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📊 Daily pulse · Sat, 04 Jul 2026

Architecture & Urban Planning · Pulse

Architecture and urban planning are sister academic disciplines that share a concern with the design of physical environment but operate at different scales — architecture from the building down to the room and the detail; urban planning from the neighbourhood through the city to the metropolitan region. Both have evolved over the 20th and 21st centuries from craft-trained professions into academic disciplines with substantial theoretical and research depth. AJG tracks them as a paired-but-distinct field that intersects with civil engineering, real-estate development, public policy, environmental science, and the social sciences.\n\nThe global architecture-school landscape clusters around a few elite institutions. In the US: Harvard Graduate School of Design (the GSD), MIT Department of Architecture, Yale School of Architecture, Princeton, Columbia GSAPP, Penn Stuart Weitzman School of Design, Berkeley's College of Environmental Design, UCLA, USC, Cornell, Rice, plus the broader system of accredited Bachelor of Architecture and Master of Architecture programs. In the UK: the Bartlett (UCL), the Architectural Association in London, Cambridge's Department of Architecture, Edinburgh, Manchester, the Royal College of Art. In Europe: ETH Zurich (consistently top-3 globally), TU Delft, the Berlage Institute (now part of TU Delft), KU Leuven, the Politecnico di Milano, ENSA Paris-Belleville. In Asia: the University of Tokyo, the National University of Singapore School of Design and Environment, Tsinghua University School of Architecture, the Indian Institutes of Technology architecture programs (especially IIT Roorkee, IIT Kharagpur), the School of Planning and Architecture (SPA Delhi, Bhopal, Vijayawada), CEPT Ahmedabad (Centre for Environment Planning and Technology, founded by Balkrishna Doshi).\n\nIndia's architecture-and-urban-planning academic infrastructure is structured around the Council of Architecture (the regulatory body), the SPA network (three campuses), the IITs' architecture departments, the NIT system's architecture programs, and a substantial private-sector architecture-college landscape. The intellectual-architectural traditions through Doshi (Pritzker Prize 2018), Charles Correa, Achyut Kanvinde, Habib Rahman, Raj Rewal, and the contemporary practitioners (Studio Mumbai's Bijoy Jain, Anupama Kundoo, Sameep Padora, Bimal Patel) constitute one of the most distinctive non-Western architectural canons of the post-independence period.\n\nUrban planning as a distinct discipline has its own institutional architecture overlapping with architecture but increasingly separate. The Bartlett School of Planning (UCL); MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning; Harvard GSD's urban planning track; UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design; Penn Stuart Weitzman School of Design; the planning programs at Toronto, Sydney, Hong Kong, Singapore. The American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP) and the Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI in the UK) provide the professional-credentialling frameworks. India's Institute of Town Planners India and the Town and Country Planning Organisation form the parallel institutional architecture. The 2014-onward Smart Cities Mission and the 2024 PM Awas Yojana extensions have created substantial public-sector planning-employment demand.\n\nSubdisciplines and specialisations worth flagging: sustainable architecture and green-building design (the LEED, BREEAM, GRIHA certification frameworks); historic preservation and adaptive reuse; landscape architecture (a distinct discipline that overlaps with both architecture and urban planning); housing studies and housing policy; transport planning; environmental planning; urban design (the scale between building and master-plan that has its own design vocabulary); real-estate development as a parallel applied track; construction technology; and the increasingly substantial digital-architecture (parametric design, BIM, computational design, urban data science, smart-city systems) specialty.\n\nFor a globally-mobile professional, architecture-and-planning programs require careful credential-recognition checks. The US-based NAAB-accredited Master of Architecture is the most-globally-portable credential. The UK RIBA Part 1 + Part 2 + Part 3 sequence; the European Bologna-aligned 5-year integrated programs; the Indian B.Arch + M.Arch sequence with Council of Architecture registration. Career destinations span design practice (the architectural firms ranging from boutique to global giants like SOM, Foster + Partners, Zaha Hadid Architects, Snøhetta, BIG, Gensler, AECOM, HOK, Perkins+Will, MVRDV), real-estate developers, government planning agencies, multilateral development banks (World Bank Urban Practice, ADB Urban, AIIB), and the substantial post-2010 sustainability-and-cities consulting ecosystem.

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