The Master of Science in Architecture (MSArch) degree is a one-year, two-semester program, which is designed for holders of a professional degree in architecture (Bachelor of Architecture or Master of Architecture), or its international equivalent. The MSArch consists of studio-centered work in architecture and urbanism supported by elective coursework in advanced technology and contemporary theory and criticism. This program is an intensive course of study intended to further students' critical skills and analytical abilities while expanding their architectural expertise. Extrapolating from its context of an urban public research university in Chicago, the School explores how the discipline of architecture might contribute to conditioning the metropolis, constructing new audiences, and circulating ideas. Rather than rehearsing architecture’s bipolar identification with either science or art, the School’s first opportunity is to articulate architecture as a species of politics, as unfolding the potentials for collective life in the polis. Politics is always a problem of formal organization, and form is always a political matter. The call to project new worlds is a simultaneous challenge to formal and political imagination, and the School conducts an ongoing forum on the possibilities for producing political effects within the disciplinary means of architecture.
September 2025
College of Architecture, Design, and the Arts
929 West Harrison Street,
303 Jefferson Hall (M/C 033),
CHICAGO,
Illinois,
60607, United States
Baccalaureate Field of Study Applicants must have an accredited professional degree in architecture or its international equivalent. Grade Point Average 3.00/4.00 for the final 60 semester (90 quarter) hours of undergraduate study.
Minimum English Competency Test Score (one of the following is required unless English competency is exhibited by prior work or education in the U.S.):
*There may be different IELTS requirements depending on your chosen course.