University of Sydney Handbooks - 2011 Archive

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Welcome

A message from the Dean

Dean of Architecture, Design and Planning, Warren Julian

Welcome to the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning at the University of Sydney.

As a student you are joining Australia€™s first university and the first faculty in our disciplines, one of the nation€™s, and world€™s, leading institutions. As well as undertaking a particular course of study or candidature, you are joining a community €’ a collegiate body €’ that is a central part of the €˜Sydney Experience€™ and a source of great pride for students and staff. It is through this that you obtain a true university experience as opposed to just studying a course. I believe that the quality of this life at Sydney and in the faculty is matched by very few other institutions.

The faculty is a community of fellow students, researchers, technical and support staff, practitioners and lecturers who are here because they are passionate about the human habitat and the creative and analytical methods to improve it, in order to make life better for people. While your initial experience here may be in lectures and the faculty€™s social life, I hope that you will progressively engage with our underlying culture, commitments and passion. We want you to come to believe in the value of our disciplines as much as we do.

This handbook sets out the diversity of the faculty€™s disciplines and activities. You may begin your journey as an undergraduate in the architecture or design computing programs or as a student in the combined architecture and engineering degree.

At postgraduate level your options extend across many different coursework or research programs including interaction design and electronic arts (IDEA), facilities management, heritage conservation, urban design, urban and regional planning and design science (with streams in audio and acoustics, building services, illumination design and sustainable design). Our professional Master of Architecture qualification is open to qualified graduates not only from our own undergraduate architecture program but also from similar programs across Australia and overseas.

Whichever program you are in you may take the opportunity to explore related fields of study with electives from other programs or combinations of degrees.

The faculty has an outstanding reputation for research across all our disciplines, with an enviable publishing record. It is the home of a number of respected academic journals including Architectural Science Review and Architectural Theory Review, while the Planning Research Centre continues to lead applied research on urban planning issues in New South Wales and Australia.

The range of disciplines which the faculty brings to bear on the environment €’ architecture, urban and regional planning and policy, architectural science, design, art, media and computing €’ enables a full understanding of the myriad interrelated factors and issues which constitute key thinking and practice in these fields.

The disciplines are supported by an outstanding range of studios, workshops and laboratories, creating an excellent creative, technical and scientific environment within which you will undertake your work.

Over the past 90 years, the faculty has developed a reputation for innovative thinking in research, teaching and practice across its disciplines. Australia’s first architecture program and the first studies in town planning, starting in 1919, were followed by the world€™s first Chair of Architectural Science in 1953 and in 1963 by the award of Australia's first PhD in architecture. The Design Lab, formerly the Key Centre of Design Computing and Cognition, has an enviable international research reputation, and the Heritage Conservation program has made an important contribution to Australia’s cultural identity.

It is important to mention the high standards required to become a part of this faculty €’ this community. Selection into the architecture program is largely from the top 5 per cent of NSW’s school leavers. The capability of our students, among whom striving for and achieving academic excellence is the norm, is part of what makes this faculty an exciting learning environment.

Whether it€™s life in the colleges, in the faculty’s €˜Hearth€™, its studios, labs or the myriad of facilities in and around the University and the city of Sydney, there can be few better places in which to have a full and enriching university experience.

The faculty seeks to inspire you with a lifelong passion for your chosen field that will sustain you throughout your studies and career. Enjoy your time here and above all use it well to make the most of the wonderful opportunities that studying at the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning provides.


Professor John Redmond
Dean

Short history

The Faculty of Architecture, the first in Australia, was established in 1919 to conduct an undergraduate professional Bachelor of Architecture program. In 1948, the Department of Town and Country Planning was founded within the faculty and in 1989 was renamed the Department of Urban and Regional Planning. A Chair of Architectural Science was created in 1954, around which the Department of Architectural Science developed. In 1989, the department was renamed the Department of Architectural and Design Science.

The Tin Sheds Gallery and Art Studios became part of the faculty in 1990, having previously been a central academic service unit which developed from resources provided by the faculty in the 1960s. In 2002, the faculty was restructured, with a faculty-wide school overseeing the disciplines created from the old departments. In 2004, the school itself was set aside for a flat structure of one faculty, with four loose disciplines defining areas of research and teaching activity. The faculty changed its name to the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning in 2006 to reflect the evolving diversity of its academic activities.

Since 1984, the faculty has been housed under one roof in the purpose-designed Wilkinson Building which includes the Tin Sheds Gallery and the largest and most advanced centre for design computing in Australia. It is located adjacent to the brand new SciTech Library which contains an outstanding architecture and planning collection. The faculty also has three research centres: the AHURI Housing and Urban Research Centre, the Ian Buchan Fell Housing Research Centre and the Planning Research Centre.