Syllabus				
				
				
											  Syllabus     Course Outline Principles
- Cultural Context: Technology exists within a cultural context. Therefore, contemporary building technology derives from a rich historical and cultural evolution of technique and form that augments the ability to design intelligently.
 - Holistic Building: Understanding individual building components and the details necessitates understanding the guiding architectural intentions, performance requirements, process of manufacture and assembly, and systematic organization of various building assemblies.
 - Invention: Architectural invention is the medium for the determination of form at all scales and permeates the physical architectural result. The making of details is not a deterministic process that seeks to optimize a singular solution. Be careful of optimization. "Il n'y a pas de detail dans la construction"
 
Scope of Course
- History and Theory of Building Systems and Architectural Components
 - Statics of Architectural Structures 
- Structural Morphology
 - Basic structural elements and force systems
 - Equilibrium equations
 - Material behavior
 
 - Building Systems 
- Performance requirements
 - Identification and specification of elements
 
 - Sustainable Strategies 
- Best practice
 - Resource efficiency
 
 - Materials: New and Old
 - Systems Integration
 
Values to Instill
- Possibility of Invention: both for engineers and architects
 - Craft of New and Old Technologies: good practice and new processes
 - Critical View of Product-Driven Design
 
Intended Results
- Familiarity with requirements of architectural assemblies
 - Understanding of broad range of "good" solutions
 - Understanding of contemporary issues in the design of architectural assemblies
 - Understanding of design process
 - Understanding of construction process
 - Identification of opportunities for "invention"
 - The initiation of a career-long study of the expressive potential inherent in the solution of technical assembly and construction situations
 - Development of strategies for collaboration between disciplines