

BSc Architectural and Interdisciplinary Studies
About this course
Architectural and Interdisciplinary Studies is an unusual and ambitious programme that examines the built environment from multiple disciplinary perspectives, combining architectural thinking with history, theory, cultural studies, and the social sciences. It asks not just how buildings are designed and constructed but what they mean, how they are experienced, how they reflect and reproduce social and political relations, and how architectural ideas have developed and been contested across different cultures and historical periods. The interdisciplinary framing allows you to engage with architecture as both a practice and an object of critical enquiry, developing a perspective that pure design programmes often cannot offer. At University College London, this four-year full-time degree benefits from UCL's remarkable research environment and its situation in one of the world's most architecturally significant cities. You will engage with the history and theory of architecture from multiple angles, drawing on art history, philosophy, cultural geography, sociology, and political theory as well as architectural history proper. You will develop skills in reading buildings as cultural artefacts, in the analysis of space and its social effects, and in situating architectural production within broader debates about aesthetics, power, sustainability, and the future of cities. The interdisciplinary nature of the degree means you will engage with scholars and students from across the humanities and social sciences, developing intellectual breadth alongside architectural depth. Graduates of this kind of programme work in architectural education, urban research, heritage organisations, cultural institutions, journalism, urban policy, and design criticism. The degree is also a route into postgraduate architectural study at Part 1 level, and some graduates continue into professional architectural training alongside the theoretical and historical interests the programme has developed. Further postgraduate options include urban studies, architectural history, cultural geography, and heritage management.
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