Architectural Design (Master) (with Thesis) (English) | |||||
Master | TR-NQF-HE: Level 7 | QF-EHEA: Second Cycle | EQF-LLL: Level 7 |
Course Code: | ARCH5005 | ||||
Course Name: | Critical Approaches to Architectural Concepts | ||||
Semester: |
Fall Spring |
||||
Course Credits: |
|
||||
Language of instruction: | English | ||||
Course Condition: | |||||
Does the Course Require Work Experience?: | No | ||||
Type of course: | Departmental Elective | ||||
Course Level: |
|
||||
Mode of Delivery: | Face to face | ||||
Course Coordinator: | Dr. Öğr. Üy. ZEHRA TONBUL | ||||
Course Lecturer(s): | Zehra Tonbul | ||||
Course Assistants: |
Course Objectives: | The course aims to provide students with conceptual, historical and linguistic tools, with which they can read modern architecture. |
Course Content: | The course will cover theoretical background to the emergence of modern architectural notions within 19th and 20th century discourses. The course will undertake discussion of these notions through examples of modern architecture and trace the history of their uses through the course of 20th and 21st centuries. |
The students who have succeeded in this course;
1) To be able to view architecture other than a construction practice, mainly as an intellectual and critical practice 2) To be able to view and produce architecture as an academic practice |
Week | Subject | Related Preparation |
1) | Introduction: Modern in Architecture and Language How does architecture communicate? Art of Literary Thinking | |
2) | An Architectural Dictionary | |
3) | Form, Gestalt, Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright | |
4) | Space, Perception and Mies van der Rohe | |
5) | Context: From Genius Loci to Humanitarianism | |
6) | User, Function, Functionalism, Flexibility | De Zurko, Edward Robert. 1957. Origins of functionalist theory. N.Y: Columbia Univ. Press, pp.3-14. |
7) | Architectural Expression, Daniel Liebeskind, Frank Gehry | |
8) | Atmospheres | |
9) | Movement, Sequence, Scenography, Bernard Tschumi | |
10) | Façade, Pastiche, Sign-- Robert Venturi | Robert Venturi, Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, Perspecta, Vol. 9. (1965), pp. 18-21. |
11) | Selection of a Building for Presentation | |
12) | Student Presentations | |
12) | Student Presentations | |
12) | Student Presentations |
Course Notes / Textbooks: | Forty, Adrian. 2004. Words and buildings: a vocabulary of modern architecture. New York: Thames & Hudson. |
References: | Zevi, Bruno. 1994. The modern language of architecture. New York: Da Capo Press. Pp. 3-6 (Introduction) |
Course Learning Outcomes | 1 |
2 |
|||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Program Outcomes | |||||||||
1) To see architecture as a transdisciplinary intellectual and critical field | |||||||||
2) To develop the ability to express architectural thought with appropriate terminology, verbally and in writing. | |||||||||
3) To learn and use the necessary tools to share the results of their research and current developments in architectural design with different groups in different platforms. | |||||||||
4) To develop the ability to discuss current design problems and propose creative solutions. | |||||||||
5) To follow, understand and apply current research methods in architectural design and to produce new research methods. | |||||||||
6) To evaluate new technical/technological developments in terms of architecture, to recognize hybrid applications and creative practices and to develop a critical perspective. | |||||||||
7) To develop approaches to transform new mathematical thinking into practice in architecture. | |||||||||
8) To be able to independently design and conduct research processes based on data collection, interpretation and announcement in the field of architectural design, within the framework of ethical values and rules | |||||||||
9) To be able to independently carry out a work that requires expertise in architectural design, to be a leader in environments that require solving problems related to architectural design. |
No Effect | 1 Lowest | 2 Average | 3 Highest |
Program Outcomes | Level of Contribution | |
1) | To see architecture as a transdisciplinary intellectual and critical field | 3 |
2) | To develop the ability to express architectural thought with appropriate terminology, verbally and in writing. | 3 |
3) | To learn and use the necessary tools to share the results of their research and current developments in architectural design with different groups in different platforms. | 3 |
4) | To develop the ability to discuss current design problems and propose creative solutions. | 2 |
5) | To follow, understand and apply current research methods in architectural design and to produce new research methods. | 3 |
6) | To evaluate new technical/technological developments in terms of architecture, to recognize hybrid applications and creative practices and to develop a critical perspective. | |
7) | To develop approaches to transform new mathematical thinking into practice in architecture. | |
8) | To be able to independently design and conduct research processes based on data collection, interpretation and announcement in the field of architectural design, within the framework of ethical values and rules | 2 |
9) | To be able to independently carry out a work that requires expertise in architectural design, to be a leader in environments that require solving problems related to architectural design. | 1 |
Semester Requirements | Number of Activities | Level of Contribution |
Homework Assignments | 1 | % 30 |
Final | 1 | % 70 |
total | % 100 | |
PERCENTAGE OF SEMESTER WORK | % 30 | |
PERCENTAGE OF FINAL WORK | % 70 | |
total | % 100 |
Activities | Number of Activities | Workload |
Course Hours | 14 | 42 |
Study Hours Out of Class | 14 | 112 |
Total Workload | 154 |