migration and the spatial conditions attached to both departure and arrival sites; the question of the relevance of design will be addressed. How can urban designers tackle such as situation? What does moving for a longer period of time and settling down socially, economically and culturally entails spatially at urban, rural and peri-urban scales? What can be the response of design to the notion of ‘staying’, in the framework of an inclusive urbanism practice? “
Charlotte Malterre-Barthes, Program Director
Fieldwork
An excursion related to studio research is conducted midway through the program’s first semester. On-site research for the studio project, visits to other relevant areas, and meetings with municipal and community organizations provide sufficient understanding of the context in which studio production will operate.
Sessions on Territory (former Urban Mutations on the Edge) – seminar and public lecture series
The SoT seminar is a series of weekly lectures by invited guests on topics in urban research and phenomena in territories that are beyond the traditional realm of architectural discourse. The objective here is a comprehensive understanding of urban research’s nature and capacities. Participants will leave the course with both an understanding of current urban research issues and the tools to conduct such research themselves.
Within the framework of this seminar, MAS participants are asked to produce two publication-quality essays related to their production within the studio. The production of the papers refines academic writing skills and familiarizes participants with research methods. In the past, the papers produced have been published both alongside the studio work and in independent architectural journals.
Facilities
The MAS UD is a postgraduate program within the Department of Architecture at ETH Zurich. The full facilities of the faculty—including dedicated studio space, model-making workrooms, digital fabrication labs, and printing facilities—are at the disposal of MAS program participants.
People
Prof. Dr. Marc Angélil
Chair
Charlotte Malterre-Barthes
Program Director
malterre@arch.ethz.ch
Co-Directors
Elena Schütz
elena.schuetz@arch.ethz.ch
Leonard Streich
leonard.streich@arch.ethz.ch
Julian Schubert
julian.schubert@arch.ethz.ch
Sascha Delz
Sessions on Territory Seminar
delz@arch.ethz.ch
03: Admission requirements and application process
The MAS program is well suited to participants with a strong interest in design and emerging urban conditions. Admission is open to individuals who have earned a five-year professional degree (Arch ETH, master’s degree, or equivalent) in architecture or a related field from an accredited institution.
The application includes the submission of the application form, letter of intent, project portfolio (print-out only), letter of recommendation.
Candidates must provide evidence of their creativity and design talent by means of a project portfolio. The selection should include academic and professional design work edited to convey the personal outlook of the applicant. It should be bound into a format no larger than A3 size. Applicants are asked not to send digital portfolios or loose sheets. Portfolios should be sent directly to the chair. The chair will keep the portfolios of matriculating students. If you would like your portfolio returned to you, please include a self-addressed stamped envelope with the submission.
Address for portfolio submission:
Prof. Marc Angélil
c/o C. Malterre-Barthes
MAS Urban Design
ETH Zürich Hönggerberg
ONA J25
8093 Zürich
Additional information and the application form can be found at the website of the Center for Continuing Education:
http://www.zfw.ethz.ch/application/admission/index_EN
The deputy rector for further education and doctoral studies at the ETH Zürich will determine whether a candidate meets formal requirements and the directors of the MAS Urban Design will then determine admission to the program. For a complete list of what is required for admission, please refer to the website of the chair:
http://angelil.arch.ethz.ch/
ETH Zurich
Centre for Continuing Education
HG E18.1
Rämistr. 101
8093 Zurich
Tel. +41 44 632 56 59
info@zfw.ethz.ch
MAS Urban Design ETH
ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Institute for Urban Design
Prof. Dr. Marc Angélil
ONA J25
8093 Zurich
Tel +41 44 633 38 22
Fax +41 44 633 11 83
if FEDEX please send to:
Alejandra Fries
ETH Zurich Hönggerberg
Institute for Urban Design
Prof. Dr. Marc Angélil
ONA
c/o
DARCH- HIL
Stefano-Franscini-Platz 5
8093 Zürich Hönggerberg
Switzerland
04: Scholarship
05: Additional material
The examples shown, produced in previous years, are indicative of the content, production, and method
of the MAS UD studio.
Exhibit in the Bi-City Biennale of Architecture/Urbanism 2015-2016, Shenzhen (PRC)
ETH- Future Blog
Cairo Observer
Exhibit in the Venice Architecture Biennale 2016 (Egyptian Pavilion), Venice (Italy)
Books are available containing the works produced during precedent studios on Egypt:
HOUSING CAIRO: The Informal Response (2016)
http://ruby-press.com/shop/housing-cairo/
CAIRO DESERT CITIES (2017)
http://ruby-press.com/cairo-desert-cities/
A book trilogy is available containing works focusing on Brazil:
MINHA CASA – NOSSA CIDADE
Innovating Mass Housing for Social Change in Brazil
CIDADE DE DEUS! CITY OF GOD!
Working with informalized mass housing in Brazil.
BUILDING BRAZIL
The Proactive Urban Renewal of Informal Settlements 2011
Building Brazil! is a comprehensive publication of the studio design and research work conducted within the 2010–2011 MAS UD studio on informal areas in Rio de Janeiro and São Paolo. The book was edited by Marc Angélil and Rainer Hehl, in collaboration with Something Fantastic, and was released in October 2011 by Ruby Press.
www.ruby-press.com/books/building-brazil
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