UW-Madison is leveraging swaths of experience across departments — and across the University of Wisconsin system — to meet student demand for an architecture program.
Boris Ivanov, Grant Behnke and Nicholas Perzacki — all candidates for UW-Madison master's degrees in real estate — collaborate during an architecture class, in which they had to design a hypothetical Italian restaurant for Madison's East Washington Avenue. The College of Engineering launched its first architecture certificate program this fall, bringing together knowledge from existing departments such as civil engineering, planning and urban studies and art history, as well as UW-Milwaukee introductory architecture classes.
UW-Madison students in an architecture class design a hypothetical Italian restaurant during a lab. A new architecture certificate is open to anyone on campus, so students studying other disciplines can also take the architecture classes.
Boris Ivanov, Grant Behnke and Nicholas Perzacki — all candidates for UW-Madison master's degrees in real estate — collaborate during an architecture class, in which they had to design a hypothetical Italian restaurant for Madison's East Washington Avenue. The College of Engineering launched its first architecture certificate program this fall, bringing together knowledge from existing departments such as civil engineering, planning and urban studies and art history, as well as UW-Milwaukee introductory architecture classes.
UW-Madison students in an architecture class design a hypothetical Italian restaurant during a lab. A new architecture certificate is open to anyone on campus, so students studying other disciplines can also take the architecture classes.