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첫번째
The School of Architecture and Planning is completing a massive $6 million renovation resulting in almost 60,000 square feet of newly developed space, giving MIT the most up-to-date architecture and planning facility in the entire nation.
All of the new studios are equipped with network drops, CAD workstations and file servers for digital image storage and distribution, as well as with ISDN lines for videoconferencing. In addition to new studios the renovations include the creation of the Advanced Visualization Theater--a teaching space which brings the latest technology into the classroom.
In addition to these spaces, the Rotch Library of Architecture and Planning, and its Visual Collections -- among the leading libraries of their kind in North America -- are housed in a new building which was awarded a medal by the Boston Society of Architects as the most beautiful building in Greater Boston in 1993.
All of the school's facilities are located on MIT's main campus on the Cambridge side of the Charles River. The campus is home to important works by Alvar Aalto, Welles Bosworth, I.M. Pei, Eero Saarinen and (soon) Frank Gehry and Fumihiko Maki. The campus also features public sculpture by Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Louise Nevelson, Pablo Picasso and Tony Smith, and the School's conference room is home to Frank Stella's phantasmagoric 3-D installation Loohooloo.
2번째
The School of Architecture and Planning is completing a massive $6 million renovation resulting in almost 60,000 square feet of newly developed space, giving MIT the most up-to-date architecture and planning facility in the entire nation.
All of the new studios are equipped with network drops, CAD workstations and file servers for digital image storage and distribution, as well as with ISDN lines for videoconferencing. In addition to new studios the renovations include the creation of the Advanced Visualization Theater--a teaching space which brings the latest technology into the classroom.
In addition to these spaces, the Rotch Library of Architecture and Planning, and its Visual Collections -- among the leading libraries of their kind in North America -- are housed in a new building which was awarded a medal by the Boston Society of Architects as the most beautiful building in Greater Boston in 1993.
All of the school's facilities are located on MIT's main campus on the Cambridge side of the Charles River. The campus is home to important works by Alvar Aalto, Welles Bosworth, I.M. Pei, Eero Saarinen and (soon) Frank Gehry and Fumihiko Maki. The campus also features public sculpture by Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Louise Nevelson, Pablo Picasso and Tony Smith, and the School's conference room is home to Frank Stella's phantasmagoric 3-D installation Loohooloo.
3번째
PLAN, the newsletter of the School of Architecture and Planning, is published both on paper and on-line. To receive immediate email notification when stories are posted on-line, send your request to [email protected].
The Art of Structural Design
An Exhibition Exploring the ARtistry of Swiss Engineering
Revisiting the Visionaries
A Conference to Reclaim the Future of Digital Technologies
The History of the Future
An Exhibit at the Pompidou Centre
Making Smart Surfaces a Snap
A Modular Infrastructure for Interactive Architecture
MIT Students Honored in National Urban Design Competition
Teams Included Candidates in Architecture, City Planning and Real Estate Development
Vertical City: The Life and Design of Pruitt-Igoe
An Exhibit Exploring What Not to Do
Ask the MIT Design Advisor
New Web Tool Helps Designers Evaluate Energy-Saving Options
MIT to Help Conduct International Competition in Sustainable Construction
Regional and Global Prizes to Total $2M Each
White Noise/White Light
An Interactive Installation at the Summer Olympics
Skin and Control
Two Gallery Installations in New York
Alumnus Bill Rawn Receives AIA Honor Award
Seventh Such Award for His Firm Since 1993
The New Division of Labor
Recent Book from Planning Professor Garners National Attention
More Books from the Planning Faculty
On Industrialization, Pension Reform,
Economic Development Finance
and Urban Resiliency
Designing MIT
A New History of MIT's Campus
Newsweek Cites MIT for
'Hottest Aarchitecture'
A Living Laboratory in Cambridge
MIT House_n Consortium Introduces the PlaceLab
Seeing As Another Sees
An Exhibit and Book of Poems and Prints Reveals a World of Visual Challenge
4번째
School-wide business is overseen by the staff in the Office of the Dean. To find students, faculty, researchers, and staff please search among the specific departments and programs:
Dean's Office
Department of Architecture
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Program in Media Arts and Sciences
The Media Laboratories
Center for Real Estate
Center for Advanced Visual Studies
Association of Postdoctoral Scholars at MIT
Rewards and Recognition Program
Overview
Infinite Mile Award
Spot or Appreciation Awards
Nomination Form
Click here for a PDF version of the nomination form.
Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader
Infinite Mile Award Recipients
5번째
The MIT Admissions office processes all undergraduate admissions for the Institute. To obtain information and materials please contact them directly via the web or by mail at:
MIT Admissions Office, Room 3-108
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
Tel: (617) 258-5515
When contacting the MIT Admissions office please be sure to include a full name and postal address with any electronic requests for information. If you are not a United States citizen or permanent resident, please note your country of citizenship.
Those interested in pursuing a graduate degree must apply to the department in which they wish to obtain the advanced degree. General graduate admissions information can be obtained from the web or at the address listed above.
Admissions information for each of the departments within the School of Architecture and Planning can be found in their websites or by writing to the departments at the following addresses:
The Department of Architecture:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Architecture
77 Massachusetts Avenue, 7-337
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
The Department of Urban Studies and Planning:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
77 Massachusetts Avenue, 7-337
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
Media Arts and Sciences:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Media Arts and Sciences
77 Massachusetts Avenue, E15-218
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
Center for Real Estate:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Center for Real Estate
77 Massachusetts Avenue, W31-310
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
6번째
Comments and queries are welcome by phone at 617.253.4401, by fax at 617.253.9417, and by snail mail at MIT 7-231, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge MA 02139.
7번째
Vision
The School of Architecture and Planning at MIT provides a rich array of courses through the Department of Architecture, the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, and through the Program in Media Arts and Sciences. The School is united by some widely shared beliefs and values that give it a unique character and direction. We are committed to sustaining and enhancing the quality of the human environment at all scales, from the personal to the global. We value design excellence, technological inventiveness, and imaginative scholarship. And we believe that design and policy interventions should be grounded in unwavering commitment to equity, social justice, and making a positive difference in the everyday lives of real people.
Unlike many professional schools, we are not a self-contained institution, but an integral part of the vast research enterprise that is at the core of MIT's mission. We have very active and diverse research programs and laboratories ourselves, and we have strong PhD programs as well as professional degree programs. There are very close, cross-disciplinary working connections with various departments in the School of Engineering, the Sloan School of Management, and the School of Humanities and Social Science. We believe that close intellectual connections between professional education and cutting-edge research are crucial, and we are strongly committed to the MIT tradition of learning by doing -- of engaging undergraduate and graduate students directly and actively in advanced research work.
The School is vitally concerned with understanding and responding to today's complex interactions of local as well as underserved communities and cultures with systems of global interconnection, and with preparing students to work in a world where time and distance are electronically compressed. It is advancing curriculum emphasizing research programs that promote social awareness while using the latest technology.
Most of all, we are committed to intellectual exploration, innovation, and leadership. We accomplish our goals by putting together the best people and the best facilities.
The School of Architecture and Planning is completing a massive $6 million renovation resulting in almost 60,000 square feet of newly developed space, giving MIT the most up-to-date architecture and planning facility in the entire nation.
All of the new studios are equipped with network drops, CAD workstations and file servers for digital image storage and distribution, as well as with ISDN lines for videoconferencing. In addition to new studios the renovations include the creation of the Advanced Visualization Theater--a teaching space which brings the latest technology into the classroom.
In addition to these spaces, the Rotch Library of Architecture and Planning, and its Visual Collections -- among the leading libraries of their kind in North America -- are housed in a new building which was awarded a medal by the Boston Society of Architects as the most beautiful building in Greater Boston in 1993.
All of the school's facilities are located on MIT's main campus on the Cambridge side of the Charles River. The campus is home to important works by Alvar Aalto, Welles Bosworth, I.M. Pei, Eero Saarinen and (soon) Frank Gehry and Fumihiko Maki. The campus also features public sculpture by Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Louise Nevelson, Pablo Picasso and Tony Smith, and the School's conference room is home to Frank Stella's phantasmagoric 3-D installation Loohooloo.
2번째
The School of Architecture and Planning is completing a massive $6 million renovation resulting in almost 60,000 square feet of newly developed space, giving MIT the most up-to-date architecture and planning facility in the entire nation.
All of the new studios are equipped with network drops, CAD workstations and file servers for digital image storage and distribution, as well as with ISDN lines for videoconferencing. In addition to new studios the renovations include the creation of the Advanced Visualization Theater--a teaching space which brings the latest technology into the classroom.
In addition to these spaces, the Rotch Library of Architecture and Planning, and its Visual Collections -- among the leading libraries of their kind in North America -- are housed in a new building which was awarded a medal by the Boston Society of Architects as the most beautiful building in Greater Boston in 1993.
All of the school's facilities are located on MIT's main campus on the Cambridge side of the Charles River. The campus is home to important works by Alvar Aalto, Welles Bosworth, I.M. Pei, Eero Saarinen and (soon) Frank Gehry and Fumihiko Maki. The campus also features public sculpture by Alexander Calder, Henry Moore, Louise Nevelson, Pablo Picasso and Tony Smith, and the School's conference room is home to Frank Stella's phantasmagoric 3-D installation Loohooloo.
3번째
PLAN, the newsletter of the School of Architecture and Planning, is published both on paper and on-line. To receive immediate email notification when stories are posted on-line, send your request to [email protected].
The Art of Structural Design
An Exhibition Exploring the ARtistry of Swiss Engineering
Revisiting the Visionaries
A Conference to Reclaim the Future of Digital Technologies
The History of the Future
An Exhibit at the Pompidou Centre
Making Smart Surfaces a Snap
A Modular Infrastructure for Interactive Architecture
MIT Students Honored in National Urban Design Competition
Teams Included Candidates in Architecture, City Planning and Real Estate Development
Vertical City: The Life and Design of Pruitt-Igoe
An Exhibit Exploring What Not to Do
Ask the MIT Design Advisor
New Web Tool Helps Designers Evaluate Energy-Saving Options
MIT to Help Conduct International Competition in Sustainable Construction
Regional and Global Prizes to Total $2M Each
White Noise/White Light
An Interactive Installation at the Summer Olympics
Skin and Control
Two Gallery Installations in New York
Alumnus Bill Rawn Receives AIA Honor Award
Seventh Such Award for His Firm Since 1993
The New Division of Labor
Recent Book from Planning Professor Garners National Attention
More Books from the Planning Faculty
On Industrialization, Pension Reform,
Economic Development Finance
and Urban Resiliency
Designing MIT
A New History of MIT's Campus
Newsweek Cites MIT for
'Hottest Aarchitecture'
A Living Laboratory in Cambridge
MIT House_n Consortium Introduces the PlaceLab
Seeing As Another Sees
An Exhibit and Book of Poems and Prints Reveals a World of Visual Challenge
4번째
School-wide business is overseen by the staff in the Office of the Dean. To find students, faculty, researchers, and staff please search among the specific departments and programs:
Dean's Office
Department of Architecture
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Program in Media Arts and Sciences
The Media Laboratories
Center for Real Estate
Center for Advanced Visual Studies
Association of Postdoctoral Scholars at MIT
Rewards and Recognition Program
Overview
Infinite Mile Award
Spot or Appreciation Awards
Nomination Form
Click here for a PDF version of the nomination form.
Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader
Infinite Mile Award Recipients
5번째
The MIT Admissions office processes all undergraduate admissions for the Institute. To obtain information and materials please contact them directly via the web or by mail at:
MIT Admissions Office, Room 3-108
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
Tel: (617) 258-5515
When contacting the MIT Admissions office please be sure to include a full name and postal address with any electronic requests for information. If you are not a United States citizen or permanent resident, please note your country of citizenship.
Those interested in pursuing a graduate degree must apply to the department in which they wish to obtain the advanced degree. General graduate admissions information can be obtained from the web or at the address listed above.
Admissions information for each of the departments within the School of Architecture and Planning can be found in their websites or by writing to the departments at the following addresses:
The Department of Architecture:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Architecture
77 Massachusetts Avenue, 7-337
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
The Department of Urban Studies and Planning:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
77 Massachusetts Avenue, 7-337
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
Media Arts and Sciences:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Media Arts and Sciences
77 Massachusetts Avenue, E15-218
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
Center for Real Estate:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Center for Real Estate
77 Massachusetts Avenue, W31-310
Cambridge, MA 02139
Attn: Graduate Admissions
6번째
Comments and queries are welcome by phone at 617.253.4401, by fax at 617.253.9417, and by snail mail at MIT 7-231, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge MA 02139.
7번째
Vision
The School of Architecture and Planning at MIT provides a rich array of courses through the Department of Architecture, the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, and through the Program in Media Arts and Sciences. The School is united by some widely shared beliefs and values that give it a unique character and direction. We are committed to sustaining and enhancing the quality of the human environment at all scales, from the personal to the global. We value design excellence, technological inventiveness, and imaginative scholarship. And we believe that design and policy interventions should be grounded in unwavering commitment to equity, social justice, and making a positive difference in the everyday lives of real people.
Unlike many professional schools, we are not a self-contained institution, but an integral part of the vast research enterprise that is at the core of MIT's mission. We have very active and diverse research programs and laboratories ourselves, and we have strong PhD programs as well as professional degree programs. There are very close, cross-disciplinary working connections with various departments in the School of Engineering, the Sloan School of Management, and the School of Humanities and Social Science. We believe that close intellectual connections between professional education and cutting-edge research are crucial, and we are strongly committed to the MIT tradition of learning by doing -- of engaging undergraduate and graduate students directly and actively in advanced research work.
The School is vitally concerned with understanding and responding to today's complex interactions of local as well as underserved communities and cultures with systems of global interconnection, and with preparing students to work in a world where time and distance are electronically compressed. It is advancing curriculum emphasizing research programs that promote social awareness while using the latest technology.
Most of all, we are committed to intellectual exploration, innovation, and leadership. We accomplish our goals by putting together the best people and the best facilities.