Using both lectures and drawing exercises, this class extends understandings of the representational conventions used by the design professions through its introduction to the possibilities offered by emerging digital techniques for the depiction of designed artifacts and environments, allowing students to extend and enhance their understandings of advanced practices for design visualization, representation, and communication. Department enforced coreqs., ENVD 1004 and 2001.
Using both lectures and drawing exercises, this class extends understandings of the representational conventions used by the design professions through its introduction to the possibilities offered by traditional techniques for the advanced practices for design visualization, representation, and communication. Department enforced coreqs., ENVD 1104 and ENVD 2003. Requisites: Requires prerequisite course of ENVD 1052 (minimum grade C-). Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Using both lectures and drawing exercises, this class examines the traditional representational conventions used by the design professions to depict and describe space, form, pattern and information. Uses a multi-disciplined approach that explores the three basic intentions that inform the marks that designers make: visualization, representation and communication. Open to nonmajors on a space available basis. Requisites: Requires prerequisite course of ENVD 1004 (minimum grade C-). Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Introduces the use of computers in design fields, including applications for word-processing, desktop publishing, graphic creation, and Cad-style design. Aims to provide basic general skills in computer use that are transferable to other computer applications. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Focuses on construction and use of computer-based information systems to represent and manipulate geographic data. Emphasizes the recording, mapping,and transforming of data for analysis and use by planners. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
The nature of design and systematic methods for improving design. Topics include: nature of design problems; structure of design process; theory of form; problem definition; generating solution ideas; evaluation; roles of form and function. Students use computers without having to learn to program. Open to nonmajors.
Introduces students to the technical and practical aspects of making photographic images: the workings of the camera and lens, principles of depth of field, black and white film processing, printing, and basic darkroom procedures. Open to nonmajors on a space available basis. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Surveys existing and emerging computer methods used in the environmental design professions, with an introduction to computer programming. Open to nonmajors with instructor consent.
Explores topics of current interest in planning. Looks at the development and social consequences of the neighborhood movement, forms of municipal and regional governments, regional settlement patterns, and new communities. Introduces selected methods from the social sciences used by planners and urban designers. Department enforced coreqs., ENVD 3100 and ENVD 3124. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Explores principles and uses of computer graphics in design. Topics include creation and modification of complex two- and three-dimensional objects; orthographic and perspective views; use of color; input using mouse and digitizer; output using screen, plotter, matrix printer, and slides; automated aids for form generation and manipulation; and analysis of current and future trends of computer usage for design. May be repeated up to 12 total credit hours. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Illustrates color media techniques for the preparation, composition, and presentation of landscape and built environment drawings. Requisites: Requires prerequisite course of ENVD 2130 (minimum grade C-). Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Provides an introductory computer programming course designed to teach the capabilities of a computer in providing graphic representations of environments, including buildings. Open to nonmajors.
Introduces the integration of computing and the architectural design process and related representational tasks. Studies common computer-aided design programs, emphasizing two- and three-dimensional and animation techniques. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Offers a seminar on imagination and creativity in environmental design. Students research and prepare a class presentation and paper on a topic of interest. Open to nonmajors at all levels.
Introductory course creating interactive web sites. Covers use of Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) and Flash to create linked pages containing text, images animations, menus, and buttons. Covers principles of site navigation, page layout, and graphic design for designers and planners. Credit not granted for this course and ENVD 2352. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Illustrates techniques of graphics communication and presentation for architectural design. Includes advanced delineation and use of color. Requisites: Requires prerequisite course of ENVD 2130 (minimum grade C-). Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Explores digital photographic workflow from capture to exhibition. Students gain the ability to document their projects and utilize photography as a means of creative expression. Topics include: using DSLRs, Adobe Lightroom, retouching with Adobe Photoshop, time-lapse photography, Adobe Premier, professional printing, landscape and architectural photography, sharing work through blogs and social media, and submitting work for publication and exhibition.
Introduces the mechanics of entering 2-D images and 3-D objects into the computer. Once entered, graphics are interactively rotated in space, walked through, and displayed in perspective from any position. Also covers the mechanics of other computer programs allowing additional manipulation of images and objects.
Covers development of an architectural set of construction documents combined with job administration, field observation, and guest speakers from related construction and architectural disciplines. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Provides an advanced seminar on special issues in design communications. May be repeated for credit by petition. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.
Topics include animation and environmental simulation, computational methods of technical evaluation and optimization, and computational mapping and analysis. May be repeated for credit by petition. Requisites: Restricted to Program in Environmental Design major or minor students only.