Yale School of Architecture
Yale School of Architecture | |
---|---|
Former names |
Department of Architecture (1916–59) School of Art and Architecture (1959–72) |
Established | 1916 |
Type | Private |
Academic affiliation | Yale University |
Location |
New Haven, Connecticut, USA 41°18′31″N 72°55′54″W / 41.30861°N 72.93167°WCoordinates: 41°18′31″N 72°55′54″W / 41.30861°N 72.93167°W |
Dean | Robert A. M. Stern |
Academic staff | 65 |
Postgraduates | 199 |
Doctoral students | 9 (GSAS) |
Website | architecture.yale.edu |
[1] |
The Yale School of Architecture is one of the constituent professional schools of Yale University. It is generally considered to be one of the most prestigious architecture schools in the world.[2][3][4]
History
Yale's architecture programs are an outgrowth of a longstanding commitment to the teaching of the fine arts in the university. "Art was first taught at an American college or university in 1869 when the Yale School of the Fine Arts was established. Yale alumnus and educator Andrew Dickson White was offered the post as the first dean of the school, but turned it down to be the first president of Cornell University. Even earlier, in 1832, Yale opened the Trumbull Art Gallery, the first college-affiliated gallery in the country. The Department of Architecture was established in the School of the Fine Arts in 1916. In 1959 the School of Art and Architecture, as it was then known, was made into a fully graduate professional school. In 1972 Yale designated the School of Architecture as its own separate professional school."[5]
The School is housed in the masterwork of its former Dean, Paul Rudolph. Rudolph Hall, formerly the Yale Art and Architecture Building, was rededicated and reoccupied in November 2008 following an extensive renovation and addition carried out by a team which included renowned New York architect and Yale alumnus Charles Gwathmey.
Programs
The school awards the degrees of Master of Architecture, a professional degree, Master of Architecture II, a post-professional degree, Master of Environmental Design, a nonprofessional research-based degree, and Doctor of Philosophy in architectural history and criticism. The school also offers joint-degree programs with the School of Management and School of Forestry. Additionally, a course of study for undergraduates in Yale College leads to a Bachelor of Arts.
Yale's core program has always stressed design as a fundamental discipline. While initially associated with Beaux Arts pedagogy, the school adopted a close affiliation with other modes of fine art, including sculpture, graphic design, painting and furniture design. One of its most illustrious early graduates, Eero Saarinen, produced a wide variety of student projects ranging from medals and currency to campus and monumental buildings. When the Art and Architecture Building became its home, Paul Rudolph's design reflected this close integration between various fine art departments. The famed department of Graphic Design contributed consistently to architecture posters, publications and exhibits, particularly to Perspecta, Yale's ground breaking student journal.
Another distinguishing element in the Yale core program has been the Yale Building Project, a first-year studio and summer program. Particularly under Dean Charles W. Moore first year students were pushed to design small buildings that ameliorated the life of poor or disadvantaged Americans, working as VISTA volunteers in the deep South. In later years the program focused more on New Haven and Southern Connecticut. A recent book on the subject documents the extraordinary breadth and significance of the work produced by students, many of whom went on to become renowned architects and educators.[6]
Yale's M.E.D., one of the first of its kind, made it possible for architects and planners to pursue a wide range of research connected to the betterment of the entire environment. Only recently have the design professions embraced this wider field of study, spurred by the movement towards sustainability and inter-disciplinarity. Notable recipients of the degree included William J. Mitchell, later dean at MIT, and Steven Izenour, a partner with Venturi, Scott Brown Associates.
The Yale Urban Design Workshop is a community design center affiliated with the Yale School of Architecture.[7] It was established in 1992 by School of Architecture professor Alan Plattus, who continues to direct the workshop.[8]
Rankings
As of 2016, the program's ten-year average ranking, places it 3rd, overall, on DesignIntelligence's ranking of programs accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board.
Conversely, DesignIntelligence's ten-year median ranking places the program 2nd, tied with Columbia University.
Year | DesignIntelligence ranking [9][10][11][12][13][14] |
---|---|
2016 | 3rd |
2015 | 3rd |
2014 | 2nd (T) |
2013 | 3rd |
2012 | 2nd |
2011 | 3rd |
2010 | 2nd |
2009 | 4th (T) |
2008 | 13th |
2007 | 3rd |
2006 | 8th (T) |
*(T) denotes tie
Publications
The school maintains an active publications program.[15] It supports two student-edited journals, Perspecta and Retrospecta; a biannual news magazine, Constructs; and publishes books. Perspecta is the oldest student-edited peer reviewed architectural journal in the United States.[16]
Noted faculty and alumni
Alumni
- Maya Lin
- Marion Weiss
- Louise Braverman
- Lise Anne Couture
- Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk
- Peter Calthorpe
- David Childs
- Norman Foster
- Paul Goldberger
- Edward D. Dart
- Charles Gwathmey
- Siamak Hariri
- Andrés Duany
- Muzharul Islam
- Steven Izenour
- William J. Mitchell
- Blair Kamin
- Alexander Garvin
- Richard Kelly
- Charles Lazor
- Tom Luckey
- David Sellers
- John Connell
- Yansong Ma
- William McDonough
- George Nelson
- James Polshek
- Tim Prentice
- Jaquelin T. Robertson
- Richard Rogers†
- Eero Saarinen
- Robert A. M. Stern
- Stanley Tigerman
- Alexander Tzonis
- Ross Wimer
Present faculty members
- Dolores Hayden
- Michelle Addington
- Keller Easterling
- Peggy Deamer
- Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen
- Trattie Davies
- Joyce Hsiang
- Mimi Hoang
- Lisa Gray
- Billie Tsien
- Annabel Wharton
- Tatiana Bilbao
- Deborah Berke
- M.J. Long
- Amy Lelyveld
- Jennifer Leung
- Yoko Kawai
- Emily Abruzzo
- Karla Britton
- Ariane Lourie Harrison
- Miroslava Brooks
- Kent Bloomer
- Sunil Bald
- Daniel Sherer
- Kyoung Sun Moon
- Bimal Mendis
- Peter Eisenman
- Mark Foster Gage
- Alexander Garvin
- Leon Krier
- Greg Lynn
- Pier Vittorio Aureli
- Robert A. M. Stern (Dean)
- John Patkau
- Alan Plattus
- Tod Williams
Former faculty members
- Zaha Hadid†
- Carie Penabad
- Bridgette Shim
- Georgina Huljich
- David Adjaye
- Bijoy Jain
- Tadao Ando†
- Cecil Balmond
- Emmanuel Petit
- Bjarke Ingels
- Massimo Scolari
- Adib Cure
- Richard Rogers†
- Alejandro Zaera-Polo
- Frank Gehry†
- David Chipperfield
- Thomas H. Beeby*, Dean, 1985–1992
- Mario Botta
- Stanislaus von Moos
- Vincent Scully
- Santiago Calatrava
- John Hejduk
- Helmut Jahn
- Philip Johnson†
- Hans Hollein†
- Louis Kahn
- Buckminster Fuller
- Daniel Libeskind
- Winy Maas
- Thom Mayne†
- Richard Meier†
- Samuel Mockbee
- Charles Willard Moore*
- Eric Owen Moss
- Enrique Norten
- Glenn Murcutt†
- Paul Rudolph
- George Ranalli
- Moshe Safdie
- James Stirling†
- Bernard Tschumi
- Serge Chermayeff*
- Robert Venturi†
- Shadrach Woods
- Joshua Prince-Ramus
- Michael Sorkin
- Hugh Hardy
- César Pelli*
*Indicates former deans of the separate School of Architecture (1972–present) or chairmen of the former Department of Architecture (part of the School of Fine Arts from 1916 and the School of Art and Architecture from 1959)
†Indicates Priztker Prize laureate
References
- ↑ "Detailed Data". Yale University Office of Institutional Research. 2015. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
- ↑ "2010 United States Best Architecture Schools". ArchDaily. 2012-08-10. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
- ↑ "Azure :: Features". Azuremagazine.com. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
- ↑ "America’s Best Architecture Schools 2012 | Features | Architectural Record". Archrecord.construction.com. 2011-10-05. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
- ↑ Yale School of Architecture: "Building history." Retrieved April 10, 2007.
- ↑ Richard Hayes and Robert A.M. Stern, Eds., The Yale Building Project: The First 50 Years, Yale Univ. Press, 2007.
- ↑ http://architecture.yale.edu/resources/yale-urban-design-workshop
- ↑ http://architecture.yale.edu/udw
- ↑ http://www.iit.edu/news/iittoday/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Pages-from-DI-249_Nov-Dec_2013-1.pdf
- ↑ http://archrecord.construction.com/features/Americas_Best_Architecture_Schools/2013/Americas_Best_Architecture_Schools-2014-1.asp
- ↑ http://www.architectmagazine.com/educational-projects/the-best-architecture-colleges-in-usa.aspx
- ↑ http://www.di.net/articles/new-leaders-in-annual-design-school-rankings/
- ↑ http://archrecord.construction.com/features/Americas_Best_Architecture_Schools/2015/Americas_Best_Architecture_Schools-2016-1.asp
- ↑ Architecture Graduate School Rankings, America's Top Architecture Schools 2016, referencing "Design Intelligence" as reported by "Architectural Record." Retrieved 11 March 2016.
- ↑ "Publications | YSOA | Yale School of Architecture". Architecture.yale.edu. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
- ↑ "Perspecta | YSOA | Yale School of Architecture". Architecture.yale.edu. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
External links
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