2023 UW Architecture Offer Packet

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2023 UW ARCHITECTURE

1. Student Work, Bryce Boho, 2. Architecture Hall Studio Space 3. Student Work, Ji Guanzhou 4. Student Work, Travis Hauan
CONTENTS Welcome 4 Virtual Open House & Visit Days 5 Department Info 6 Facilities 8 Program Highlights 10 Lectures & Events 11 Professional Advisory Council 12 Recent Selected Awards 14 Advanced Degrees 16 College of Built Environments 18 Housing & Tuition 20 1 3
5. “Sketching as Witness” Gould Gallery
Exhibition 2 4 5
Gallery

WELCOME TO UW ARCHITECTURE

CONGRATULATIONS!

Welcome to the Department of Architecture in the College of Built Environments at the University of Washington! We are excited for you to join us, a dynamic community of educators, scholars and professionals who have created a culture of innovative research, critical practice, and interdisciplinary collaboration.

We value our role in a public research university that critically engages the city as a physical, cultural and ecological system. Working in a vibrant educational setting, we embrace diversity in identity, research, and teaching and strive in our efforts to make a more just and sustainable world. Our dedicated faculty inspire students to excel within a broad design-based curriculum that encompasses concentrations in history and theory, materials and fabrication, and sustainable systems and design.

Some aspects of our program that are unique and valuable for our students include:

We partner with strong support from the local professional community, including our Professionals Advisory Council, to create a challenging yet supportive learning environment for students. Seattle is a world-class city, and a particularly exciting place to study architecture and start a career.

We work within a quarter system which enables students to have many opportunities for elective seminars and studio options including design build, furniture design and study abroad.

The MArch program culminates with two research-based options— independent thesis or research studios—that challenge students to develop the critical thinking, design and research expertise that will be needed in the future.

We’d be delighted to have you join our 2023 incoming class and our remarkable community of students, faculty, and staff!

Sincerely,

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2023 VIRTUAL

OPEN HOUSE & IN-PERSON VISIT DAYS

OPEN HOUSE

Friday, March 31, 2023

This year we are offering a Virtual Open House that allows all admitted graduate applicants to receive a comprehensive preview of what our school has to offer. This combination of live and recorded events includes faculty presentations, a tour of facilities and studios, and opportunities to talk with faculty, current students, recent alumni, and advising staff about our graduate programs. We encourage you to participate!

The Virtual Open House will be hosted via Zoom on Friday, March 31, 2023 via this URL:

https://be.uw.edu/prospective-student-day/ Password: UWARCH2023

Link to Architecture Open House page will go live on 3/25.

Sessions will be recorded and we will share the links on this page. The Open House website will include links to video tours and presentations across programs in the College of Built Environments.

IN-PERSON VISIT DAYS

Friday, April 7

Monday, April 10

Friday, April 14

We are able to accommodate in-person tours on the following dates and times only. Registration required to participate. The deadline to register is three days prior to event date.

Schedule

10:30-11:00 Welcome and Q&A with Dean and Chairs

11:30-12:30 Student-led tours

12:30-1:30 Luch with current students and facult

QUESTIONS?

Contact: Claudine Manio, Graduate Program Advisor

claudine@uw.edu

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Architecture Hall Design Studio

ARCHITECTURE

In the Department of Architecture, we empower students to be responsive and responsible to society, culture, and the environment. Our values are based in the traditions of architecture and craft making, activism, and community-based design, seen within the context of social and technological change. Our classes and studios provide students with handson experiences that reflect Seattle’s unique position as a regional center with strong global connections. Through international travel opportunities we expose students to the impact and outcomes of architecture in diverse cultural settings. Further, as we advance architectural knowledge through research and practice, we use our experiences to benefit local, national, and global communities.

Chair: Brian McLaren, PhD, Professor

Permanent Faculty - 32

Affiliate Faculty - 29

History, Theory and Criticism

Materials and Fabrication

Sustainable Systems and Design

LEADERSHIP DEGREE OPTIONS CERTIFICATES

Design Computing

Historic Preservation

Housing Studies

Lighting Design

Real Estate

Urban Design and Planning

ALUMNI PERSPECTIVES

“The architecture program is rooted locally while thinking globally. The regional design emphasis on materials, craft, and sustainability are consistent throughout the curriculum and are complimented with multiple diverse opportunities for study and research abroad.”

“Returning to school after 20 years was a bit terrifying, and I braced for the potential of a dog-eat-dog experience. To my pleasant surprise, I found only support and camaraderie, and I graduated with friendships that I’ll have for life. The familial culture in the program was critical to my survival, and is both professional and personal gold.”

PROGRAMS

BA Architecture

BA Architecture Design

BS Architecture/Construction Management

M Architecture

MArchitecture/Landscape Architecture

MS Architecture (Design Technology)

MS Architecture (History/Theory)

Ph.D. Built Environments

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FACILITIES

LABS+CENTERS

Center for Integrated Design: Housed in The Bullitt Center, the greenest commercial building in the world, the Center works to advance knowledge and policies that support healthy, high performing buildings and cities. Fabrication Lab: Provides students with the space and equipment needed to design and build models, furniture, and small-scale building components.

Carbon Leadership Forum: Acts as an industryacademic collaborative working to close the gap between Life Cycle Assessment based Carbon Accounting and industry best practices.

Material & Daylighting Lab: The Materials Library houses samples to allow students in our department to design with an intimate understanding of physical materials and their properties. The Daylighting Lab provides access to a heliodon for examining daylight design, an Overcast Sky Simulator, and a Mock-up Room for testing electrical lighting ideas. Both are staffed by students in our department.

UW Rome Center: The UWRC hosts a diversity of faculty-led study abroad programs in a wide range of disciplines. A short walk from the Vatican the center houses a beautiful studio for an immersive architecture experience.

RESOURCES

BE Library: The University of Washington libraries comprise one of the largest research library systems in North America. The Built Environments Library in Gould Hall holds the primary collection of materials on the subjects of architecture, construction management, landscape architecture, and urban design and planning. It includes more than forty thousand books and bound periodicals, over three hundred currently received serial titles and almost eight thousand items in microform and other formats.

1. Architecture Hall Studio 2. Photo Lab 3. Fabrication Lab 4. Architecture in Rome Program 5. Center for Integrated Design
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PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

NEIGHBORHOOD DESIGN/BUILD

For the last 30 years, the Howard S. Wright Neighborhood Design/Build Studio, managed by Professor Steve Badanes has engaged our students with clients and public agencies. The process of the design/build course takes students through the journey of site visits and sketching through material decisions, assembly details, and hands-on construction. This award-winning studio has given our students meaningful opportunities to design and build small usable structures for Seattle-area nonprofit groups, such as:

Urban Preschool Greenhouse Garden, Woodland Park Community Preschool Danny Woo Children’s Garden Cookery, Danny Woo Community Gardens Room for a Forest, Beacon Food Forest Urban Farm Supershed, UW Center for Urban Horticulture

Santos Rodriguez Memorial Park, El Centro De La Raza

ARCHITECTURE ABROAD

We take our students to Rome to confront a densely layered historical context; to Mexico to work with a rapidly changing metropolis; to Copenhagen to study pedestrian and bikefriendly infrastructure; and to Tokyo to learn from its large-scale transportation hubs. These intense international experiences prepare our graduates for the diverse cultural challenges that architects face in an increasingly global context.

SCAN DESIGN FURNITURE studio gives students the opportunity to design and fabricate their own piece of furniture using the facilities located in Gould Hall. Students - many of whom have no furniture making experience - are able to learn how to craft and design their pieces using tools in our wood and metal labs, in addition to the laser cutters and CNC routers. The studio concludes with a 10-day trip to Denmark in June partially funded by the Scan Design Foundation.

1. Architecture Abroad 2. “Climatic Imaginaries” James Graham Lecture Poster
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3. “After Land: A New Era of Design?” Dilip da Cunha Lecture Graphic
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LECTURES & EVENTS

LECTU RES

The Department of Architecture together with the College of Built Environments hosts a lecture series with speakers from all over the world. Our lecture series (in-person and online) spans the discipline of architecture within the built environment, bringing work from fine detailing to planning, installation projects to restoration. We aim to inspire students and our local community with a robust array of lectures from leaders in the global field.

HHF - Dilip da Cunha, Columbia GSAPP “After Land: A New Era of Design?”

Thursday, Nov 17, 2022, 5:30 – 7 p.m.

CBE has invited architect, planner and landscape architect Dilip da Cunha to build on the work he did in The Inventions of Rivers to imagine crossdisciplinary ways of inventing the future in an ‘ocean of wetness.’

Matt Wittman, A Right to Nature

Monday, Feb 6, 2023, 12 – 1 p.m. During this lunchtime lecture, Matt Wittman will present work of Wittman Estes and beyond in blurring boundaries between buildings and gardens, the relationship between indoor and outdoor space, and urban visions. The talk is in conjunction with the architecture research seminar, Metabolism 2023.

HHF James Graham, Assistant Professor, Architecture Program California College of the Arts, “Climatic Imaginaries”

Thursday, Feb 23, 2023, 5:30 – 7 p.m.

This talk revisits the book Climates: Architecture and the Planetary Imaginary alongside other recent research on resource geology and atmosphere, moving through several scales of climatic thought—from the planetary to the territorial to the community scale.

EVENT S

CBE Career Fair

CBE Happy Hour

ARCHPAC Open Studio

ARCPAC Portfolio Review

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PROFESSIONALS ADVISORY COUNCIL

The Department of Architecture Professionals Advisory Council (PAC) maintains a dialog between practicing architects, allied design professionals, and the department faculty. This dialog informs the profession about departmental concerns and larger academic issues. In turn, faculty gain greater awareness of marketplace realities and trends. Through participation in the council, members enjoy opportunities for professional growth while supporting the department.

...To provide feedback about the evolving realities of practice to the Department of Architecture.

...To act as a liaison between the Department of Architecture and the community of architectural practitioners.

...To act as a liaison between the Department of Architecture and other professionals’ advisory groups in the College of Built Environments.

...To provide recommendations and support for aspects of the department’s programs that build the professional merit of its graduates.

...To help students in the department better understand the professional practice of architecture and associated career paths.

...To help develop and maintain transitional programs, such as internships, that will assist graduates in developing their careers.

...To support continuing education for practicing architects in diverse career paths.

...To help the department access resources from the professional community for the benefit of its students.

WHO WE ARE WHAT WE DO INITIATIVES

1. Portfolio Review 2. Student Interns at Weinstein A+U 3. Career Fair 4. Student Intern
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5. Career Fair 47° NORTH CONSTRUCTION TOURS INTERNSHIPS STUDENT SEMINARS NEW STUDENT CHARRETTE
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PARTICIPATING OFFICES

Bassetti Architects

Baylis Architects

Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

Dean Alan Architects

DLR Group

EHDD

Environmental Works

Fraser + Fogle Architects

KMB Architects

LMN Architects

MG2, Miller Hayashi Architects

Miller Hull Partnership

Mithun

NAC Architecture

NBBJ

Olson Kundig

Rolluda Architects

Runberg Architecture Group

SCB

SHKS Architects

Sportswood Design

SRG Partnership

Studio Meng Strazza

Weber Thompson

Weinstein A+U

ZGF Architects

P.A.C. INTERNSHIPS

UW ARCH PAC summer internships offer paid internships in Seattle-area design offices, with the primary intention of offering an introduction to the design workplace to students completing the first year of the Department’s 3-year MArch program. Matching of eligible applicants with available workplace openings achieves student placements for 320-400 hours of employment. Generally following the guidelines of the National Council of Architect Registration Boards (NCARB) Experience Requirements directed toward architect licensing, workplace supervisors monitor and mentor interns, in liaison with and reporting students’ experience to a Department faculty advisor.

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Intern at Weinstein A+U
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Image courtesy of Andrew Nam Image courtesy of Andrew Nam

RECENT SELECTED AWARDS

Over the past year UW Architecture faculty, students and alumni have been recognized through significant publications and awards for practice, research, and scholarship. The list below illustrates a portion of that productivity and includes regional, national, and international design awards, major research grants, book publications and exhibitions, and individual honors. Highlights include a short-listed project for the Aga Kahn Award, nine out of fifteen awarded projects at the annual AIA Seattle Honor Awards being led by UW faculty and/or alumni, and Seattle-based Mithun, co-led by three UW alumni, being awarded the 2023 National AIA Firm Award.

FACULTY AWARDS

Practice/Research

• Affiliate Associate Professor Susan Jones

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Award of Merit for HEARTWOOD Mass Timber/Steel Hybrid Workforce Housing

• Assistant Professor Tomas Mendez Echenagucia

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Award of Merit (Research and Innovation) for A Workplace that Resonates

• Associate Professors Elizabeth Golden and Rick Mohler

2022 National AIA Small Project Award for Seattle Street Sink

2022 National EDRA Great Places Award for Seattle Street Sink

2021 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Honorable

Mention for Seattle Street Sink

• Associate Professor Elizabeth Golden

2020-2022 Aga Kahn Award for Architecture Short List for Niamey 2000

• Affiliate Assistant Professor David Strauss

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Honorable

Mention for Byrd Barr Place

2022 AIA Washington Council Civic Design Awards Citation Award for Seymour Conservatory

Grants/Fellowships

• Professor Kate Simonen

Embodied Carbon Policy Support, Climate Works Foundation - $1.5M (PI)

Compiling and Benchmarking Embodied Carbon Data, Alfred P Sloan Foundation - $200,000 (PI)

• Professor Chris Meek, Assistant Professor Tomas Mendez Echenagucia and Professor Kate Simonen

POD | LCA, ARAP-E Hestia - $3,700,000/$3,994,303 (Co PIs)

• Associate Professor Gundula Proksch

National Science Foundation’s Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI) program - $2M (Co-PI)

• Associate Professor Kathryn Rogers Merlino

Saving America’s Treasure’s Grant, Department of the Interior. ASUW Shell House renovation - $500,000 (PI)

• Associate Professor Ann Huppert

Ailsa Mellon Bruce Visiting Senior Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art

• Affiliate Associate Professor Robert Hutchison

Japan-US Creative Artist Fellowship (JUSFC)

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1. A House Deconstructed, Vikram Prakash 2. A Workplace that Resonates, Tomas Mendez Echenagucia

• Professor Brian McLaren

Modern Architecture, Empire, and Race in Fascist Italy, Brill, 2021

• Professor Vikram Prakash

A House Deconstructed, Actar Publishing (with Mark Jarzombek)

• Professor Ken Oshima

2022 “Architectures of Japan: Beyond Borders,” exhibit sponsored by Japan Foundation (Chief curator)

STUDENT AWARDS

Practice & Research

• Vidhya Rajendran MSDT

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Award of Merit (Research and Innovation) for A Workplace that Resonates

• Isabela Noriega

2022 National AIA Small Project Award for Seattle Street Sink

2022 National EDRA Great Places Award for Seattle Street Sink

2021 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Honorable Mention or Seattle Street Sink

Grants/Fellowships

• Daquan Proctor MArch/MLA & Frank Obi MArch

2022 WRNS Studio Foundation Scholarship

ALUMNI AWARDS

Practice

• David Goldberg MArch x, Brendan Connelly, MArch x, Walter Schact, MArch x - President and Partners, Mithun

2022 National AIA Firm Award

• Mariam Kamara MArch x and Jasaman Esmaili MArch x

2020-2022 Aga Kahn Award for Architecture Short List for Niamey 2000 Mariam Kamara MArch 2013

2023 AD Magazine 100

• Ian Butcher MArch x, Kailin Gregga BA Arch x – Principals, Best Practice

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Honor Award for Phinney Mini

• Brendan Connelly - Partner, Mithun

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Honor Award and Energy in Design Award for the Bush School

• Barbara Bushetti MArch x, Leah Martin MArch x - Principals, Allied8 Architects

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Award of Merit for Columbia City Abbey

• David Neiman BA Arch x – Principal, Neiman Taber Architects

2022 AIA Seattle Washington Awards for Architecture Award of Merit Individual Awards

• Mariam Kamara MArch 2013

2023 AD Magazine 100

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Books & Exhibitions
3. HEARTWOOD, Susan Jones 4. ASUW Shellhouse, Kathryn Rogers Merlino 5. Seymour Conservatory, David Strauss

ADVANCED DEGREES IN ARCHITECTURE

MASTER OF SCIENCE IN ARCHITECTURE

The Master of Science (MS) in Architecture is a research-based degree that addresses the increasing demand for research skills in both academia and the profession. Our program provides advanced, concentrated study in two areas of specialization: design technology and architectural history and theory. Both degrees require 45 credits and can be completed in 5-6 quarters. Master of Architecture students who would like to continue on with an MS Architecture degree can share up to 9 credits with their M Arch degree, saving approximately one quarter of study.

The MS Architecture in Design Technology program provides the opportunity for architects, engineers, and other qualified individuals to pursue advance research on topics that include design computing, building performance simulation, sustainable systems and design, high-performance buildings, materials and fabrication, structural analysis, life cycle analysis, food-water-energy nexus, and other related topics. They work closely with faculty advisors to select courses that best suit their research interests and to prepare a clear and focused thesis topic. Students in this program are affiliated with the Design Machine Group research collaborative.

Program director:  Mehlika Inanici, inanci@uw.edu

The MS Architecture in History and Theory examines the architectural, cultural, and political forces that have shaped architecture. Students follow a curriculum that builds research skills, preparing them to do advanced scholarly work in the field. They work closely with faculty advisors to select courses that best suit their research interests and to prepare a clear and focused thesis topic.  Particular areas of faculty research include the many forms of modernity in architecture and urbanism. Subsets of these interests are: modern architecture and the decorative arts; the history and theory of preservation; architectural representation; the arts and crafts movement; and vernacular and domestic architecture. Faculty expertise also includes issues in regional and global modernity.

Program director: Ken Oshima, koshima@uw.edu

1. Prof. Tomás Méndez Echenagucia and Nathan Brown
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2. Radiated Sound Analysis
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COMPUTING

Students have 24/7 access to two computing labs: the Digital Commons, located on the basement level of Gould Hall, consists of computer workstations and a 32-seat classroom. Scanners, printers, and plotters, as well as projectors and meeting areas, allow students to collaborate in small group settings.

ARCHNET is located in Architecture Hall and provides design studio support, technology, and Help Desk services. This lab is set up for 24/7 on demand printing and plotting.

To read more about the computing labs, visit CBE Computing.

DESIGN MACHINE GROUP

The Design Machine Group (DMG) is a multi-disciplinary collaborative research group open to students from several degree streams, including the Department of Architecture’s MS Design Technology, M.Arch, and BA programs, as well as students from the iSchool, HCDE, and CSE. Our aim is to explore and develop ideas with the power to shape the software, technology and conceptual paradigms at the intersection of digital technologies, design, and built environments. The projects developed in the DMG, including explorations in human-computer interaction, fabrication, ubiquitous computing, touch, and lighting, focus on demonstrating new ways of engaging this evolving situation. The DMG is located in G52 Architecture Hall.

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WELCOME TO CBE

Congratulations on your admission to the College of Built Environments! We very much hope you join us in our quest to create a more just and beautiful world. From our careful review of your application, we are confident that you will contribute to and thrive in our community, and that your experiences in the College of Built Environments will ground and accelerate your future success.

You can expect that your experience in our College will provide you with opportunities for learning, research, and engagement that takes advantage of the most unique aspects of our college: together, the disciplines in our college are sharply focused on transforming the built environment for the better. Our degree programs reflect every aspect of shaping, planning, designing, and building the built environment and we are located in a city that exemplifies why solutions are needed for the most urgent challenges facing the world today. Through our complementary disciplinary expertise areas and approaches to the built and natural worlds, we instigate transformational change in industries that have historically been too slow to change.

We expect graduate students in our college to be active participants in their learning and to engage in shaping the work of the college with a wide range of partners. In CBE, our commitment to equity means appreciating the agency of all of the many stakeholders in our community and practicing deep listening in order to be excellent collaborators.

If you are curious to know more about our work, please look at our website, or reach out to the contacts provided in your offer letter if you have any questions. Congratulations and we look forward to welcoming you as members of our community!

Sincerely,

Renée Cheng

COMMITMENT TO EQUITY, DIVERSITY, & INCLUSION

At CBE we believe that Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) are essential to meeting our goal of a more just and beautiful world. We believe that focusing on equitable and inclusive principles in the built environment, elevates diversity and justice, and results in increased prosperity and deeper levels of engagement for everyone. The built environment bears a disproportionate share of carbon emissions and energy consumption in the world and we have seen disparate impacts of place-based determinants on health and wellness. This responsibility comes with the power to enact positive change in both how we work and the outcomes of things we work on. Working equitably is key to equitable outcomes since complex problems require the ability to work effectively with people who come from different backgrounds, points of view, and cultural norms.

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Dear Future Member of College of Built Environments Community,
RENÉE CHENG, FAIA

COLLEGE OF BUILT ENVIRONMENTS

BE/ARCH/CM/LA/RE/UDP/PHD

The UW College of Built Environments is one of the few institutions where architecture, construction management, urban design and planning, landscape architecture, and real estate come together. Our mission is to teach students to be skilled practitioners, strong collaborators, who are conscious of the natural environment and cultures they work for. As researchers, we aim to understand the place and context that the built environments has in our world, address big questions, and come up with solutions that preserve our world, while also moving forward in a way that is equitable for everyone. As our work spans all areas of health, business, technology, design, sustainability, and policy, we work to act as mobilizers to the community and as experts in our professions.

BUILT ENVIRONMENTS INNOVATION

iBE is a consortium of labs, research centers, and service learning programs that pursue innovative solutions to challenges facing communities, cities, and regions. The institute is the first point of contact for engagement by groups and agencies seeking assistance in addressing real world issues. Through the Institute, we are able to leverage the collective capacity of the College and University to bring together all areas of our expertise to solve problems and generate new ideas to serve the public good.

COMMITMENT TO COMMUNITY

LEADERSHIP

Renee Cheng: Dean

Department Chairs & Directors:

Giovanni Migliaccio: Construction Management

Brian McLaren: Architecture

Christopher Campbell: Urban Design & Planning

Ken Yocom: Landscape Architecture

Steve Bourassa: Runstad Center for Real Estate Studies

INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVE

We bring together five interconnected disciplines to act as one consortium of experts committed to creative and innovative problem solving. We achieve our success through teaching and research collaborations, knowledge sharing and taking on real-world projects. Examples of our interdisciplinary practice include:

McKinley Futures Studio

Livable City Year Program

Runstad Center Affiliate Fellows Program

Integrated Design Lab

Design/Build Studios

Storefront Studio

Beyond skills in planning, design, building, and place making, it is critical that our students recognize their profession has a responsibility to provide people with healthy and safe places to live their lives. CBE students participate in service learning projects at all levels of their education. Some of our annual projects include:

17 municipalities have benefited from the Storefront Studiostudents work with small business districts to re-imagine their identity and revitalize underused spaces.

6 regions included in our Health Impact Assessment Course - studying the impact of environment and infrastructure in local communities.

20 years of Neighborhood Design/Build Studios - Multiple courses take on the planning and construction.

A.R.C. FELLOWSHIP

Through the ARC initiative, built environment firms with a presence in the Seattle area partner with College of Built Environments (CBE) graduate students and faculty for research that is targeted at the specific needs of the firms. Firms work with faculty to shape research priorities for the consortium based on their needs and the latest research in our fields. ARC then matches graduate student fellows with firms for multi-quarter applied research projects that directly relate to the firms’ current work. Faculty mentors and supervisors at firms work with the fellows, contributing to their academic and professional development in the program and ensuring that the projects fit with longer term research goals. Learn more about this unique program here.

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GRADUATE HOUSING

As a graduate student, your apartment living options are many and varied. You can live right next door to campus or just a short bus ride away. Our furnished and unfurnished apartments are available to students who are single, married, registered same-sex domestic partners, as well as students with families.

APARTMENTS

For students attending the UW on a year-round schedule or those planning to work and live in Seattle during summer quarter. Autumn, winter, spring and summer contract. Mercer Court buildings D and E are reserved for graduate and professional students and come furnished with full-size beds.

FAMILY APARTMENTS

Ideal for married students or students living with children, who are attending the UW full-time. Month-to-month contract. For more info, visit Graduate Student Apartments.

TUITION & FEES

Tuition for the 2023-24 academic year will be published by the UW Planning & Budgeting office in June on the Graduate Tuition Dashboard

Tuition & fee information below is based on 2022-23 tuition.

Department of Architecture, Masters Degrees

Resident: Non-Residents: $18,993 $38,832

If you submitted a FAFSA to the UW please visit the Office of Financial Aid.

1. Gould Court 2. Architecture Hall 3. Graduate Student Housing, Mercer Court 4. Graduate Student Housing, Radford Court 5. Cherry Blossoms 6. UW Campus
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7. Architecture Hall
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UW CAMPUS

When you come to the UW’s Seattle campus, you’re part of more than the innovative city that’s brought us everything from legendary music to lifesaving cures. You’re part of something bigger, too. You’re part of a globally connected community that loves to innovate, to explore, to create. Here, you’re part of Seattle’s vibrant history — and the world’s promising future.

Take a virtual tour of UW Campus. Explore curated videos featuring campus highlights, housing tours, student perspectives and Seattle sights.

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UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

COLLEGE OF BUILT ENVIRONMENTS DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE

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