Interior Architecture Courses
INTAR 3130-01
X-REALITIES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course seeks to introduce the underlying concepts and technologies of spatial computing and to provide a fundamental understanding of AI. Thus, it shall enable the students to partake in a technological transformation now unfolding, and driven by spatial computing and artificial intelligence. The “X” in X-Reality stands for the four spatial computing technologies Augmented, Mixed, Assisted and Virtual Reality, all of which will be creatively explored in this course.
Estimated Cost of Materials: 100.00
Open to Junior, Senior or Graduate Students.
Elective
LAEL 1017-01
HISTORY OF INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE I: 1400-1850
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course will examine personalities working in Europe and in North America as well as non-western regions in the period 1400 to 2009. Areas of study will include an examination of interior architecture related issues that will be studied in the context of their social, political, technological, and economic circumstances, as they pertain to the design culture of the period. Special emphasis will be given to interior additions and renovations and other interventions. Other areas of study will include the development of architectural drawing, and the way in which designs often evolved through committees, or ongoing consultations among patrons, designers, administrators, and scholars. Attention will also be given to design theory, and the doctrines relating to site, orientation, proportion, decorum, and the commercial design market. A general background in the history of art and design is desirable but not mandatory.
Open to Sophomore Interior Architecture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Interior Studies
LAEL 1027-01
HISTORY OF INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE II: 1850 to Present
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course will examine the major designers working in the period 1850 to the present. Areas of study will include an examination of design related issues that will be studied in the context of their social, political, technological, and economic circumstances, as they pertain to the design culture of the period. Special emphasis will be given to the history of interior interventions, additions and renovations. Other areas of study will include the development of architectural drawing and other presentation media, and the way in which designs often evolved through committees, or ongoing consultations among the patrons, designers, administrators, and scholars. Attention will also be given to design theory, and the doctrines relating to site, orientation, proportion, decorum, and the commercial design market. A general background in the history of art and design is desirable but is not mandatory.
Open to Sophomore Interior Architecture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Interior Studies