Architecture Design Studio: Poiesis Studio I
This studio introduces students to the fundamentals of architectural design through practices of critical thinking, iterative design methodology, and design agency. Emphasizing form, space and composition, this first-year studio lays the foundation for a rigorous and creative design practice.

Louis Kahn, Design for Tapestries, First Unitarian Church, Rochester, New York, 1959–62. AAUP, Louis I. Kahn Collection.
This studio introduces students to the fundamentals of architectural design through practices of critical thinking, iterative design methodology, and design agency. Emphasizing form, space and composition, this first-year studio lays the foundation for a rigorous and creative design practice.
Students engage in a cyclical design process that includes precedent and site analysis, freehand and orthographic drawing, formal analysis, perspective drawing, model-making, collage, and writing. Through a sequence of structured exercises, the course builds core skills in spatial thinking and visual communication while introducing key architectural concepts including site, context, program, materiality, tectonics, cultural practice, and spatial experience.
In parallel with skill development, students are encouraged to understand architecture not only as a formal and material practice, but also as a cultural and ecological act. Throughout the semester, the studio explores the global, environmental and social dimensions of the discipline and begin to shape our own agendas within it.