MASTER OF ARTS IN URBAN DESIGN
MAUD Programme Handbook AY 22 23 Department of Architecture National University of Singapore
MAUD Programme Handbook AY 22 23 Department of Architecture National University of Singapore
NUS has been leading the urban design education in Asia since 1998, when the Master of Arts in Urban Design (MAUD) was established as the first of its kind programme in Asia. Over the past two decades, the MAUD programme has cultivated numerous leading urban designers with strategic visions and creative thinking skills for Asia and beyond. Today, in response to the fast changing and increasingly complex urban realities, this programme provides students with an unparalleled learning opportunity, tapping into the experience of Singapore and cities in Asia as laboratories for design innovation and excellence. It aims to equip graduates with cutting edge knowledge, social responsibility, entrepreneurial spirit, and all necessary skills to push forward the urban design profession in the rapidly urbanising world.
The learning of MAUD programme is organised around several key areas: 1) high density urban environment and its physical structures and social conditions; 2) technological advancement and data augmented design; 3) social engagement and community development; and 4) systems thinking and collaboration in design.
The MAUD programme is a one year full time programme (two year part time). Its interdisciplinary curriculum is anchored by two urban design studios and a set of theory, methodology and technology modules. Students are able to participate in overseas field trips, internship attachments, and research activities to broaden their exposure and enrich their learning. This programme is uniquely positioned to leverage on Singapore’s experiences and its role as the central hub of the region and the world. It brings to students:
• A global perspectives on Asian urban challenges
The teaching team of the MAUD programme is drawn from an international cast of experts from both academia and practice to provide students with global perspectives and help them become future ready urban designers to deal with
challenges in and beyond Asia. Besides, Singapore as the regional hub for many multinational design and planning firms attracts numerous urban professionals around the world, who are also engaged in various ways to enhance the teaching and learning of this programme.
• Singapore as a laboratory for high density urbanism
Singapore is well known for its outstanding achievements in high density urbanism. It is the birthplace of many innovative urban design ideas that lead to the production of high quality urban spaces across many cities. To study in and on Singapore is to live the city state’s experience, witnessing how it creates new spatial configurations, incorporates natural resources, promotes public engagement, and harnesses smart technologies to achieve successful placemaking.
• Broad exposure through varsity industry government partnerships
Understanding relations and creating synergies between different stakeholders can result in more constructive outcomes of urban design. The programme continuously engages practitioners and government officers in the teaching of different modules to deepen students’ learning through various lenses, and also to ground their studies on real world challenges.
• Collaborative learning to nurture leadership for greater cities
A defining character of urban design practice is collaboration across different knowledge boundaries and professional disciplines. Besides vocational knowledge, this programme places social and intellectual interdependence at the core of the education. It nurtures leadership skills in future urban designers for them to helm multi professional, multi disciplinary collaboration with strong commitment to creating greater cities.
The MAUD curriculum aims to create an encompassing platform to consolidate students’ knowledge foundation and, more importantly, promote interdisciplinary collaborative learning. The modules are therefore designed to strike a balance between design studio and different aspects of urban design in terms of content, and between project based and discussion based
learning in terms of pedagogy. Many modules are shared with other programmes to provide students with an opportunity to work across disciplinary boundaries, socially negotiating knowledge with different peers. A diversity of practitioners and government officers are also engaged to provide students with wider exposures through seminar conversation and dissertation research.
SEMESTER ONE MODULE INSTRUCTOR
UD5601
URBAN DESIGN STUDIO 1
Ms. Asma KHAWATMI Visiting Associate Professor
UD5221
URBAN DESIGN THEORY AND DISCOURSE
UD5622 FRAMEWORK OF URBAN DESIGN AND ANALYSIS
Ms. Asma KHAWATMI Visiting Associate Professor
Mr. François DECOSTER Visiting Associate Professor; Founding Partner (l’AUC)
Mr. Jason ANG Adjunct Associate Professor; Managing Director (UVest)
Dr. Ye ZHANG Associate Professor
Ms. Asma KHAWATMI Visiting Associate Professor
UD5625 METHODS AND TOOLS FOR URBAN DESIGN
UD5626 URBAN ECONOMICS
Dr. Filip BILJECKI Assistant Professor
Dr. Maxwell NIE Postdoctoral Research Fellow (Harvard)
SEMESTER TWO MODULE INSTRUCTOR
UD5602
URBAN DESIGN STUDIO 2 Mr. Shee Tiog TAN Adjunct Associate Professor
UD5628
CRITIQUES OF CONTEMPORARY URBAN DESIGN
Dr. Ye ZHANG Associate Professor
Ms. Karen THAM Executive Director (AECOM Singapore)
Dr. Ye ZHANG Associate Professor
TWO ELECTIVES If Dissertation is not selected
DISSERTATION
Dr. Ye ZHANG Associate Professor
Dr. Beng Kiang TAN Associate Professor
Dr. Zdravko TRIVIC Assistant Professor
MODULE WEEK DAY TIME VENUE
UD5601 3 13 Monday, Thursday 2 6PM
MAUD Studio, CREATE Building
UD5221 3 13 Tuesday 2 6PM Shared space, MAUD studio, CREATE building
UD5622 0 2 Every Afternoon 2 6PM MAUD Studio, CREATE Building
UD5625 1 13 Monday 6:30 9:30PM Executive Room 1, SDE4
UD5626 1 13 Wednesday 9AM 1PM Online
TBC
Please refer to NUS academic calendar: https://nus.edu.sg/registrar/docs/info/calendar/a y2022 2023.pdf
The first urban design studio focuses on establishing a comprehensive understanding of urban design procedures. Following UD5622, the studio explores a deeper understanding on various urban systems (urban form, public space networks, transport/infrastructure networks, green/blue networks) and their synthesis. Students are expected to work in groups on all studio tasks. The studio is broken down into two stages in the first stage, all groups propose different guide plans for an urban district; in the second stage, all groups are assigned with different sites for developing masterplan and urban design guidelines. Along with the design process, students are expected to conduct case studies, socioeconomic and geospatial analysis using knowledge from other modules. Instructors from other modules also engage in the studio’s review activities, in order to foster multi level collaborative learning.
Building on the learning outcomes of Urban Design Studio 1, this module comprises three independent design studios, each aiming to tackle a contemporary urban challenge that is aligned with the studio leader’s expertise. Students are expected to work in groups, conducting systematic theoretical research, analysing urban design precedents, articulating urban design strategies, and developing fine grained urban design schemes. Each studio usually includes a field trip to a city either within or beyond the region that is in line with the studio theme, allowing students to expand their horizons and gain experiences of working with local authorities and institutions (the field trip has been suspended during the Covid 19 pandemic).
Urban design is a discipline that focuses on the interaction of groups of buildings, streets and open spaces within a larger context. This introductory module will focus on some of the physical elements that impinge and influence urban design. The module aims to impart knowledge, understanding and analytical skills in urban design, through lectures, reading discussions, fieldwork and case studies analysis in order to develop the capacities of the students to: Describe city fabric and its material stocks, flows and their interdependencies; Understand the socio economic drivers and
catalysts for urban design; Appreciate and evaluate the performance of city elements in time; and Formulate well reasoned criteria for analysis and assessment of contemporary urban design conditions of varying scales, complexity and contexts.
This course is taken in conjunction with urban design studios. Approaches of urban analysis and urban design will be taught to enable the students to tackle urban design projects of varying scales in the following studios, UD5601. This module is conducted as an intensive workshop on a daily basis over a period of three weeks (usually week 0 to 3 of Semester One). The various aspects of urban design, including urban structure, urban form, transportation, infrastructure, parcellation, etc. will be introduced through lectures, hands on tutorials and group work. Each group of students will produce and present a schematic spatial framework for a community. Upon finishing the workshop, students will get spatial and scale senses on urban design and become familiar with the local urban environment.
This module is intended for MSc in Real Estate and MAUD students and others at the Business School and the School of Design and Environment who aspire to learn about geographic information in the urban context and attain basic GIS skills. This inter programme module has a multidisciplinary touch and much of it is focused on a variety of applications. The module focuses on urban problems, but the generic skills you develop in this module will be useful for a wide range of data, and give you a solid foundation to explore particular and focused problems. This module is composed of lectures, demos, tutorials, readings and range of assignments, providing hands on the state of the art tools, datasets, and methods to manipulate, analyse, and visualise geospatial data. Upon completion of the module, students will be able to: Start thinking about data spatially; Collect appropriate geospatial data and assess its suitability; Use QGIS, one of the most widely used GIS software packages; Conduct data processing and spatial analysis; Portray the results in an effective way; Be critical with maps and spatial
analyses; Use the attained knowledge and skills in their studies and career.
This module is a shared module between MAUD and MUP programmes. It explains the economic forces that shape urban development and create a multitude of urban challenges we face today. It aims to provide a holistic framework for evaluating urban planning and design interventions devised to tackle these challenges. After reviewing the relevant fundamental economic forces, the module examines urban challenges arising from disruptive technologies and the governance gaps in globalization that threaten economic inclusiveness and environmental sustainability. It further examines citymaking visions to tackle these challenges and the creation of public resources and private incentives for realizing these visions.
This module aims to help students develop a critical understanding of emerging urban challenges through assessing a series of contemporary urban design projects. In the face of accelerating technological advancement, exacerbating environmental degradation, and in particular unexpected threats such as the Covid 19 pandemic, our cities are confronted with many emerging challenges. This requires us to reflect on and re conceptualise urban design practice. By examining the latest debates and discussions, and through conversations with experts from practices, government agencies, and academia, this module will provide students with a multi perspective platform for them to develop their own critical views and convictions of urban design.
UD5641 Dissertation is a research intensive module for MAUD students that enables conducting an independent research project during their study under the supervision of a research active faculty member with expertise in a related domain.
The key objectives of the dissertation module are to provide an opportunity to the student to understand how to conduct scientific research and to deepen their expertise in a particular topic of interest. The module is flexible, it allows freedom in exploring own interests, and it is predominantly individual. The main deliverable is a research report to be submitted at the end of their studies. The dissertation module is conducted primarily between the student and supervisor, with sporadic contact with the coordinator, other academic staff, and other students. It is important to highlight that the dissertation is an independent study, thus, a student will undertake a higher degree of independence than usual.
The key components of this module are:
• Literature review: getting familiar with the state of the art of a relevant topic.
• Conceptusalisation of research: defining a research question/topic/objective.
• Exploration (performing preliminary experiments to assess the feasibility of the topic).
• Designing a sound research methodology.
• Conducting research/experiments.
• Presentation of the work (in class presentation and writing a report).
• Understanding potential for future work and further applications.
The results of this module may serve as a foundation for further research or for publication in an external outlet, e.g. conference or journal.
The dissertation module is not a module during doctoral studies, so cutting edge research or advanced originality is not expected as it is at the PhD level, but a degree of novelty and quality at the graduate level of a research university is required. This module is also for those who are interested in pursuing PhDs to better prepare themselves.
Besides the student, the dissertation includes the supervisor, co reader, and coordinator.
Each dissertation must have a supervisor. The supervisor is responsible for the overall project from early discussions to the final submission, and he/she is involved in all the steps of the process. A supervisor may be a faculty member who is domain expert in a particular topic.
The co reader serves as the second examiner of the dissertation (besides the supervisor) at the final stage of the module. The co reader may not be involved in the research to ensure the objectivity of assessment. A co reader is arranged by the coordinator, but input from the student and supervisor may be considered in certain circumstances.
The coordinator manages the organisation and execution of the module, and administrative matters. Students are welcome to contact the coordinator for queries before and during this module.
Most of the contact is directly between the student and supervisor (and optionally, co supervisor) through periodic progress meetings. The schedule will be discussed between the student and supervisor. Weekly contact (if not meetings, then at least a brief status update) is encouraged, but no more than two weeks should pass between consecutive discussions.
During the semester, we will meet twice as a cohort: Introduction to the module with some tips (in the first few weeks); Midterm review (This session is to solicit feedback, check on the progress, and have an opportunity to consolidate thoughts and writing. It plays no role in the marking. The presence of the supervisor is necessary).
There is no final thesis defense. The only final deliverable is the report.
The MAUD programme aims to enhance students’ learning by broadening their exposure to different urban environments and professional practices. The field trip takes students to cities within or beyond the region for 7 to 10 days, learning about
urban design practice in the local contexts. Students will be able to interact with scholars, practitioners, and government officers to gain insights on the practice, and to explore the cities to observe and experience the urban spaces.
Each student receives a letter grade for each module taken, depending on his/her academic performance. Each grade corresponds to a grade point as shown below:
GRADE GRADE POINT
A+ 5.00
A 5.00
A 4.50
B+ 4.00 B 3.50 B 3.00 C+ 2.50 C 2.00 D+ 1.50 D 1.00 F 0
Students are allowed to request a review to a grade within 3 days after the release of the grade. Please refer to: https://www.nus.edu.sg/registrar/administrative policies procedures/graduate/grading policy examination process
Academic progress is tracked by the CAP, which is the weighted average grade point of all modules taken by a student. Therefore, a student's CAP is the sum of the module grade points multiplied by the number of Modular Credits (MCs) for the corresponding module, divided by the total number of MCs. This is represented as follows:
CAP = SUM (MODULE GRADE POINT X MCs ASSIGNED TO MODULE) / SUM (MCs ASSIGNED TO ALL MODULES
An online CAP calculator is available at: https://inetapps.nus.edu.sg/capcalc/cap_calculat or.aspx
For continuation to the Semester 2, a student must achieve a minimum grade B for UD5601 and a minimum CAP of 2.50.
For any semester in which the student’s CAP falls below 3.0 (but ≥2.50), that student will be issued an academic warning. For any semester in which the student’s CAP falls below 2.50, that student will be issued an academic Probation.
To be eligible for graduation, a student must complete all essential modules and 44MCs, and achieve:
• A minimum CAP of 3.0, and
• Minimum grade B for both UD5601 and UD5602
The above requirements are subject to the university’s policy change. For more information, please refer to:
• Continuation and Graduation Requirements, NUS Registrar’s Office: https://www.nus.edu.sg/registrar/academic information policies/graduate/graduate continuation and graduation requirements
• Modular System, NUS Registrar’s Office: https://www.nus.edu.sg/registrar/academic information policies/graduate/modular system
• Continuation and Graduation Requirements, College of Design and Engineering: https://cde.nus.edu.sg/graduate/graduate programmes by coursework/graduation requirements/
Academic writing is one of the most essential challenges for postgraduate studies. Here are some resources that are useful for your academic excellence during your study period.
• Architectural research guide, NUS Libraries: https://libguides.nus.edu.sg/Architecture_Met hodology
• Urban studies guide, NUS Libraries: https://libguides.nus.edu.sg/yncurban
• Geographical Information System guide, NUS Libraries: https://libguides.nus.edu.sg/yncgis
Students are encouraged to use consultation service at Writing and Communication Hub, to improve writing and communication abilities. For more information, please refer to: https://www.nus.edu.sg/celc/writinghub/index.ht ml
Especially, students are required to use uniform citation styles while writing, based on the specific requirements from instructors. Please refer to the citation guides: https://libguides.nus.edu.sg/citation
All students are expected to maintain and uphold the highest standards of integrity and honesty at all
times The University takes a strict view of cheating in any form, deceptive fabrication, plagiarism and violation of intellectual property and copyright laws. The most common form of academic dishonesty is Plagiarism. Plagiarism is generally defined as “presentingotherpeople’s workorideasasyourownwithorwithouttheir consent,byincorporatingitintoyourworkwithout fullacknowledgement,whetherintentionallyor not” (The New Oxford Dictionary of English) The University does not condone plagiarism.
To avoid plagiarism, students are expected to cite whenever you 1) directly quote from a source, 2) paraphrase or summarize ideas/argument from a source, 3) reference your own work, and 4) use statistics/data/images/other works created by others.
Please carefully read the following guide: https://libguides.nus.edu.sg/new2nus/acadintegri ty
To detect and prevent plagiarism, postgraduate students can use iThenticate to check their own work. Please refer to: https://cit.nus.edu.sg/plagiarism prevention/; and https://wiki.nus.edu.sg/display/cit/iThenticate
The MAUD experiences provide its students with visionary insights, critical skills and needed knowledge to excel in various sectors of urban development in the region and beyond. In particular, it gives them newfound capacities and broadened perspectives to address emerging challenges to high density cities in Asia. With a degree from one of the world’s premier universities, NUS graduates’ standing and marketability are greatly enhanced.
Many MAUD alumni work as professionals in different fields, from design firms to planning institutes, from real estate developers to government authorities, and from urban consultancies to creative industries. Some graduates become entrepreneurs, others may segue to research and continue to pursue PhDs.
The MAUD programme has established close collaborations with Singapore’s government agencies, such as Urban Redevelopment Authority and Housing and Development Board, and various local practices like DP Architects, providing students with internship opportunities to experience professional life and complement with their classroom learning.
NUS Centre of Future ready Graduates provides series of resources and events for career advancement and skill boost. Moreover, students are encouraged to consult the career advisors for advices on career planning, resume, cover letter, etc. For more information, please refer to: https://nus.edu.sg/cfg/students/postgraduate
Department of Architecture
College of Design and Engineering, National University of Singapore 4 Architecture Drive, SDE1 #03 01 Singapore 117 566 +65 6516 8736
Programme Director
Associate Prof. Ye ZHANG (Dr) akizy@nus.edu.sg
Executive (Academic)
Jonathan Wai LEONG akijlw@nus.edu.sg Tel: +65 6516 3454
Programme Teaching Assistant Zhuoshu HE akizhe@nus.edu.sg
Programme Website https://cde.nus.edu.sg/arch/programmes/master of arts in urban design/
Instagram @nusurbandesign
LinkedIn Group https://www.linkedin.com/groups/14007829/
MAUD Programme Handbook AY 22 23 Department of Architecture National University of Singapore
Updated July 2022