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The School of Architecture and Planning offers graduate certificate programs in Historic Preservation and Regionalism and in Urban Innovation. These certificates require 18 credit hours, some of which can also be applied to a graduate degree program, and are open to applicants not currently enrolled as UNM graduate students.
Francisco Uviña, Director
School of Architecture and Planning
The graduate certificate in Historic Preservation and Regionalism is designed for students wishing to contribute to the conservation of architectural and cultural heritage, and to the contemporary vitality of valued regional traditions. The program integrates proven historic preservation techniques with the spectrum of related planning and design approaches for cultivating local history, and cultural distinctiveness. The graduate certificate in Historic Preservation and Regionalism is open to students pursuing a graduate degree in a related field at the University of New Mexico, those who already hold such a graduate degree, and those with a bachelor’s degree and appropriate related experience.
Applicants must either:
The application to the graduate certificate program is found on the UNM Admissions Web site. Students who are not currently enrolled as graduate students at the University must apply through Graduate Studies.
Application Requirements
To insure consideration for a Fall semester admission, completed applications are due no later than March 1; for a Spring semester admission, no later than November 1. Depending on space availability, applications received after those dates may be considered.
To receive the certificate, students must successfully complete:
Credit Hours |
||
ARCH/CRP/LA 590 | Historic Research Methods | 3 |
ARCH/CRP/LA 591 | Introduction to Preservation and Regionalism | 3 |
Electives chosen in consultation with the certificate program Director from the approved list below. | 9 | |
Final Project, with approval. | 3 | |
Total | 18 |
List of approved electives:
ARCH 662 | Sem: Alternative Construction Methods and Materials |
ARCH 662 | Sem: Preservation Technologies and Adaptive Reuse |
ARCH 662 | Sem: Southwest Architecture and Cultural Landscapes |
ARTH 507 | Museum Practices |
CRP 570 | Sem: Preservation, Eco-tourism, and Community Development |
CRP 570 | Sem: Preservation Law |
CRP 573 | Planning on Native American Lands |
CRP 586 | Planning Issues in Chicano Communities |
LA 512 | Sem: Cultural Landscape Planning |
and other seminars with appropriate content as approved by the Director. |
Urban Innovation Graduate Certificate Curriculum Committee:
Moises Gonzales
Kathy Kambic
Michaele Pride
John Quale
Cities and towns are among humanity's largest and most complex achievements. The buildings, public works, plazas and parks of even a small community embody substantial amounts of capital, energy, natural resources, history and aspirations. Cities are among our greatest creations, yet typically no single individual creates them.
New Mexico and the American Southwest offer a unique variety of settlement and district types for study, including Native American pueblos; strip mall development; Spanish Colonial settlements; streetcar suburbs; gated residential developments; downtown revitalization districts; acequia villages; railroad, company, courthouse square, military and Mormon towns; second-home sprawl; ghost mining towns; Interstate commercial clusters, colonias; and communes. Ruins of ancient Native cities, myths of lost cities, and a rich literature of place provide further opportunities for research and design. Interactions between the natural and built environment are particularly vivid and strong in New Mexico’s desert and alpine ecosystems, as well as other parts of the Southwest. Examples of both extractive settlements and centuries-old renewable resource based settlements are clearly represented in the State and region.
The graduate certificate in Urban Innovation examines settlements from village to megalopolis and from street to planet-wide patterns to provide a foundation for students to engage one of humanity’s greatest needs and challenges - how to create sustainable and vibrant 21st-century cities.
The program aims to give students the foundations to explore critical questions about, study examples of, and propose approaches to creating specific sites, neighborhoods, districts, towns, cities and regions within a globalized world.
Students in the Urban Innovation graduate certificate program should develop:
Applicants must either:
The application to the graduate certificate program is found on the UNM Admissions Web site.
Application Requirements
The Urban Innovation Graduate Certificate Curriculum Committee may waive or substitute other coursework for any of the above requirements if the application as a whole demonstrates that the student has the skills, background, and ability to successfully complete the graduate certificate.
Students who have strong applications but whose skills in a particular area need development may be asked in the admission letter to add another course to their studies depending on their previous background.
Applications to the Urban Innovation graduate certificate must be submitted by May 1 for fall semester admission, or by January 1 for spring semester admission.
The certificate requires the completion of 18 credit hours.
3 credit hours: Introduction to Urban Innovation (required)
This introductory core course is interdisciplinary, and it addresses the core concepts of the certificate. The course focuses on theories and methods of policy, ecology, and design in urban environments. The course emphasizes leadership in all of these realms, and will require case studies on relevant topics. It is ideal for the student to complete his course at the beginning of the certificate. This course is a prerequisite for the last six credit hours of Urban Innovation Research Studio.
9 credit hours: (approved electives)
Students must take nine credit hours in courses from their current graduate program. These should correspond to the topics addressed in the Urban Innovation Certificate, including urban research, economics, sociology, community development, public policy, planning, housing, infrastructure, urban ecologies, history, geography, water resources, and design (such as urban design, architecture, and landscape architecture). The proposed courses should be submitted to the Coordinator for approval by the Urban Innovation Curriculum Committee.
6 credit hours: Urban Innovation Research Studio (substitution allowed) (required)
This is the last course. Design work is not expected from non-design students.
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