Workshops

Available as part of diploma programs through two tracks: the Advanced Diploma and the 12-month Diploma, or as standalone, our workshops are designed to deepen your engagement with the Built Environment.

  • Knowledge-Based Workshops: Focus on critical thinking and theoretical understanding, providing participants with the intellectual tools needed to analyze and address complex issues in the built environment.
  • Skill-Based Workshops: Emphasize practical tools and techniques, equipping participants with hands-on skills essential for effective problem-solving and project execution in real-world scenarios.

The City through a Social Sciences Lens

Next available course: 23 Mar | 23 May

This module examines how space actively structures human experience and asks what the built environment can teach us about how people organize social worlds, construct political projects, and plan for the future. Using theoretical orientations from cultural anthropology, geography, sociology, political science, and history, this module will investigate how social structures shape and are shaped by contemporary urban spaces.

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Ethics and Philosophy of Practice in the Built Environment (Seminar)

This seminar explores the ethical and philosophical dimensions of practices within the Built Environment. Rather than treating "ethics" as a broad and abstract concept, the seminar seeks to critically examine and contextualize it through multiple perspectives. By analyzing the historical, political, and cultural factors that shape these diverse practices, it aims to clarify what "ethics in practice" means across disciplines. The seminar then investigates its practical applications, with a particular focus on the field of the Built Environment.

The seminar is structured around a central question: Why does the Built Environment necessitate ethical inquiry? It addresses this question across multiple levels, beginning with political systems (governance), moving through ideological systems (society), and culminating at the individual level (the subject).

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Ecologies of Cities

Next available course: 01 Jun | 01 Aug

This module explores urban environments through ecological and systems thinking, viewing cities as ecosystems with significant impacts on surrounding landscapes. It examines urban environmental histories and contemporary challenges like climate change, species extinction, loss of natural system complexity, and resource insecurities. The module also explores systems-based ecological design typologies for urban intervention, focusing on their implications for environmental quality and justice.

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Critical Approaches to Heritage and History

Next available course: 01 Jun | 01 Aug

With Africa and the Middle East as its focus, this module examines the history of the conservation and management of built heritage. Starting with a review of theories of architectural conservation, the module critiques policies and methods of heritage management and conservation from pre-modern times to the present, with a focus on heritage as a political construct that is embedded in wider issues such as colonialism, nationalism, globalization, development, sustainability and climate change.

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Arts in the City: Marks and Claims

Next available course: 23 Mar | 25 May

This module explores imprints of the art(s) in shaping urban social-cultural landscapes. Participants will examine the power dynamics of the social and the political as they are narrated in realms and levels of the official, the subversive, the planned, the improvised, the individual, the collective, the imagined and the illusory. They will engage with the notion of public accessibility of art, while exploring charged pockets within the city that are not necessarily public or accessible. The module also investigates how artistic approaches and cultural interventions interpret placemaking policies and ambitions, as well as how they respond to city representation across various mediums and diverse cultural and contemporary curatorial practices.

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Critical Thinking Methods in the Built Environment

Next available course: 09 May | 27 Jun

This Online workshop introduces participants to different approaches to the built environment in critical social sciences and humanities. The main objective is to give participants the tools to situate their own understanding of the built environment – shaped by different social and educational backgrounds – with wider parallel understandings in society. The workshop’s approach is based on experiential learning, rather than reading or design work, allowing participants to gain a grasp on basic critical thinking methods through walking, note-taking, photography, film, sound, and geotagging.

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Participatory Research and Design

Next available course: 11 Jul | 25 Jul

This workshop introduces co-production as a transformative approach in urban upgrading, offering an alternative to traditional top-down planning models. By focusing on collaborative partnerships between local communities and various stakeholders, the workshop demonstrates how co-production can foster more equitable, sustainable, and resilient urban spaces. Through a blend of theoretical exploration, practical applications, and hands-on exercises, participants will engage with methodological tools, co-planning practices, and research techniques. The workshop also addresses barriers and challenges in co-production, equipping participants with the skills to contribute to a fairer and more sustainable built environment.

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Poetics of Cement

Grey? Boring?... Ubiquitous! Cement is the most widely used substance after water. Cement and Concrete are central to what we consider modernity (as an architectural style), urbanisation and construction. Cement holds key promises of development and is also the harbinger of toxicity, pollution and destruction. In this workshop we follow cement, how it appears and disappears in our urban fabric, how it features in different imaginations. How it emerges aesthetically, bodily and materially. The aim, besides tracing the poetics of cement, would be to train in following one material and be sensitive to the diverse and often contradictory worlds it assembles.

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Research Methods

Next available course: 11 Apr | 25 Apr

This mandatory workshop focuses on developing critical research questions and selecting effective research methods to explore them. Participants will learn to assess the strengths and limitations of various research tools, and identify gaps in existing approaches. Emphasis is placed on critical reflection and the creative design of new or adapted methods better suited to complex, interdisciplinary inquiries.

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