Found 43 relevant results in 2.04s where lecturer="Freek Persyn"
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Focus Work Design and Architecture (IEA)
Vertiefungsarbeit Entwurf und Architektur (IEA)
Focus works are executed in the fields of expertise of the institures of D-ARCH. The content can be proposed by the students; it will be set bey the professors of the institutes in consultation with the students. The content of a focus work can refer to an elective course or be freely chosen.
Focus Work Landscape and Urban Studies (LUS)
Vertiefungsarbeit Landschaft und Urbane Studien (LUS)
Focus works are executed in the fields of expertise of the institures of D-ARCH. The content can be proposed by the students; it will be set bey the professors of the institutes in consultation with the students. The content of a focus work can refer to an elective course or be freely chosen.
The integrated study performance has to accompany the design, though it has to be a clearly recognizable independent performance within the discipline of urban planning.The formal framework needs to be discussed with the assistants.
The integrated study performance has to accompany the design, though it has to be a clearly recognizable independent performance within the discipline of urban planning.The formal framework needs to be discussed with the assistants.
The integrated study performance has to accompany the design, though it has to be a clearly recognizable independent performance within the discipline of urban planning.The formal framework needs to be discussed with the assistants.
Landscape & Imagination
Agri-Landscape Design
Landscape & Imagination approaches imagination as a situated, embodied and relational practice that precedes and conditions territorial design. Rather than treating imagination as a tool for generating ideas or projecting futures, the course focuses on practices of presence and attentiveness.
Introduction to international perspectives in spatial planning. Exploring various scales and their interconnectedness as well as flows and practices that bridge different cultures of planning. International competitions as a tool to navigate different planning realities, terrains and transformations.Team work on an ongoing case.
Perspectives on Landscape and Urban Transformation I
Perspektiven auf Landschaft und Urbane Transformation I
In this course we will collectively explore the different actions and actors, as well as the roles and professional practices that represent and collectively shape our environment. This is the first course which is collectively organized by the Institute of Landscape and Urban Studies (LUS), with the NEWROPE chair taking up the coordination. It will span two semesters.
Perspectives on Landscape and Urban Transformation II
Perspektiven auf Landschaft und Urbane Transformation II
This is the second semester of the course Perspectives on Landscape and Urban Transformation. We will collectively explore the different roles and professional practices that represent and collectively shape our environment. The course is collectively organized by the Institute of Landscape and Urban Studies (LUS), with the NEWROPE chair taking up the coordination.
As part of the ‘Doctoral Program in Landscape and Urban Studies’, the ‘Research Methods in Landscape and Civic Design' seminar offers PhD students at the D-Arch an application-oriented introduction into the variety of methodologies and tools available to conduct research on the (built) environment at the urban and territorial scale.
Advanced PhD candidates of urban studies, urban and landscape design and urban sociology report about their experiences and insights in the concrete application of methods utilized for their research and scientific publications. Discussion of ongoing individual work, methodological questions, critical perspectives on urban and landscape design and city's relation to society.
As part of the ‘Doctoral Programme in Landscape and Urban Studies’, the ‘Research Methods in Landscape and Urban Studies' seminar offers PhD students at the D-Arch an application-oriented introduction into the variety of methodologies and tools available to conduct research on the (built) environment at the urban and territorial scale.
Advanced PhD candidates of urban studies, urban and landscape design and urban sociology report about their experiences and insights in the concrete application of methods utilized for their research and scientific publications. Discussion of ongoing individual work, methodological questions, critical perspectives on urban and landscape design and city's relation to society.
As part of the ‘Doctoral Programme in Landscape and Urban Studies’, the ‘Research Methods in Landscape and Urban Studies' seminar offers PhD students at the D-Arch an application-oriented introduction into the variety of methodologies and tools available to conduct research on the (built) environment at the urban and territorial scale.
This seminar supports researchers writing on topics related to landscape, urban studies, and architecture through offering hands-on guidance and a safe space for peer-to-peer exchange. The seminar participants receive guidance on how to work with fieldwork, literature reviews, and archival research, develop arguments and narrative arcs in writing.
This course addresses the specificity of writing about the urban, landscape, and territory in the Anthropocene. The seminar surveys key writings, ideas, and figures in the Anthropocene debate in conversation with critiques from environmental humanities and postcolonial studies.
This course addresses the specificity of writing about the urban, landscape, and territory in the Anthropocene. The seminar surveys key writings, ideas, and figures in the Anthropocene debate in conversation with critiques from environmental humanities and postcolonial studies.
This course addresses the specificity of writing about the urban, landscape, and territory in the Anthropocene. The seminar surveys key writings, ideas, and figures in the Anthropocene debate in conversation with critiques from environmental humanities and postcolonial studies.
This course addresses the specificity of writing about the urban, landscape, and territory in the Anthropocene. The seminar surveys key writings, ideas, and figures in the Anthropocene debate in conversation with critiques from environmental humanities and postcolonial studies.