Bachelor of Environmental Design

A Bachelor of Environmental Design, (B.EnvD.), is an undergraduate course of study. Similar in nature to a pre-law degree, a B.EnvD is designed as preparatory undergraduate training for a professional course of study in architecture, landscape architecture, or urban planning, and is one of several degrees offered as preparatory training for the Master of Architecture degree. An alternative three-year Master of Architecture exists for people with a bachelor's degree not related to design, the M.Arch I degree. A Bachelor of Environmental Design should not be confused with a Bachelor in Environmental Studies, which though similar, does not train one for graduate professional study in architecture, landscape design, or urban planning. Environmental Design degree programs generally take four years of full-time study to complete, and many institutions allow a specialty emphasis within urban planning, architecture or landscape architecture.[1] Other pre-professional degrees include the B.S. in Architectural Studies, B.A. in Architecture, the B.S. in Architecture, and the B.S. in Construction Management. Though the Bachelor of Environmental Design is not accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board NAAB, like other college degrees, programs in Environmental Design are accredited through their host-institution schools by various regional agencies, such as the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, or the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. The Bachelor of Environmental Design should not be confused with the M.Arch or the five-year accredited B.Arch degree.[2]

Purpose and nature of training

Modern environmental design began as a series of separate disciplines that intersect between the professional worlds of architecture, product design, and the eco/environmental movement. Intersecting disciplines of similar philosophies include permaculture, complementary gardening, sustainable agriculture, zero-energy building design, passive solar architecture, pollution mitigation, cradle-to-grave, open space preservation, New Urbanism, sustainable transportation and traffic planning, multi-modal transportation design etc. With the development of a bachelor's degree, these various different disparate fields are brought together in a unified, but interdisciplinary field of environmental design. In the academic world, environmental design may cross disciplines with departments of geography, environmental science, climatology, neuroscience, and various others. The most publicly known example of environmental design is LEED certified design, which stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design. Sustainable design is rapidly being adopted by governments around the world. On October 28th, 2010, the U.S. General Services Administration moved to mandate LEED certification in all new federal buildings.[3]

List of environmental design degree–granting institutions

gollark: The existing ones.
gollark: They seem to generally have been named after general... stuff... and not specific mythological beings.
gollark: Oh right, the existing ones already have elemental wotsits, that's a clue.
gollark: The desert one might be... sun, or oasis, or summer, or something, not earth.
gollark: To be honest, I kind of prefer the original set's egg colors, but the new ones look nice as hatchlings.

See also

References

  1. http://www.archcareers.org/website/article.asp?id=13 Archived 2013-01-01 at the Wayback Machine "Arch Careers.org. Architecture Degree Programs", Retrieved on April 4th, 2013.
  2. http://www.ncarb.org/Studying-Architecture/Difference-Between-NAAB-Accredited-And-Non.aspx "DIFFERENCE BETWEEN NAAB-ACCREDITED AND NON-ACCREDITED PROGRAMS", NCARB, Retrieved on April 4th, 2013.
  3. Beatty, MaryAnne. http://www.gsa.gov/portal/content/197325 "GSA Moves to LEED Gold for All New Federal Buildings and Major Renovations", the General Services Administration, Retrieved on April 4th, 2013.
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