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The Institute for Architecture & Urban Studies is a non-profit architecture studio & think tank located in Manhattan, New York, USA. ==IAUS (1967–1984)== The Institute of Architecture and Urban Studies was founded in 1967 as a non-profit independent agency concerned with research, education, and development in architecture and urbanism. It began as a core group of young architects seeking alternatives to traditional forms of education and practice. The IAUS developed its curriculum in collaboration with a group of liberal arts colleges and universities and began its undergraduate education program in 1973. The program was open to students from a consortium of liberal arts colleges and provided an architectural component as a supplement to traditional liberal arts studies. Five schools (Oberlin, Wesleyan, Hampshire, Smith, Sarah Lawrence) and twelve students participated in the institute’s first academic year (1974–75), rising to sixteen colleges and 35 students in 1978. The program was organized around a rigorous sequence in the history and theory of architecture and an intensive design tutorial taught by the institute’s fellows. Like Princeton University, Columbia University, and Yale University, where architecture is taught at the undergraduate level as a concentration, the IAUS is not accredited. In 1977 began the design/study options to give students enrolled in a six-year professional degree program the opportunity to participate in the academic program. Since the IAUS was not a degree-granting institution, credit for the program was provided by the student’s own institution. Peter Eisenman was appointed as the Institute’s first Executive Director followed by Anthony Vidler (1982), Mario Gandelsonas (1983) and Stephen Peterson (1984). In 1985 the Institute ceased to exist. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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