UMA Undergraduate Guide 2013-2014 Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning Academic Departments and Programs Landscape Architecture The Major
The Major
The Bachelor of Science Program in Landscape Architecture focuses on visual, physical, ecological, cultural, and design issues encountered in the urbanizing landscape. Its primary objective is to educate and train professionals who are prepared to engage future design problems and advance the state of the art. Our fundamental concern is the sustainable design of land and natural resources. As the public becomes increasingly aware of and sophisticated about environmental issues, opportunities for professional landscape architects can be expected to increase rapidly. Landscape architects serve as mediators between developers and a site to ensure that development does not unduly disrupt natural systems, serves the cultural context, and is aesthetically pleasing. They design and plan parks, residential communities, university campuses, corporate headquarters, and regional open space networks. The landscape architect’s planning and design decisions are of critical significance to both the immediate and long-term future. Opportunities exist in the program for study abroad. Students may go to a variety of locations including Copenhagen, Brazil, and Prague. Faculty-led field study classes are also offered each year with recent trips focusing on the Netherlands, Belize, France, Germany, Guatemala, Holland, Italy, Portugal and Spain. Students who enroll in the program as freshmen can earn a B.S. degree in Landscape Architecture in four years. In addition to the university’s General Education requirements, the landscape architecture core curriculum consists of five interrelated areas or sequences as follows: Design Studio Sequence Natural and Cultural Factors Sequence History Sequence Skills Sequence Computer Requirement |
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