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2020 Student Thesis Showcase - Part I

student housing architecture thesis

Have you ever wondered what students design in architecture school? A few years ago, we started an Instagram account called IMADETHAT_ to curate student work from across North America. Now, we have nearly 3,000 projects featured for you to view. In this series, we are featuring thesis projects of recent graduates to give you a glimpse into what architecture students create while in school. Each week, for the rest of the summer, we will be curating five projects that highlight unique aspects of design. In this week’s group, the research ranges from urban scale designs focused on climate change to a proposal for a new type of collective housing and so much in between. Check back each week for new projects. 

In the meantime, Archinect has also created a series featuring the work of 2020 graduates in architecture and design programs. Check out the full list, here .

student housing architecture thesis

Redefining the Gradient by Kate Katz and Ryan Shaaban, Tulane University, M.Arch ‘20

Thesis Advisors: Cordula Roser Gray and Ammar Eloueini / Course: 01-SP20-Thesis Studio

Sea level rise has become a major concern for coastal cities due to the economic and cultural importance tied to their proximity to water. These cities have sustained their livelihood in low-lying elevations through the process of filling, bridging, and raising land over coastal ecosystems, replacing their ecological value with infrastructures focused on defining the edge between city and nature. Hard infrastructures have been employed to maintain urban landscapes but have minimal capacity for both human and non-human engagement due to their monofunctional applications focused on separating conditions rather than integrating them. They produce short-term gains with long-term consequences, replacing and restricting ecosystems and acting as physical barriers in a context defined by seasonal transition. 

To address the issues of hard infrastructure and sea level rise, this thesis proposes an alternative design strategy that incorporates the dynamic water system into the urban grid network. San Francisco was chosen as the location of study as it is a peninsula where a majority of the predicted inundation occurs on the eastern bayside. In this estuary, there were over 500 acres of ecologically rich tidal marshlands that were filled in during the late 1800s. To protect these new lands, the Embarcadero Sea Wall was built in 1916 and is now in a state of neglect. The city has set aside $5 billion for repairs but, instead of pouring more money into a broken system, we propose an investment in new multi-functional ecologically-responsive strategies. 

As sea levels rise, the city will be inundated with water, creating the opportunity to develop a new circulation system that maintains accessibility throughout areas located in the flood zone. In this proposal, we’ve designed a connective network where instance moments become moments of pause and relief to enjoy the new cityscape in a dynamic maritime district. 

On the lower level, paths widen to become plazas while on the upper level, they become breakout destinations which can connect to certain occupiable rooftops that are given to the public realm. The bases of carved canals become seeding grounds for plants and aquatic life as the water level rises over time. Buildings can protect high-risk floors through floodproofing and structural encasement combined with adaptive floorplates to maintain the use of lower levels. The floating walkway is composed of modular units that are buoyant, allowing the pedestrian paths to conform and fluctuate with diurnal tidal changes. The composition of the units creates street furniture and apertures to engage with the ecologies below while enabling a once restricted landscape of wetlands to take place within the city. 

The new vision of the public realm in this waterfront district hopes to shine an optimistic light on how we can live with nature once again as we deal with the consequences of climate change.

student housing architecture thesis

Unearthing the Black Aesthetic by Demar Matthews, Woodbury University, M.Arch ‘20

Advisor: Ryan Tyler Martinez Featured on Archinect

“Unearthing The Black Aesthetic” highlights South Central Los Angeles’s (or Black Los Angeles’s) unique positioning as a dynamic hub of Black culture and creativity. South Central is the densest population of African Americans west of the Mississippi. While every historically Black neighborhood in Los Angeles has experienced displacement, the neighborhood of Watts was hit particularly hard. As more and more Black Angelenos are forced for one reason or another to relocate, we are losing our history and connection to Los Angeles.

As a way to fight this gentrification, we are developing an architectural language derived from Black culture. So many cultures have their own architectural styles based on values, goals, morals, and customs shared by their society. When these cultures have relocated to America, to keep their culture and values intact, they bought land and built in the image of their homelands. That is not true for Black people in America. In fact, until 1968, Black people had no rights to own property in Los Angeles. While others began a race to acquire land in 1492, building homes and communities in their image, we started running 476 years after the race began. What percentage of land was left for Blacks to acquire? How then can we advance the development of a Black aesthetic in architecture?

This project, most importantly, is a collaboration with the community that will be for us and by us. My goal is to take control of our image in architecture; to elevate, not denigrate, Black life and culture. Ultimately, we envision repeating this process in nine historically Black cities in America to develop an architectural language that will vary based on the history and specificities of Black culture in each area.

student housing architecture thesis

KILLING IT: The Life and Death of Great American Cities by Amanda Golemba, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, M.Arch ’20

Advisors: Nikole Bouchard, Jasmine Benyamin, and Erik Hancock / Independent Design Thesis

For decades, post-industrial cities throughout the United States have been quietly erased through self-imposed tabula rasa demolition. If considered at all, demolition is touted as the mechanism for removing unsightly blight, promoting safety, and discarding the obsolete and the unwanted. Once deemed unworthy, rarely does a building survive the threat of demolition. 

In the last decade, the City of Chicago has erased over 13,000 buildings with 225 in just the last four months. Not only does this mass erasure eradicate the material and the spatial, but it permanently wipes the remnants of human bodies, values, and history — a complete annulment of event, time, and memory. 

But why do we feel the need to erase in order to make progress?

Our current path has led to a built environment that is becoming more and more uniform and sterile. Much of America has become standardized, mixed-use developments; neighborhoods of cookie-cutter homes and the excessive use of synthetic, toxic building materials. A uniform world is a boring one that has little room for creativity, individuality, or authenticity.

This thesis, “KILLING IT,” is a design proposal for a traveling exhibition that seeks to change perceptions of the existing city fabric by visualizing patterns of erasure, questioning the resultant implications and effects of that erasure, and proposing an alternative fate. “KILLING IT” confronts the inherently violent aspects of architecture and explores that violence through the intentionally jarring, uncomfortable, and absurd analogy of murder. This analogy is a lens through which to trace the violent, intentional, and premature ending and sterilization of the existing built environment. After all, as Bernard Tschumi said, “To really appreciate architecture, you may even need to commit a murder.”1 But murder is not just about the events that take place within a building, it is also the material reality of the building itself. 

Over the life of a building, scarring, moments in time, and decay layer to create an inhabitable palimpsest of memory. This traveling exhibition is infused with the palimpsest concept by investigating strategies of layering, modularity, flexibility, transparency, and building remains, while layering them together to form a system that operates as an inhabitable core model collage. Each individual exhibition simultaneously memorializes the violence that happened at that particular site and implements murderous adaptive reuse strategies through collage and salvage material to expose what could have been.

If we continue down our current path, we will only continue to make the same mistakes and achieve the same monotonous, sterilizing results we currently see in every American city and suburb. We need to embrace a new path that values authenticity, celebrates the scars and traces of the past, and carries memories into the future. By reimaging what death can mean and addressing cycles of violence, “KILLING IT” proposes an optimistic vision for the future of American cities. 

  • Tschumi, Bernard. “Questions of space: lectures on architecture” (ed. 1990)

student housing architecture thesis

A New Prototype for Collective Housing by Juan Acosta and Gable Bostic, University of Texas at Austin, M.Arch ‘20

Advisor: Martin Haettasch / Course: Integrative Design Studio Read more: https://soa.utexas.edu/work/new-prototype-collective-housing

Austin is a city that faces extreme housing pressures. This problem is framed almost exclusively in terms of supply and demand, and the related question of affordability. For architects, however, a more productive question is: Will this new quantity produce a new quality of housing? 

How do we live in the city, how do we create individual and collective identity through architecture, and what are the urban consequences? This studio investigates new urban housing types, smaller than an apartment block yet larger and denser than a detached house. Critically assessing existing typologies, we ask the question: How can the comforts of the individual house be reconfigured to form new types of residential urban fabric beyond the entropy of tract housing or the formulaic denominator of “mixed-use.” The nature of the integrative design studio allowed for the testing of material systems and construction techniques that have long had an important economic and ecological impact.

“A New Prototype for Collective Housing” addresses collectivity in both a formal and social sense, existing between the commercial and residential scales present in Austin’s St. John neighborhood as it straddles the I-35 corridor; a normative American condition. A diversity of programs, and multigenerational living, create an inherently diverse community. Additionally, a courtyard typology is used to negotiate the spectrum of private and shared space. Volumes, comprising multiple housing units ranging from studio apartments to four bedrooms, penetrate a commercial plinth that circulates both residents and mechanical systems. The use of heavy timber ensures an equitable use of resources while imbuing the project with a familiar material character.

student housing architecture thesis

ELSEWHERE, OR ELSE WHERE? by Brenda (Bz) Zhang, University of California at Berkeley, M.Arch ’20

Advisors: Andrew Atwood and Neyran Turan See more: https://www.brendazhang.com/#/elsewhere-or-else-where/

“ELSEWHERE, OR ELSE WHERE?” is an architectural fever dream about the San Francisco Bay Area. Beginning with the premise that two common ideas of Place—Home and Elsewhere—are no longer useful, the project wonders how disciplinary tools of architecture can be used to shape new stories about where we are.

For our purposes, “Home,” although primarily used to describe a place of domestic habitation, is also referring generally to a “familiar or usual setting,” as in home-base, home-court, home-page, and even home-button. As a counterpoint, Elsewhere shifts our attention “in or to another place,” away. This thesis is situated both in the literal spaces of Elsewhere and Home (landfills, houses, wilderness, base camps, wastelands, hometowns) and in their culturally constructed space (value-embedded narratives determining whether something belongs, and to whom). Since we construct both narratives through principles of exclusion, Elsewhere is a lot closer to Home than we say. These hybrid spaces—domestic and industrial, urban and hinterland, natural and built—are investigated as found conditions of the Anthropocene and potential sites for new understandings of Place.

Ultimately, this thesis attempts to challenge conventional notions of what architects could do with our existing skill sets, just by shifting our attention—Elsewhere. The sites shown here and the concerns they represent undeniably exist, but because of the ways Western architecture draws thick boundaries between and around them, they resist architectural focus—to our detriment.

In reworking the physical and cultural constructions of Homes and Elsewheres, architects are uniquely positioned to go beyond diagnostics in visualizing and designing how, where, and why we build. While this project looks specifically at two particular stories we tell about where we are, the overall objective is to provoke new approaches to how we construct Place—both physically and culturally—within or without our discipline.

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student housing architecture thesis

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Digital Commons @ USF > College of The Arts > School of Architecture and Community Design > Theses and Dissertations

Architecture and Community Design Theses and Dissertations

Theses/dissertations from 2011 2011.

Aging with Independence and Interaction: An Assisted Living Community , Steven J. Flositz

Theses/Dissertations from 2010 2010

Wayfinding in Architecture , Jason Brandon Abrams

Phenomenology of Home , Lidiya Angelova

Do You Have A Permit For That? Exposing the Pseudo-Public Space and Exploring Alternative Means of Urban Occupation , Adam Barbosa

Architecture as Canvas , Monika Blazenovic

Women and Architecture: Re-Making Shelter Through Woven Tectonics , Kirsten Lee Dahlquist

Re-Connecting: Revitalizing Downtown Clearwater With Environmental Sensibility , Diego Duran

Livable Streets: Establishing Social Place Through a Walkable Intervention , Jeffrey T. Flositz

Upgrading Design: A Mechatronic Investigation into the Architectural Product Market , Matthew Gaboury

Emergent Morphogenetic Design Strategies , Dawn Gunter

Re-Tooling an American Metropolis , Robert Shawn Hott

The Rebirth of a Semi-Disintegrated Enterprise: Towards the Future of Composites in Pre-Synthesized Domestic Dwellings; and the Societal Acceptance of the Anti-In Situ Architectural Movement , Timothy James Keepers

Architectural Symbiosis , Tim Kimball

Elevating Communication , Thao Thanh Nguyen

PLAY: A Process-Driven Study of Design Discovery , Kuebler Wilson Perry

AC/DC: Let There Be Hybrid Cooling , Christopher Podes

The Third Realm: Suburban Identity through the Transformation of the Main Street , Alberto Rodriguez

From Airport to Spaceport: Designing for an Aerospace Revolution , Paula Selvidge

Perceiving Architecture: An Experiential Design Approach , Ashley Verbanic

(im•print) A Material Investigation to Encourage a Haptic Dialog , Julie Marie Vo

Theses/Dissertations from 2009 2009

The Sleeping Giant: Revealing the Potential Energy of Abandoned Industry Through Adaptive Transformation , Wesley A. Bradley

Community Service Through Architecture: Social Housing with Identity , Karina Cabernite Cigagna

Building a Brighter Future Through Education: Student Housing for Single Parent Families , Carrie Cogsdale

Cooper-Hewitt Museum of Design and Technology (C-HMD+T): Biomimetic architecture as part of nature , Isabel Marisa Corsino Carro

Dyna-Mod Constructing the Modern Adaptable Home , Sarah Deardorff

Memory - Ness: The Collaboration Between a Library and Museum , Kelsey Doughty

Promoting Cultural Experiences Through Responsive Architecture , Shabonni Olivia Elkanah

Urban-Eco-Filter: Introducing New Lungs to the City of Beijing , Carlos Gil

Sustainable Planning and Design for Ecotourism: Ecotecture Embraced by the Essence of Nature on Amboro National Park, Santa Cruz-Bolivia , Claudia P. Gil

Revitalization and Modernization of Old Havana, Cuba , Mileydis Hernandez

Framework for Self Sustaining Eco-Village , Eric Holtgard

Condition / recondition: Reconstruction of the city and its collective memory , C Lopez

Architecture of materialism: A study of craft in design culture, process, and product , Logan Mahaffey

Incorporating solar technology to design in humid subtropical climates , Andres Mamontoff

"RE-Homing": Sustaining housing first , Jennifer McKinney

Devised architecture: Revitalizing the mundane , Jason Novisk

A greener vertical habitat: Creating a naturally cohesive sense of community in a vertical multi-family housing structure , Justin Onorati

Visualizing sound: A musical composition of aural architecture , James Pendley

Biotopia: An interdisciplinary connection between ecology, suburbia, and the city , Jessica Phillips

Cultural visualization through architecture , Fernando Pizarro

Experience + evolution: Exploring nature as a constant in an evolving culture and building type , Robin Plotkowski

Nature, daylight and sound: A sensible environment for the families, staff and patients of neonatal intensive care units , Ana Praskach

School work environment: Transition from education to practice , Shane Ross

ReLife: Transitional Housing for Victims of Natural Disaster , Alexander B. Smith

Form and Numbers: Mathematical Patterns and Ordering Elements in Design , Alison Marie Thom

Martian Modules: Design of a Programmable Martian Settlement , Craig A. Trover

Redesigning the megachurch: reintroduction of sacred space into a highly functional building , Javier Valencia

Aquatecture: Architectural Adaptation to Rising Sea Levels , Erica Williams

Theses/Dissertations from 2008 2008

Landscape as Urbanism , Ryan Nicholas Abraham

Architectural Strategies in Reducing Heat Gain in the Sub-Tropical Urban Heat Island , Mark A. Blazer

A Heritage Center for the Mississippi Gulf Coast: Linking the Community and Tourism Through Culture , Islay Burgess

Living Chassis: Learning from the Automotive Industry; Site Specifi c, Prefabricated, Systems Architecture , Christopher Emilio Emiliucci Cox

Permanent Supportive Housing in Tampa, Florida: Facilitating Transition through Site, Program, & Design , Nicole Lara Dodd

School as a Center for Community: Establishing Neighborhood Identity through Public Space and Educational Facility , Fred Goykhman

Reestablishing the Neighborhood: Exploring New Relationships & Strategies in Inner City Single Family Home Development , Jeremy Michael Hughes

High-Rise Neighborhood: Rethinking Community in the Residential Tower , Benjamin Hurlbut

reBURB: Redefining the Suburban Family Unit Under a New Construction Ecology , Matthew A. Lobeck

Blurring the Disconnect: [Inter]positioning Place within a Struggling Context , Eric Luttmann

Socializing Housing Phased Early Response to Impromptu Migrant Encampments In Lima, Peru , Raul E. Mayta

Knitting of Nature into an Urban Fabric: A Riverfront Development , Thant Myat

An Address, Not a Room Number: An Assisted Living Community within a Community , Gregory J. Novotnak

Ecological Coexistence: A Nature Retreat and Education Center on Rattlesnake Key, Terra Ceia, Florida , Richard F. Peterika

Aging with Identity: Integrating Culture into Senior Housing , Christine Sanchez

Re-Establishing Place Through Knowledge: A Facility for Earth Construction Education in Pisco, Peru , Hannah Jo Sebastian

Redefining What Is Sacred , Sarah A. Sisson

Reside…Commute…Visit... Reintegrating Defined Communal Place Amongst Those Who Engage with Tampa’s Built Environment , Matthew D. Suarez

The First Icomde A Library for the Information Age , Daniel Elias Todd

eCO_URBANism Restitching Clearwater's Urban Fabric Through Transit and Nature , Daniel P. Uebler

Urban Fabric as a Calayst for Architectural Awareness: Center for Architectural Research , Bernard C. Wilhelm

Theses/Dissertations from 2001 2001

Creating Healing Spaces, the Process of Designing Holistically a Battered Women Shelter , Lilian Menéndez

A prototypical Computer Museum , Eric Otto Ryder

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student housing architecture thesis

Student housing (Rethinking of hostel space)

Topic – STUDENT HOUSING (Rethinking of hostel space) Location - Pune, Maharashtra. AIM To design a student housing with all required facilities and with good architectural aesthetics sense. which will provide a comfort living to students and young professionals. OBJECTIVES 1.To create a familiar environment for students & young working professional’s by providing proper facilities & also a structure with good architectural senses. 2.To identify the challenges in venturing a modern drome's with all required facilities for student , a viable business model and analyze the marketing strategies adopted for long term business In India. 3.To investigate the scope modern amenities in student housing 4.To Analyze the importance of Recreational Areas in sports in Student housing 5.To create relaxed and easy atmosphere through design, architecture , expression so as to make the complex retreat from city life. 6.Integration of built form with landscape. NEED AND SCOPE There is always unseen effect of space we live within, which directly affect on our day to day life. Many times living area dose not matches as per users requirements which directly or indirectly affects on individuals routine,such is in case with student housing/hostels in India. Hostels in India are mostly simple concrete structure, and amenities which are not as per student requirements. which leads to uncomfortable living for students. So the space need to be rethink & design in such way that it will be create a good impression on users mind. Now a days we can see that most of the students prefer to stay in private apartments or P.G Instead of hostels, which are not at all affordable as well as comfortable for most of them specially in metro cities like Mumbai, Pune, Delhi. The society and residential housing also have issue with student living in the premises. LIMITATION The design will be limited to students & young professional like interns. The site should be in city center or place from where colleges or universities and other city landmarks must me nearby. Occupancy will be for limited users. WHY PUNE ? Pune city in Maharashtra, is oftenly known as “Oxford of the east” for its educational hubs in the country with close to 811 functional colleges. With a strong learning culture, at present the city is home to more then 3,00,000 outstation student. About 55% of enrolled student are outside pune & 6% are from outside India. STATISTICS & NEED India has currently approximately 34 million students in higher education system, which is double the size of student housing market in the west. Increased student mobility both internationally & intra-nationally is expected to rise in coming years meaning that the student enrolment number in higher education system could likely reach 40 million by 2021 in India. As against 10.4 million student in India there are only 6.1 million beds. Since 2010 there is a 67% increase in student population & 29% increase number of universities in India. There is also a student influx from African nation & also from Bangladesh, Afghanistan, south Korea, japan, china and few more countries. With such sheer volume of student the demand for organized student housing market is going to increase the coming years. Students are the backbone of any society or nation. A nation’s progress is dependent on how much is the young generation educated. India is fortunate that more than 60% of its total population of the country consists young people and most of them are the students. Hence it seems an extreme necessity to conduct one of such studies in order to throw some light on this type of project particularly serviced based student housing and to find out what role can architecture play in spreading awareness and promoting this topic which can be greatly beneficial for youth of our country.

STUDENT HOUSING (RETHINKING OF HOSTEL SPACE) TOTAL SITE AREA-29,902 SQ.M BUILD UP-16,474 SQ.M BASICALLY ITS A LIVING SPACE FOR STUDENTS AND YOUNG PROFESSIONALS WITH ALL REQUIRED AMENITIES SUCH AS GYM, INDOOR ,OUTDOOR SPORTS AREA, STUDY LOUNGE, COMMERCIAL, & SWIMMING POOL. COMMUNITY KITCHEN. PROJECT CONTAIN' TOTAL THREE TYPES OF ROOM FOR STUDENTS. 1. STUDIO APARTMENT 40SQ.M(31 UNITS) 2. DOUBLE SHARING 60SQ.M (34 UNITS) 3. FOUR SHARING 75SQ.M(32 UNITS) TOTAL SPACE FOR 296 STUDENTS. STRUCTURE IS DIVIDED INTO 4 BLOCKS BLOCK A & B ARE G+3 STRUCTURES WITH 32 UNITS (7 GROUND FLOOR AND 8 UNITS ON 1 TO 3RD FLOOR WITH 4 LIFTS & 2 STAIRCASE AND ONE GUEST ROOM) BLOCK C -G+4 STRUCTURE WITH TOTAL NO OF 35 UNITS (6 ON GROUND FLOOR & 7 UNIT ON 1ST OT 3RD FLOOR WITH WARDEN ROOM AND 4 LIFTS &2 STAIRCASE. BLOCK D-G+5 STRUCTURE WITH TOTAL NO. OF 33 (5 UNITS ON EACH FLOOR TILL 2FLOOR & 6 UNITS ON 3 TO 5TH FLOOR AND 4 LIFTS & 2 STAIRCASE AND INTERACTION SPACES LIKE INDOOR SPORTS ROOM,A.V ROOM,HYRROPONIC GARDENING WITH SITTING SPACE) ALL THE BLOCKS ARE HEXAGONAL IN SHAPE WITH OPENING IN ONE SIDE AND EACH HEXAGON CONTAIN ONE PUBLIC USED STRUCTURE PLACED IN BETWEEN THEM. EACH BLOCK HAVE EXTENDED BALCONY ATTACHED TO COMMON LOBBY AS WELL AS PRIVATE BALCONY TO EACH ROOM. PROJECT ALSO CONTAIN OUTDOOR SPORTS SUCH AS 2.TENNISE COURT 3.BASKETBALL COURT 4.SWIMMING POOL IN ADDITION PROJECT ALSO HAVE RECREATIONAL AREAS LIKE OUTDDOR SITTING SPACE,CYCLE TRACK, GAZIBO AND JOGGING TRACK & - COMMERCIAL BLOCK,MULTIPURPOSE HALL ,COMPUTER CAFE& 1 SMALL COFFE HOUSE PARKING SPACE FOR 170- 2 WHEELERS 28- CARS& 3 BUSES

PARAG GUJAR

student housing architecture thesis

Student housing in architectural renovation and urban regeneration projects

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20 Types of Architecture thesis topics

student housing architecture thesis

An architectural thesis is perhaps the most confusing for a student because of the range of typologies of buildings that exist. It also seems intimidating to pick your site program and do all the groundwork on your own. While choosing an architectural thesis topic, it is best to pick something that aligns with your passion and interest as well as one that is feasible. Out of the large range of options, here are 20 architectural thesis topics .

1. Slum Redevelopment (Urban architecture)

Slums are one of the rising problems in cities where overcrowding is pertinent. To account for this problem would be one of great value to the city as well as the inhabitants of the slum. It provides them with better sanitation and well-being and satisfies their needs.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet1

2. Maggie Center (Healthcare architecture)

This particular typology of buildings was coined by a cancer patient,  Margaret Keswick Jencks,   who believed that cancer-treatment centres’ environment could largely improve their health and wellbeing by better design. This led a large number of starchitects to participate and build renowned maggie centres.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet2

3. Urban Sprawl Redesign (Urban design)

The widening of city boundaries to accommodate migrants and overcrowding of cities is very common as of late. To design for the constant urban sprawl would make the city life more convenient and efficient for all its users.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet3

4. Redesigning Spaces Under Elevated Roads and Metros (Urban infrastructure)

A lot of space tends to become dead space under metros or elevated roads. To use these spaces more efficiently and engage them with the public would make it an exciting thesis topic.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet4

5. Urban Parks (Urban landscape)

Urban parks are not only green hubs for the city, which promotes the well-being of the city on a larger level, but they also act as great places for the congregation and bring a community together.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet5

6. Reusing Abandoned Buildings (Adaptive reuse)

All buildings after a point become outdated and old but, what about the current old and abandoned buildings? The best way to respond to these is not by demolishing them; given the amount of effort it takes to do so, but to enhance them by restoring and changing the building to current times.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet6

7. Farming in Cities (Green urban spaces)

With climate change and population on the rise, there is statistical proof that one needs to start providing farming in cities as there is not sufficient fertile land to provide for all. Therefore, this makes a great thesis topic for students to explore.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet7

8. Jails (Civil architecture)

To humanize the function of jails, to make it a place of change and rehabilitation, and break from the stereotypical way of looking at jails. A space that will help society look at prisoners as more than monsters that harm, and as fellow humans that are there to change for everyone’s betterment.

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9. Police Academies (Civil architecture)

Academies that train people to be authoritative and protective require spaces for training mentally and physically; focussing on the complexity of the academy and focussing on the user to enhance their experience would work in everyone’s favour.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet9

10. High Court (Civil architecture)

Courtrooms are more often than not looked at as spaces that people fear, given the longevity of court cases. It can be a strenuous space; therefore, understanding the user groups’ state of mind and the problems faced can be solved using good design. 

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet10

11. Disaster-resilient structures (Disaster-relief architecture)

Natural disasters are inevitable. Disaster-resilient structures are build suitably for the natural disasters of the region while also incorporating design into it, keeping in mind the climatic nature of the location.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet11

12. Biophilic design (Nature-inspired architecture)

As humans, we have an innate love for nature, and the struggle between integrating nature and architecture is what biophilic design aims towards. To pick a topic where one would see minimal use of natural elements and incorporate biophilic design with it would be very beneficial.

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13. Metro stations and Bus terminals (Transportation spaces)

Bus terminals and metro stations are highly functional spaces that often get crowded; and to account for the crowd and the problems that come with it, plus elevate the experience of waiting or moving, would contribute to making it a good thesis topic.

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14. Airport design (Transportation spaces)

Airport designing is not very uncommon; however, it is a rather complex program to crack; thereby, choosing this topic provides you with the opportunity to make this space hassle-free and work out the most efficient way to make this conducive for all types of users.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheetv14

15. Sports Complex (Community architecture)

If your passion lies in sports, this is a go-to option. Each sport is played differently, different materials are used, and the nature of the sport and its audience is rather complicated. However, to combine this and make it a cohesive environment for all kinds of users would make a good thesis topic.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet15

16. Stadium (Community architecture)

Unlike a sports complex, one could also pick one sport and look at the finer details, create the setting, and experience for it; by designing it to curate a nice experience for the players, the public, and the management.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet16

17. Waste-recycling center (Waste management)

Reducing waste is one of the most fundamental things we must do as humans. Spaces where recycling happens must be designed consciously. Just like any other space, it has been given importance over the years, and this would make a good thesis topic to provide the community with.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet17

18. Crematorium (Public architecture)

Cremation of a loved one or anyone for that matter is always a rather painful process and a range of emotions is involved when it comes to this place. Keeping in mind the different types of people and emotions and making your thesis about this would mean to enhance this experience while still keeping the solemnity of it intact.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet18

19. Museums (Community architecture)

Museums are spaces of learning, and the world has so much to offer that one could always come up with different typologies of museums and design according to the topic of one’s interest. Some of the examples would be cultural heritage, modern art, museum of senses, and many more.

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet19

20. Interpretation center (Community architecture)

An interpretation center is a type of museum located near a site of historical, cultural, or natural relevance that provides information about the place of interest through various mediums.

student housing architecture thesis

References:

  • 2022. 68 Thesis topics in 5 minutes . [image] Available at: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NczdOK7oe98&ab_channel=BlessedArch> [Accessed 1 March 2022].
  • Bdcnetwork.com. 2022. Biophilic design: What is it? Why it matters? And how do we use it? | Building Design + Construction . [online] Available at: <https://www.bdcnetwork.com/blog/biophilic-design-what-it-why-it-matters-and-how-do-we-use-it> [Accessed 1 March 2022].
  • RTF | Rethinking The Future. 2022. 20 Thesis topics related to Sustainable Architecture – RTF | Rethinking The Future . [online] Available at: <https://www.re-thinkingthefuture.com/rtf-fresh-perspectives/a1348-20-thesis-topics-related-to-sustainable-architecture/> [Accessed 1 March 2022].
  • Wdassociation.org. 2022. A List Of Impressive Thesis Topic Ideas In Architecture . [online] Available at: <https://www.wdassociation.org/a-list-of-impressive-thesis-topic-ideas-in-architecture.aspx> [Accessed 1 March 2022].

20 Types of thesis topics - Sheet1

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student housing architecture thesis

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student housing architecture thesis

Theses and Dissertations

student housing architecture thesis

View all past theses and dissertations on DSpace@MIT .

Theses and Dissertations in HTC

Thesis and Dissertations in HTC

https://architecture.mit.edu/history-theory-criticism

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Student Residence / SOA Architectes

Student Residence  / SOA Architectes - Windows, Facade

  • Curated by María Francisca González
  • Architects: SOA Architectes
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  10500 m²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020
  • Photographs Photographs: Camille Gharbi
  • Engineering Studies : Igrec Ingénierie
  • General Building Company : Léon Grosse
  • Design Team:  SOA Architectes
  • Landscape Design:  Sébastien Sosson
  • Client:  Batigère
  • City:  Gif-sur-Yvette
  • Country:  France
  • Did you collaborate on this project?

Student Residence  / SOA Architectes - Windows, Facade

Text description provided by the architects. This project is organized on three city scales. First, at the grand scale of public domain, of encounter and discovery, of shared programs organized around an outdoor amphitheater, symbol of the sharing of knowledge in the student world. Dialoguing around this central figure are the offices of the CROUS (student social aid office), a large store with a café, a laundry, a labor exchange, a terrace, a large workshop and a dance studio. These programs enliven and open onto garden and street. 

Student Residence  / SOA Architectes - Facade, Windows

On the second, collective scale, are the embedded daily sharing and mutual aid areas, developed throughout the upper floors and the shared corridors of the residence. Two-story shared spaces are designed and sized for 16 people on average and equipped with a small working space and a living area around a double-height terrace. Finally, there is the private scale, of the individual and of small groups. On the roofs, private gardens provide ideal places to relax and rejuvenate or gather friends.

Student Residence  / SOA Architectes - Table, Windows, Chair

The apartments, either individual or shared, benefit from a very large window and an open stretch that allows each renter to organize his or her apartment like a living room. The furniture is custom designed and rows of hooks on the wall allow for a very practical arrangement. 

Student Residence  / SOA Architectes - Windows, Facade

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Student Residence  / SOA Architectes - Windows, Facade

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Address: gif-sur-yvette, france.

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© Camille Gharbi

法国学生公寓,在三种尺度中与城市对话 / SOA Architectes

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Thesis Presentation Board - 1

Sangaath Housing - M. Arch Thesis Project

Presenting "Sangaath Housing" - The name means a community which grows together. A community where contemporary design meets ancient vernacular architecture. 

Due to recent economic growth and political policies, Ahmedabad is expanding at exponential rate. The growth is enourmous, but new developments in the city are lacking the supporting infrastructure such as schools, hospitals, recreational parks etc. This thesis aims to develop a mixed-use gated community where the vernacular architecture of Ahmedabad is preserved and principles of sustainability are applied. This project can be used as module to create micro neighborhoods in the city for sustainable growth.

Status: Built Location: Ahmedabad, India My Role: Thesis Student

Thesis Presentation Board - 2

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Solitaire Luxurious Residences

Solitaire Luxurious Residences

Center for Environmental Preservation and Technology

Center for Environmental...

IMAGES

  1. Dorm 19a Admiralty Street, Singapore

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  2. Student Housing Final Thesis

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  3. Student Housing / Master Thesis :: Behance

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  4. 2020 Student Thesis Showcase

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  5. 2022 Clifford Wong Prize in Housing Design: Brian Lee's “People’s Park

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  6. Student Housing / Master Thesis :: Behance

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VIDEO

  1. How to do case study for architecture thesis?

  2. The most beautiful house in China. Go back to your hometown and build a house. Your neighbors will

  3. The best house in China is still a self-built rural house in a Chinese-style courtyard Villa Design

  4. Rural self-built houses that will be popular in five years Villa design Architectural design

  5. My Architecture Thesis Project (Masters Portfolio)

  6. Do you think it's worth building? Rural self-built houses, villa design, modern and simple

COMMENTS

  1. Social Interaction in Student Residence Halls: an Architectural Perspective

    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture SOCIAL INTERACTION IN STUDENT RESIDENCE HALLS: AN ARCHITECTURAL PERSPECTIVE A Thesis in Architecture by Sohrab Rahimi Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Architecture August 2015

  2. PDF Final Renovation of Historic Student Housing

    REHABILITATION OF HISTORIC STUDENT HOUSING: A CASE STUDY by PAULA JEAN HOLDER B. Architecture, University of Tennessee, 2000 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the R equirements for the Degree MASTER OF HISTORIC PRESERVATION ATHENS, GEORGIA 2002

  3. Microsoft Word

    GMH Communities Trust (GCT) started operations in 2005 and owns military housing in addition to student housing. The company currently manages 77 properties and 47,000 beds. Education Realty Trust (EDR) completed their IPO in 2005. The company presently manages or owns 66 properties with 40,000 beds.

  4. 2020 Student Thesis Showcase

    KILLING IT: The Life and Death of Great American Cities by Amanda Golemba, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, M.Arch '20. Advisors: Nikole Bouchard, Jasmine Benyamin, and Erik Hancock / Independent Design Thesis. For decades, post-industrial cities throughout the United States have been quietly erased through self-imposed tabula rasa demolition. If considered at all, demolition is touted as ...

  5. House, home, and community : good models for graduate student housing

    Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2004. Some pages folded. Includes bibliographical references (p. 135-137). by Jienan Han. ... This thesis explores the planning and design of on-campus housing for graduate students in urban context. This study reviews the prevailing models of on-campus housing ...

  6. Student Homes?: Aspects of Student Housing Satisfaction

    Abstract. The main objective of this thesis has been to examine socio-cultural and architectural aspects that influence student housing satisfaction. The study applies case study methodology with focus on three selected student housing projects in Norway and a survey conducted among the student population in Trondheim.

  7. PDF Student Housing

    Aspects of Student Housing Satisfaction Thesis for the degree philosophiae doctor Trondheim, May 2008 Norwegian University of Science and Technology Faculty of Architecture and Fine Art Department of Architectural Design and Management Judith Thomsen Innovation and Creativity. NTNU

  8. 20 Thesis topics related to Residential Design

    So, here are 20 thesis topics related to residential typology that any architecture student can take up. 1. Mixed-Use Buildings | Residential Design. With the global pandemic forcing people to stay confined in their houses, the development of mixed-use buildings with residential, commercial and office spaces all in one place will help with ...

  9. Live, Work, and Study: The Future of University Student Housing

    Most rec, collegiate dorms caught major headlines when the University of California, Santa Barbara unveiled their plan for a massive new student housing project. The design was driven by a wealthy ...

  10. Student Housing

    The Architecture at Zero 2016 competition challenge is to create a zero net energy (ZNE) student housing project on the San Francisco State University campus. The competition has two components.

  11. Architecture and Community Design Theses and Dissertations

    Community Service Through Architecture: Social Housing with Identity, Karina Cabernite Cigagna. PDF. Building a Brighter Future Through Education: Student Housing for Single Parent Families, Carrie Cogsdale. PDF. Cooper-Hewitt Museum of Design and Technology (C-HMD+T): Biomimetic architecture as part of nature, Isabel Marisa Corsino Carro. PDF

  12. Student housing (Rethinking of hostel space)

    Description. Topic - STUDENT HOUSING (Rethinking of hostel space) Location - Pune, Maharashtra. AIM To design a student housing with all required facilities and with good architectural aesthetics sense. which will provide a comfort living to students and young professionals. OBJECTIVES 1.To create a familiar environment for students & young working professional's by providing proper ...

  13. Design for New Student Accommodation in Sydney Aims to ...

    Plus Architecture has designed a new building for student accommodation on the campus grounds of Moore Theological College in Newtown, Sydney, focusing on encouraging interaction.Through scale ...

  14. (PDF) Student housing in architectural renovation and urban

    Abstract. University student living is an evolving form of housing, subject to significant investment and design experimentation. In Italy, Law 338/2000 gave a strong stimulus to the construction ...

  15. 20 Types of Architecture thesis topics

    While choosing an architectural thesis topic, it is best to pick something that aligns with your passion and interest as well as one that is feasible. Out of the large range of options, here are 20 architectural thesis topics. 1. Slum Redevelopment (Urban architecture) Slums are one of the rising problems in cities where overcrowding is pertinent.

  16. Theses and Dissertations

    MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Architecture + Planning 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA, USA

  17. Student Residence / SOA Architectes

    Projects Built Projects Selected Projects Educational Architecture Other facilities Dorms Gif-sur-Yvette On Facebook France Published on August 11, 2020 Cite: "Student Residence / SOA Architectes ...

  18. Sangaath Housing

    Presenting "Sangaath Housing" - The name means a community which grows together. A community where contemporary design meets ancient vernacular architecture. Due to recent economic growth and political policies, Ahmedabad is expanding at exponential rate. The growth is enourmous, but new developments in the city are lacking the supporting ...