Virginia Tech College of Architecture and Urban Studies

Virginia Tech College of
Architecture and Urban Studies
Motto Ut Prosim (Latin)
Motto in English
That I May Serve
Type Public University
Established 1964[1]
Parent institution
Virginia Tech
Dean Jack Davis
Students 2,020
Undergraduates 1,457
Postgraduates 563
Location Blacksburg
Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.
Riva San Vitale, Switzerland
Colors Chicago maroon and Burnt orange[2]          
Website www.caus.vt.edu
Cowgill & Burchard Halls on the Blacksburg campus.

The College of Architecture and Urban Studies at Virginia Tech consists of four schools, including the School of Architecture + Design, which consistently ranks among the best in the country.[3] Headquartered in Blacksburg, Virginia, the college also has sites in Alexandria, Virginia and Riva San Vitale, Switzerland. Spread out among these three locations, the college consists of nearly 2,200 students, making it one of the largest schools of architecture in the nation.

Academics

The College of Architecture and Urban Studies offers 13 bachelor’s degrees and 11 graduate degrees through its four schools. Programs offered within these schools are architecture, art and art history, building construction, environmental design and planning, government and international affairs, industrial design, interior design, landscape architecture, public administration and policy, and urban affairs and planning.

School of Architecture + Design

Programs in the School of Architecture + Design include architecture, interior design, industrial design, and landscape architecture. Through the school, students can earn Bachelor of Architecture and Master of Architecture degrees, which are accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board.[4] The Bachelor of Architecture degree at Virginia Tech has been accredited by the NAAB, consecutively, since the 1957-58 academic year making it one of the oldest, accredited architecture programs in the U.S. along with Syracuse University, Cornell University, Pratt Institute, Auburn University, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and University of Oregon.[5] The School also offers professionally accredited degrees in Industrial Design (BS.IDS), Interior Design (BS.ITDS), and Landscape Architecture (BLA and MLA). Research-oriented degree programs include the Master of Science in Architecture and the PhD in Architecture and Design Research. According to the School of Architecture + Design's website, the School's mission is "to create a setting for the pursuit of theoretical, practical, and productive knowledge, embracing the duality of the education of an individual and the practice of a profession."[6]

On the Blacksburg campus, the Architecture programs are housed in Cowgill Hall and Burchard Hall, named after the college’s first dean Charles Henry Burchard. The Industrial Design Program is housed in Burchard Hall, and the Interior Design and Landscape Architecture programs are based in Burruss Hall. Architecture and Landscape Architecture studios are offered at the Nation Capital Region/Washington-DC's Washington-Alexandria Architecture Center, located in Oldtown Alexandria, Virginia, and at the Steger Center for International Scholarship, the former Center for European Studies and Architecture, in Riva San Vitale, Switzerland.

School of Visual Arts

The School of Visual Arts offers programs in art history, visual communication design, and studio arts, with concentrations in visual communication design/graphic design, creative technologies, 3-D animation, modeling, painting, ceramics, animation, and sculpture. Areas of study include the studio arts (B.F.A.), the visual communication design (B.F.A.), art history (B.A.), and the creative technologies (M.F.A.).[7] The school’s administrative offices are located in the Armory, one of Blacksburg’s historic buildings.[8]

Myers-Lawson School of Construction

Bishop-Favrao Hall. Home to the Department of Building Construction

The Myers-Lawson School of Construction is a joint venture between the College of Architecture and Urban Studies and the College of Engineering. It offers degrees in building construction and construction engineering and management.[9] The school's programs are unique in that they blend building construction and civil engineering.

The Department of Building Construction offers a B.S. in Building Construction with two different tracks, the first track being Construction & Design, and the other track being Development, Real Estate, and Construction (which comes with a Minor in Real Estate). The department also offers a Masters of Science in Building Construction Science & Management, and a Masters of Science in Building Construction Science & Management plus an MBA. The department also hosts a PhD program.[10]

School of Public and International Affairs

The School of Public and International Affairs was established in 2003 with the intent of offering an "innovative integration of scholarship and professional instruction in policy and planning in public administration, urban affairs, environment, governance, and international relations."[11] The school offers undergraduate students either a bachelor of science in environmental policy and planning or a bachelor of arts in public and urban affairs. In addition, the school offers master's degrees in public administration, public and international affairs, and urban and regional planning. Doctoral students may earn degrees in planning, governance and globalization or in public administration and public affairs. The School of public and International Affairs is situated in Blacksburg, Virginia and Alexandria, Virginia.

National Capital Region programs

Washington Alexandria Architecture Center

VT's National Capital Region offers Architecture and Urban Studies programs within the Washington metropolitan area.
"LumenHAUS" - Award winning solar powered house designed and constructed by Virginia Tech in 2010.

The Washington-Alexandria Architecture Center (WAAC) has been functioning as the urban extension of the School of Architecture and Design in the Virginia Tech National Capital Region since 1980. Since 1985 the WAAC has also housed a consortium of national and international architectural schools. The WAAC grants degrees in the M.Arch.1 program for those students with a five-year professional degree, and the M.Arch.2 program for students with a four-year Bachelor of Science in Architecture degree. M.Arch.3 students are able to attend the WAAC during their thesis level of study after having completed their first two years at the main campus in Blacksburg, Virginia. The WAAC also offers a Master of Landscape Architecture degree as a three-year program for individuals with a baccalaureate degree background. Students interested in a degree in Urban Design can apply through the Master of Science in Architecture. The Urban Design concentration requires 3-4 semesters of study with a background in design; students without a design background can enter the program after a foundation year in the Landscape program. A Ph.D. in Architecture and Design Research is available to qualified candidates.[12]

Urban Affairs and Planning

The Department of Urban Affairs and Planning (UAP) provides interdisciplinary teaching and learning, research and scholarship, and outreach and service in planning, public policy, and public and non-profit management to serve students, the university and society. The department's diverse programs and interdisciplinary faculty provide a wide range of professional specializations, including urban development, environment protection, economic and community development, international development, community health, housing and information technology and society.Department of Urban Affairs and Planning offers a Master of Urban & Regional Planning (MURPL) degree.[13]

Research

Research centers

Virginia Tech is a major research university. Its College of Architecture and Urban Studies is affiliated with research centers through which faculty and students conduct research and further engage in their respective fields. University Centers include the Virginia Center for Housing Research and the Institute for Policy and Governance. College Centers include the Center for Innovation in Construction Safety and Health, the Community Design Assistance Center, the Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech, the Vibration Testing Laboratory, the Research and Demonstration Facility, the Environmental Systems Laboratory, and the Center for Advanced Visual Media. Centers based in the School of Architecture + Design include the Center for Design Research, the Center for High Performance Learning Environments, the Center for Preservation and Rehabilitation Technology, the Henry W. Wiss Center for Theory and History of Art and Architecture, and the International Archive of Women in Architecture. FourDesign is a faculty-led, student-run digital and print design center based in the School of Visual Arts. The Institute for Community Health is based in the School of Public and International Affairs.

LumenHAUS

The college has earned national recognition for its LumenHAUS project, a solar house designed and built by students and faculty of the School of Architecture + Design to compete in the U.S. Dept. of Energy's Solar Decathlon competition, which went on to win the international Solar Decathlon Europe Competition in Madrid, Spain in June 2010.[14] Built from renewable and recyclable materials, the fully automated solar house is completely self-sufficient, zero-energy, and provides an new approach to environmental and sustainable design. Since the house won the competition, the house has been displayed in Times Square in New York City, N.Y.; Millennium Park in Chicago, Ill.; and on the grounds of the Farnsworth House in Plano, Ill.[15] In 2012, the LumenHAUS received a national Institute Honor Award from the American Institute of Architects.[16]

Independent Research and Scholarship by Faculty

Faculty members conduct sponsored and independent research and publish books with some of the leading publishers in their respective disciplines and write articles who appear in prestigious scholarly and professional journals.

Art and Architecture Library

The Art and Architecture Library contains a collection of approximately 78,000 volumes and more than 200 journals, which encompass the visual arts, art history, architecture, decorative arts, and design. In addition, the library holds nearly 900 multimedia items, including DVDs, videotapes, and slides, and houses several hundred architectural plans and drawings for in-house use.

Rankings

The Bachelor of Architecture and Master of Architecture programs in the School of Architecture + Design consistently rank among the top tier Architecture schools in the U.S. based on the ranking of the journal DesignIntelligence. The Bachelor of Architecture program is commonly ranked in the top five (3rd in 2016), the Master of Architecture program is usually ranked in the top 15 (9th in 2016).[17] The undergraduate degree program in Landscape Architecture was ranked 10th in 2015 and the graduate program in Landscape Architecture was ranked 14th in 2015. The undergraduate program in Interior Design was ranked 9th in 2015.[18] DesignIntelligence rankings are based on survey responses from a wide range of private practice organizations that were asked, “In your firm’s hiring experience in the past five years, which of the following schools are best preparing students for success in the profession?”

The U.S. News & World Report also ranked some of the college’s programs as top in the nation. The graduate urban planning program was ranked seventh in the nation, and the public administration graduate program was ranked twelfth in the nation. In addition, the public affairs program was ranked as twenty-seventh in the nation.[19]

Ranking history

According to 2009 rankings by DesignIntelligence, the journal published by the Design Futures Council and the only national college ranking survey focused exclusively on design, Virginia Tech’s Architecture Program was recognized as one of America’s World-Class Schools of Architecture with highest distinction, tied with Harvard, Yale, and Columbia Universities. The multidimensional DesignIntelligence ranking, was based on five criteria: current rankings by professional practices; historic 10-year rankings by professional practices; rankings by academic department deans and chairs; overall campus environment and student evaluations; and program accreditation.[20]

In addition to the school rankings by professionals, deans and chairs from academic programs participate in separate surveys for DesignIntelligence.[21] In 2012, the deans ranked the Bachelor of Architecture program #2, citing the program’s “design quality, preparation for professional practice, and collaboration with other majors.” The deans ranked the undergraduate Interior Design program #3, citing its “faculty, comprehensive education, and collaborative teaching approach.” The deans ranked the undergraduate Landscape Architecture program #4, citing its “excellent resources, good design program, and diversity of students.” The deans’ survey ranked the undergraduate program in Industrial Design #2 in the nation, citing its “emphasis on human factors, comprehensive program, and quality of students.”[22]

Notable alumni

References

  1. "CAUS 50th Anniversary". vt.edu. 19 December 2015.
  2. "The Brand Guide: Virginia Tech Identity Standards and Style Guide" (PDF). Virginia Tech. February 2015. p. 10. Retrieved November 4, 2015. The burnt orange and Chicago maroon are the university's official colors that were adopted in 1896.
  3. "CAUS". College of Architecture and Urban Studies. Virginia Tech. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  4. "School of Architecture + Design". Virginia Tech. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  5. "NAAB Accredited School Database". NAAB. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  6. "About the School of Arch/Design". Virginia Tech.
  7. "School of Visual Arts". Virginia Tech. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  8. 6. http://www.sova.vt.edu/. School of Visual Arts. Virginia Tech College of Architecture and Urban Studies
  9. "Myers-Lawson School of Construction". Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  10. http://www.bc.vt.edu/degrees
  11. "School of Public and International Affairs". Virginia Tech. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  12. About WAAC Program
  13. About UAP Program
  14. "About Lumenhaus". Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  15. Matt Shuba. "Virginia Tech Lumenhaus". lumenhaus.com.
  16. http://www.aia.org/practicing/awards/2012/architecture/LumenHAUS/index.htm. American Institute of Architects
  17. http://archdesign.vt.edu/news/2015-16/1601. Virginia Tech School of Architecture + Design
  18. http://archdesign.vt.edu/news/2014-15/1486. Virginia Tech School of Architecture + Design
  19. http://www.caus.vt.edu/about. Virginia Tech College of Architecture and Urban Studies.
  20. http://archdesign.vt.edu/news/2008-09/749. Virginia Tech School of Architecture + Design
  21. (http://www.di.net)
  22. http://archdesign.vt.edu/news/2011-12/1225. Virginia Tech School of Architecture + Design
  23. 1 2 "Alumni Elevated to AIA College of Fellows". www.archdesign.vt.edu. caus · virginia tech. March 28, 2014. Retrieved March 7, 2016.
  24. 1 2 3 "Alumni Elevated to AIA College of Fellows for 2015". www.archdesign.vt.edu. CAUS Virginia Tech. March 23, 2015. Retrieved March 7, 2016.
  25. "A. Jack Davis, FAIA, LEED AP". www.archdesign.vt.edu. 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.
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