Master of Architecture (MArch) - Option 2 24 months Postgraduate Program By Rice University |Top Universities
Subject Ranking

# 101-150QS Subject Rankings

Program Duration

24 monthsProgram duration

Main Subject Area

Architecture and Built EnvironmentMain Subject Area

Program overview

Main Subject

Architecture and Built Environment

Study Level

Masters

Program Learning Outcomes for Master of Architecture (MArch) Students graduating from this program will: Develop or augment design and communication skills to formulate architectural projects that engage broader theoretical, social, political, economic, cultural, and environmental issues at a level commensurate with advanced study. Develop or augment a comprehensive knowledge of the technical aspects of design and construction including an understanding of their impact on design and the environment at a level commensurate with advanced study. Develop or augment the ability to synthesize heterogeneous cultural and technical considerations into a coherent project at a level commensurate with advanced study. Develop or augment a comprehensive understanding of architectural practice and foster the development of innovative forms of practice at a level commensurate with advanced study. Degree Requirements for Master of Architecture (MArch) The Master of Architecture program understands architecture to be a generalist practice, while encouraging each student’s freedom to forge a specific trajectory within this generalist milieu. We prepare students to engage an ever more ambiguous world—one that can no longer simply be flattened by such binaries as local and global, quantity and quality, mind and nature, form and function, or standards and exceptions. The challenge we pose to our students is to transgress the obsolescence of opposing values and to navigate the tricky waters of a world no longer organized around presupposed notions of solidity, permanence, rootedness, centrality, protection, and identity. Our program is the very place where visions of the future are tested and where students are asked to understand the world’s complexity in order to focus on the tangible, the legible, and the relevant. Programs of Study—There are two program options at the Master of Architecture level: Options 1 and 2. They differ according to the Bachelor’s degree received prior to entering the graduate program. Option 2 Offered to individuals who hold a four-year undergraduate degree with a major in Architecture. Advanced placement into Option 2 is at the discretion of the admissions committee, but generally preference for admission is given to those who have successfully completed five semesters or more of undergraduate design studio as well as undergraduate courses that are analogous to those given in the first year of Option 1. A minimum of two semesters of college-level courses in the history of art and/or architecture and one semester of college-level courses in mathematics or physics is expected. In order to graduate, students in this program must complete, in addition to 4 semesters of design studios, a curriculum of 39 credit hours with an additional free electives course load of 15 hours. MArch Thesis Requirement Thesis is payback time—it is when students build upward and outward from what they’ve learned over the years, giving back to the school by providing new disciplinary fodder. More immediate than a crystal ball, some of the common threads underlying a Rice thesis might well reveal tomorrow’s future. Despite working in the context of Texas’s vast horizon, Rice thesis students do not envision an endless frontier. RSA Paris MArch (Option 1 and Option 2) students may apply to RSAP to complete one semester in Paris: Option 1 students may do so in their fifth or sixth semester, Option 2 in their third or fourth semester. BArch students may apply to RSAP in their final year of study.

Program overview

Main Subject

Architecture and Built Environment

Study Level

Masters

Program Learning Outcomes for Master of Architecture (MArch) Students graduating from this program will: Develop or augment design and communication skills to formulate architectural projects that engage broader theoretical, social, political, economic, cultural, and environmental issues at a level commensurate with advanced study. Develop or augment a comprehensive knowledge of the technical aspects of design and construction including an understanding of their impact on design and the environment at a level commensurate with advanced study. Develop or augment the ability to synthesize heterogeneous cultural and technical considerations into a coherent project at a level commensurate with advanced study. Develop or augment a comprehensive understanding of architectural practice and foster the development of innovative forms of practice at a level commensurate with advanced study. Degree Requirements for Master of Architecture (MArch) The Master of Architecture program understands architecture to be a generalist practice, while encouraging each student’s freedom to forge a specific trajectory within this generalist milieu. We prepare students to engage an ever more ambiguous world—one that can no longer simply be flattened by such binaries as local and global, quantity and quality, mind and nature, form and function, or standards and exceptions. The challenge we pose to our students is to transgress the obsolescence of opposing values and to navigate the tricky waters of a world no longer organized around presupposed notions of solidity, permanence, rootedness, centrality, protection, and identity. Our program is the very place where visions of the future are tested and where students are asked to understand the world’s complexity in order to focus on the tangible, the legible, and the relevant. Programs of Study—There are two program options at the Master of Architecture level: Options 1 and 2. They differ according to the Bachelor’s degree received prior to entering the graduate program. Option 2 Offered to individuals who hold a four-year undergraduate degree with a major in Architecture. Advanced placement into Option 2 is at the discretion of the admissions committee, but generally preference for admission is given to those who have successfully completed five semesters or more of undergraduate design studio as well as undergraduate courses that are analogous to those given in the first year of Option 1. A minimum of two semesters of college-level courses in the history of art and/or architecture and one semester of college-level courses in mathematics or physics is expected. In order to graduate, students in this program must complete, in addition to 4 semesters of design studios, a curriculum of 39 credit hours with an additional free electives course load of 15 hours. MArch Thesis Requirement Thesis is payback time—it is when students build upward and outward from what they’ve learned over the years, giving back to the school by providing new disciplinary fodder. More immediate than a crystal ball, some of the common threads underlying a Rice thesis might well reveal tomorrow’s future. Despite working in the context of Texas’s vast horizon, Rice thesis students do not envision an endless frontier. RSA Paris MArch (Option 1 and Option 2) students may apply to RSAP to complete one semester in Paris: Option 1 students may do so in their fifth or sixth semester, Option 2 in their third or fourth semester. BArch students may apply to RSAP in their final year of study.

Admission requirements

7+

Tuition fee and scholarships

One of the important factors when considering a master's degree is the cost of study. Luckily, there are many options available to help students fund their master's programme. Download your copy of the Scholarship Guide to find out which scholarships from around the world could be available to you, and how to apply for them.

In this guide you will find:
opportunities

Where to look for scholarship opportunities

how_to

How to apply to scholarships relevant to you

list

A list of available scholarships around the world

checklist

A scholarship application checklist

banner
download_icon Download Scholarship Guide

More programs from the university

Rice University offers over 50 undergraduate majors, including:

  • Electrical engineering
  • Statistics
  • Anthropology
  • Writing and communication
  • Environmental engineering

BA in English

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in History

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Linguistics

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Music

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Philosophy

::type_cta_button:: View Details

Bachelor of Music

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Astronomy

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Chemistry

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Mathematics

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Physics

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BA in Statistics

::type_cta_button:: View Details

BS in Mathematics

::type_cta_button:: View Details

Rice University offers advanced degrees in 37 fields of study and enrolls approximately 2,800 graduate students.

  • Architecture
    • Architecture
    • Master of Arts
    • Urban design
  • Business
    • Accounting
    • Business Administration
    • Marketing and finance
    • Strategic marketing
  • Education
    • Teaching
    • Liberal studies
  • Engineering
    • Applied physics
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical and biomolecular engineering
    • Civil and environmental engineering
    • Computational and applied mathematics
    • Computational science and engineering
    • Computer science
    • Electrical and computer engineering
    • Industrial engineering
    • Materials science and nanoengineering
    • Mechanical engineering
    • Statistics
  • Humanities
    • Art history
    • English
    • History
    • Philosophy
    • Religion
  • Music
    • Music
    • Musical arts
    • Artist diploma
  • Natural Sciences
    • Applied physics
    • Biochemistry and cell biology
    • Bioscience and health policy
    • Chemistry
    • Earth, environmental and planetary sciences
    • Ecology and evolutionary biology
    • Environmental analysis
    • Mathematics
    • Physics and astronomy
    • Science teaching
    • Space studies
    • Subsurface geoscience
    • Systems, synthetic and physical biology
  • Social Sciences
    • Anthropology
    • Economics
    • Energy economics
    • Global affairs
    • Human factors/human computer interaction
    • Linguistics
    • Political science
    • Psychological sciences
    • Sociology

MA in Art History

::type_cta_button:: View Details

MA in English

::type_cta_button:: View Details

MA in History

::type_cta_button:: View Details

MA in Philosophy

::type_cta_button:: View Details
Postgrad programs 524