Course syllabus

Link to the syllabus

 

Course-PM

ACE495 New urban landscapes lp2 HT23 (15 hp)

Course is offered by the department of Architecture and Civil Engineering

 

Contact details

Joaquim Tarrasó, Architect. Course Examiner & Tutor joaquim.tarraso@chalmers.se

Carl-Johan Vesterlund, Architect. Course Tutor  carl-johan.vesterlund@chalmers.se

Louise Didriksson, Landscape Architect. Course Tutor louise.didriksson@chalmers.se

Kengo Skorick, Architect. Course Tutor  kengo@chalmers.se

Jorge Gil, Lecturer. Associate Professor in Urban Analytics and Informatics   jorge.gil@chalmers.se 

 

Course purpose

Aim

The Aim of the course is to develop the student's ability to intervene in complex urban environments using design as an integration tool and in pursuit of sustainable urban models.

The urban space is a result of countless overlapping layers of different character, all of them with implications in terms of social, cultural, environmental, and economical parameters. That situation has important consequences in the Urban physical environment, both in the fields of Architecture, Urban Landscape and infrastructure Landscape. To understand and address such a complexity in the course the student will work with a transverse approach through different scales and complementary disciplines.

New urban landscapes focus on urban river contexts to develop proposals that interpret and solve the diversity of conflicts typically present in these areas, departing from contextual analysis and leading to spatial proposals to create architectural solutions that establish new types of relationship between urbanization and nature.

 

Content

The course focuses on river environments in the city of Gothenburg, with the intention to develop proposals that interpret and solve the diversity of conflicts typically present in these areas. Along river structures, across Urban areas, we find many different layers in an unbalanced coexistence. Most of industrial cities have converted along history former natural landscapes into urban structures related to infrastructure and logistics. In relation to this phenomena, the course uses the context of Gothenburg with its diversity of rivers to learn about that unbalance situation and to propose new scenarios of Urban reconnection related to green and blue infrastructure that can propose and effective coexistence between urban and environmental qualities.

The course promotes an experimental and creative research-by-design approach, based on a strong knowledge of facts and contexts. The learning process holds on all the working stages of space design, from preliminary analysis, an understanding of the site from specific and relevant parameters, that are mapped and articulated in intentional cartographies which are transformed in spatial structures through modeling. An iterative process resulting in spatial strategies and finally in design of alternative Urban Landscapes. During the course the students will work with green corridors related to riversides in the city of Gothenburg.

 

Course design

New Urban Landscapes is a Design studio starting on Monday 30th October 2023 and ending on Friday 12th of January 2024. The course is project-design based.  During the course lecturers and experts will provide information and knowledge in relation to specific studied locations and contribute with a broader interdisciplinary perspective. 

The design process is assessed and monitored throughout the course, based on weekly supervision sessions, as well as partial reviews linked to seminars and workshops. The course also fosters the student's analytical and critical capacity through peer review sessions. The course concludes with final presentations and exhibition.

The course is organized in four phases. All combine group and individual work and are developed through a series of assignments, together with lectures, visits, seminars, and workshops. All activities are intended to support the design process.

Regarding the four course Phases, all of them promote an experimental research based on a knowledge of facts and contexts. Every phase is carried out to inform and be developed in the next step: the site analysis and mapping will help to define the basis for working strategy, not merely as a descriptive product.  

  

Phase 1: Analysis & Landscape Strategies 

2 weeks of team work to analyze and explore elementary concepts related to river landscapes in Gothenburg that will be developed along the course. Landscape concepts establisning relations between urban and environmental systems.

 

Phase 2: Spatial Explorations and proposal

2 weeks of team + Individual work for methodologically and experimentally generate schematic designs.

 

Phase 3: Project Definition 

3 weeks of Team + Individual work for integration of the strategies into the definition of a green-blue corridor .

 

Phase 4: Exhibition & Publication

3 weeks of Studio and self study work about dissemination of our work to generate new knowledge and impact discourse. 

 

Schedule

See Canvas calendar

 

Course literature

A list of literature will be provided in the course description and will be available before the beginning of the course.

 

Changes made since the last occasion

ACE495 New Urban Landscapes is a new course

 

Learning objectives and syllabus

Learning objectives:

Knowledge and understanding

  • Demonstrate theoretical and critical understanding of models and references of urban design based on transverse approach in terms of complementary disciplines, as well as insights into current architectural practice and research.
  • Demonstrate understanding of the different layers connected to river areas, the conflicts related to the coexistence between urbanization and environmental qualities for these types of contexts and the diversity of scales related to them.
  • Demonstrate knowledge of environmental adaptation and sustainable development in the built environment and refer to relevant research findings in the field of architecture / landscape architecture / urban design from a sustainable perspective.

Competence and skills

  • Design, develop and preserve the built environment from a holistic perspective, dealing with complex contexts and regarding existing values and demands from different users perspectives and in relation to sustainable development
  • Fulfil qualified projects within urban design; independently, creative, and critically with adequate methods and syntheses.
  • Be able to describe and assess the qualities of design and built environment and clearly motivate different proposals with reference to scientific and experience-based knowledge and value-based arguments.
  • Describe and analyze urban systems by applying software for mapping and modelling from developing strategies to detail design.
  • Use an iterative and speculative method to design a project by Systematically apply knowledge and understanding of physical, technical and process principles in design.
  • Demonstrate the capacity for teamwork and collaboration with various constellations
  • Dialogue and communicate with different stakeholders and colleagues using the entire repertoire of architectural media and methods, to present the reasoning and work conclusions and so to generate knowledge about architectural design and hereby contribute to the development of the profession.

Judgement and approach

  • Use critical thinking to assess and constructively evaluate projects, informed by relevant disciplinary, social and ethical aspects, and to integrate the needs of all people as a fundament for proposals of long-term and high aesthetic quality.
  • Be able to interpret, question and develop given prerequisites based on achieved knowledge and experience and create unexpected or not demanded values in proposals.
  • Be able to show intention, commitment, and ability to identify needs for further knowledge and undertake on-going development of the students skills.

 

Examination form

The course examination form is based on continuous assessment through different course components. To pass the course is required active participation in scheduled activities and group work. It is expected presence in a minimum of 80% of all scheduled activities, including lectures, visits, seminars, supervision, pinups, and presentations. Some absence can be accepted if there are legitimate reasons, and they are communicated in advance, to compensate, supplementary assignments may be handed in.

The review of the submitted final project work weighs heavily in the collective assessment that forms the basis of the examination. Supplementations will be asked when the students’ work does not fulfil the course objectives and presentation requirements)

The course examiner may assess individual students in other ways than what is stated above if there are special reasons for doing so, for example if a student has a decision from Chalmers on educational support due to disability.

Course summary:

Date Details Due