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The Architecture minor offers a program of study in which our undergraduates can become more adept at understanding the power of the built environment to shape lives and embody societal values.
Minor Requirements
The minor includes a minimum of six courses as follows.
Introductory Course
Four Courses
Students may apply to the Architectural Studies Minor Coordinator for permission to integrate one course from outside the ARTS department into their minor concentration, as a substitute for one of the following requirements.
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At least two courses must be focused on the history and theory of architecture from the following:
ARTS 220Â -Â Early Modern European Architecture - ARTS 244Â -Â Housing the Sacred in Ancient India
- ARTS 273Â -Â Architecture of Art Museums
- ARTS 275Â -Â American Campus Architecture
- ARTS 277Â -Â Modern Architecture 1880-1970
- ARTS 344Â -Â Hindu Temples: Architecture and Sculpture, Architecture as Sculpture
- ARTS 350Â -Â Art and the Goddess
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ARTS 357Â -Â Storytelling Without Words
  No more than two of the four courses may be drawn from those focused on architecture and its interaction with other arts and cultural forms: - ARTS 207 - Roman Art
- ARTS 245Â -Â Palaces and Paintings of India
- ARTS 360Â -Â Borderlands
- ARTS 363Â -Â War and Plunder
Electives
Complete at least one course from the following:
- ARTS 211Â -Â Drawing
- ARTS 263Â -Â Sculpture: Surface and Form
- ARTS 264Â -Â Sculpture: Material & Process
- ARTS 271Â -Â Architectural Design I
- ARTS 274Â -Â Sustainability in Architectural Design
- ARTS 312Â -Â Advanced Drawing
Graduate Study Recommendations
Students anticipating graduate work in architecture should be aware that liberal arts experience is highly valued by the best graduate schools. To prepare for graduate work in architecture, students should take PHYS 105Ìý´Ç°ù PHYS 111 and one semester of calculus. Experience in studio courses, especially drawing (ARTS 211), sculpture (ARTS 263Ìý´Ç°ù ARTS 264), is extremely valuable in the preparation of a graduate portfolio. The study of historical architecture and the ways in which architecture connects to society is promoted in many art courses such as ARTS 207, ARTS 216, ARTS 220, ARTS 226, ARTS 275, ARTS 277, ARTS 344, and ARTS 360. Students interested in careers in architecture should contact the architecture adviser.