• Department of Urban Studies and Planning

Writing a research proposal

Find out how to write your research proposal, and what to include in it.

Students sat at a table writing.

What makes a strong PhD?

A PhD is an independent piece of research and writing that makes an original contribution to existing knowledge. It is between 75,000 to 100,000 words long and is typically conducted over three years full-time (or five years part-time.)

The defining feature of a PhD is that it is yours. The topic will usually come from you, unless you are working on a predefined project attached to funding. Even then, you will take ownership of that project and make it your own.

The PhD will likely be the most challenging type of academic work you have ever done: it should also be the most rewarding.

The research proposal – an outline

The research proposal constitutes the main way in which the department of Urban Studies and Planning evaluates the potential quality of your proposed PhD. Your proposal should be approximately 1,500 words in length and include:

  • An overview of the topic and the main research aim
  • A brief literature review of relevant research in the field (including the key academic and theoretical debates) and how your research would relate to this literature
  • The specific research questions to be answered in the thesis
  • suggested research methods; and
  • the expected contribution to knowledge and to society beyond academia (i.e. its social and/or economic impact).

Don't forget

  • Try to be concise. Do not write too much – be as specific as you can but not wordy. It is a difficult balance to strike.
  • Bear in mind that the proposal is only a starting point. If you are registered to read for a PhD you will be able to develop the proposal with your supervisor in more detail in the early months, leading up to as full proposal presented to the department, usually after nine months.
  • Take a look at the department’s  staff profiles  and the  research areas and topics of the PhD school. Can you identify possible supervisors and intellectual support networks within the department? The better ‘fit’ there is between your proposal and our research, the better able the department will be to support your research.

The research proposal – in detail

The title indicates the ‘headline’ character of the PhD. It should include any key concepts, empirical focus, or lines of inquiry that you aim to pursue. For example: ‘The environmental and social impacts of mass housing in Latin American countries’, or ‘Using water efficiently: understanding the impact of expanding middle-class demand on city water systems’.

Your title should describes what you aspire to research – and demonstrate its originality and value.

Overview and aim

You need a clear aim, sometimes framed as a question, to drive the research forward: you need to convince the reader that your research topic is both original and important.

Originality means that it needs to be something that has not been addressed before – either looking at a topic which hasn’t been explored, or it might mean taking a fresh approach to an existing topic or issue.

You also need to explain in a few sentences why it is important: what is the wider value of the research, and why does it matter?

This needs to be set within a brief overview, giving enough background to your research context to demonstrate that this research aim is credible and worthwhile: you do not need to give a great deal of factual detail.

Literature review

A short note of key existing literature situates and justifies the PhD with respect to existing research. Literature reviews are not simply descriptive mapping exercises at PhD level (i.e. ‘X said this, Y said that’).

Rather you should identify a small number of key texts and say something about how these are important for your research – how they motivate it, what ideas or debates it engages with, and how your work might support, extend, or challenge existing work.

Research questions

You should give your aim more content by setting out a short list of questions (3-6 is normal) which your research will answer.

These should be achievable within the framework of a PhD, where time is a key constraint: this is typically an individual endeavour, designed to be a three-year project, of which no more than around 9 months can be committed to data collection.

They should also be answerable – questions which begin what/how/why are typically fine. Beware of normative questions (‘what is the best way to…?’ or ‘how should X work…?’): these may motivate your project overall, but researchable questions need to focused in the real world and on things that do exist.

This is where you can say something about how you will answer your questions.

It is relatively easy to ask a new question; it is more challenging to set out how you might come up with a convincing answer.

As a department we welcome applications from a very broad range of methodological and philosophical backgrounds: quantitative and qualitative; text-based and mapping big data; interpretive, positivist, realist, and many more.

‘Methods’ does not only mean empirical methods such as semi-structured interviews or surveys and statistical interpretation; it also might involve a statement on the kind of theoretical framework you will employ, such as a certain kind of approach to organisations or a way to understand ideas.

What is important is that there are coherent links between your aims, questions and proposed methods – why is using this evidence going to provide the most robust answer to your questions?

Expected contribution to knowledge

Here you should set out briefly the kind of conclusions you expect to draw, and why they matter. Obviously at this point this can only be speculative, but you should identify what kind of knowledge you might develop, and who it might be of interest to, and why.

If you have ideas about how you might disseminate this knowledge, and have impact on the non-academic world, then put them in here.

Related information

Research areas and topics

Grad Coach

Research Proposal Example/Sample

Detailed Walkthrough + Free Proposal Template

If you’re getting started crafting your research proposal and are looking for a few examples of research proposals , you’ve come to the right place.

In this video, we walk you through two successful (approved) research proposals , one for a Master’s-level project, and one for a PhD-level dissertation. We also start off by unpacking our free research proposal template and discussing the four core sections of a research proposal, so that you have a clear understanding of the basics before diving into the actual proposals.

  • Research proposal example/sample – Master’s-level (PDF/Word)
  • Research proposal example/sample – PhD-level (PDF/Word)
  • Proposal template (Fully editable) 

If you’re working on a research proposal for a dissertation or thesis, you may also find the following useful:

  • Research Proposal Bootcamp : Learn how to write a research proposal as efficiently and effectively as possible
  • 1:1 Proposal Coaching : Get hands-on help with your research proposal

Free Webinar: How To Write A Research Proposal

FAQ: Research Proposal Example

Research proposal example: frequently asked questions, are the sample proposals real.

Yes. The proposals are real and were approved by the respective universities.

Can I copy one of these proposals for my own research?

As we discuss in the video, every research proposal will be slightly different, depending on the university’s unique requirements, as well as the nature of the research itself. Therefore, you’ll need to tailor your research proposal to suit your specific context.

You can learn more about the basics of writing a research proposal here .

How do I get the research proposal template?

You can access our free proposal template here .

Is the proposal template really free?

Yes. There is no cost for the proposal template and you are free to use it as a foundation for your research proposal.

Where can I learn more about proposal writing?

For self-directed learners, our Research Proposal Bootcamp is a great starting point.

For students that want hands-on guidance, our private coaching service is recommended.

Literature Review Course

Psst… there’s more!

This post is an extract from our bestselling short course, Research Proposal Bootcamp . If you want to work smart, you don't want to miss this .

You Might Also Like:

Example of a literature review

10 Comments

Lam Oryem Cosmas

I am at the stage of writing my thesis proposal for a PhD in Management at Altantic International University. I checked on the coaching services, but it indicates that it’s not available in my area. I am in South Sudan. My proposed topic is: “Leadership Behavior in Local Government Governance Ecosystem and Service Delivery Effectiveness in Post Conflict Districts of Northern Uganda”. I will appreciate your guidance and support

MUHAMMAD SHAH

GRADCOCH is very grateful motivated and helpful for all students etc. it is very accorporated and provide easy access way strongly agree from GRADCOCH.

Tamasgen desta

Proposal research departemet management

Salim

I am at the stage of writing my thesis proposal for a masters in Analysis of w heat commercialisation by small holders householdrs at Hawassa International University. I will appreciate your guidance and support

Abrar Shouket

please provide a attractive proposal about foreign universities .It would be your highness.

habitamu abayneh

comparative constitutional law

Kabir Abubakar

Kindly guide me through writing a good proposal on the thesis topic; Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Financial Inclusion in Nigeria. Thank you

Tatenda Mpofu

Kindly help me write a research proposal on the topic of impacts of artisanal gold panning on the environment

Bunrosy Lan

I am in the process of research proposal for my Master of Art with a topic : “factors influence on first-year students’s academic adjustment”. I am absorbing in GRADCOACH and interested in such proposal sample. However, it is great for me to learn and seeking for more new updated proposal framework from GRADCAOCH.

Submit a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

  • Print Friendly
  • Postgraduate

Research degrees

  • Examples of Research proposals
  • Apply for 2024
  • Find a course
  • Accessibility

Examples of research proposals

How to write your research proposal, with examples of good proposals.

Research proposals

Your research proposal is a key part of your application. It tells us about the question you want to answer through your research. It is a chance for you to show your knowledge of the subject area and tell us about the methods you want to use.

We use your research proposal to match you with a supervisor or team of supervisors.

In your proposal, please tell us if you have an interest in the work of a specific academic at York St John. You can get in touch with this academic to discuss your proposal. You can also speak to one of our Research Leads. There is a list of our Research Leads on the Apply page.

When you write your proposal you need to:

  • Highlight how it is original or significant
  • Explain how it will develop or challenge current knowledge of your subject
  • Identify the importance of your research
  • Show why you are the right person to do this research
  • Research Proposal Example 1 (DOC, 49kB)
  • Research Proposal Example 2 (DOC, 0.9MB)
  • Research Proposal Example 3 (DOC, 55.5kB)
  • Research Proposal Example 4 (DOC, 49.5kB)

Subject specific guidance

  • Writing a Humanities PhD Proposal (PDF, 0.1MB)
  • Writing a Creative Writing PhD Proposal (PDF, 0.1MB)
  • About the University
  • Our culture and values
  • Academic schools
  • Academic dates
  • Press office

Our wider work

  • Business support
  • Work in the community
  • Donate or support

Connect with us

York St John University

Lord Mayor’s Walk

[email protected]

01904 624 624

York St John London Campus

6th Floor Export Building

1 Clove Crescent

[email protected]

01904 876 944

architecture phd proposal sample

  • Policies and documents
  • Module documents
  • Programme specifications
  • Quality gateway
  • Admissions documents
  • Access and Participation Plan
  • Freedom of information
  • Accessibility statement
  • Modern slavery and human trafficking statement

© York St John University 2024

Colour Picker

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Dui id ornare arcu odio.

Felis bibendum ut tristique et egestas quis ipsum. Et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Faucibus pulvinar elementum integer enim neque volutpat ac. Hac habitasse platea dictumst vestibulum rhoncus.

Nec ullamcorper sit amet risus nullam eget felis eget. Eget felis eget nunc lobortis mattis aliquam faucibus purus.

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

paper cover thumbnail

Successful thesis proposals in architecture and urban planning

Profile image of Mahmoud A Abdellatif

2020, Successful thesis proposals in architecture and urban planning

Purpose-The purpose of this research is to improve the understanding of what constitutes a successful thesis proposal (TP) and as such enhance the quality of the TP writing in architecture, planning, and related disciplines. Design/methodology/approach-Based on extended personal experience and a review of relevant literature, the authors proposed a conception of a successful TP comprising 13 standard components. The conception provides a specific definition/s, attributes, and success rules for each component. The conception was applied for 15 years on several batches of Saudi graduate students. The implications of the conception were assessed by a students' opinion survey. An expert inquiry of experienced academics from architectural schools in nine countries was applied to validate and improve the conception. Findings-Assessment of the proposed conception demonstrated several positive implications on students' knowledge, performance, and outputs which illustrates its applicability in real life. Experts' validation of the conception and constructive remarks have enabled further improvements on the definitions, attributes, and success rules of the TP components. Research limitations/implications-The proposed TP conception with its 13 components is limited to standard problem-solving research and will differ in the case of other types such as hypothesis-based research. Practical implications-The proposed conception is a useful directive and evaluative tool for writing and assessing thesis proposals for graduate students, academic advisors, and examiners. Social implications-The research contributes to improving the quality of the thesis production process among the academic community in the built environment fields. Originality/value-The paper is meant to alleviate the confusion and hardship caused by the absence of a consensus on what constitutes a successful TP in the fields of architecture, urban planning, and related disciplines.

Related Papers

European Journal of Engineering Education

Rahman Tafahomi

architecture phd proposal sample

Journal of Design Studio

The aim of this paper is to evaluate the application of a theoretical framework in the architecture thesis project to discover the effectiveness of the exercise on the thesis projects. It was common to observe that the students prepared the architectural thesis project with limited, unstructured, or disconnected studies to analysis, programming, and conceptualization phases. A theoretical framework model was tested to evaluate the effects on the learning outcomes of the students. The methodology of the research was designed based on structured observation and content analysis. The findings of the research reveal that the students perceive and understand the studies and the theoretical framework differently. The students demonstrated their theoretical framework with four categorical specifications including information, application, presentation, and communication. The information referred to data and structure of the organization, the application implied the relation between the dat...

Michael Karassowitsch

This paper is an introduction to the scope and intents of the dissertation. It contains the Abstract for the dissertation and a description of its parts, results and the research orientation that the work generates. The full document may be made available on request. Questions may be forwarded to the author.

aastha gaur

Serafin Talisayon

madis pihlak

Insight into a Personalized Procedure of Design in Concept Generation by the Students in Architecture Thesis Projects

This paper analyses the predominant trend between the students to follow, frame, and develop a concept in the architectural thesis design. The research targets to question how the students derive their inspiration from diverse sources and influencers into the architectural design concept. The research methodology was based on semi-structured questionnaires with Likert scale questions to analyse and interpret data through the Chi-Square test in SPSS software. The findings revealed that first, the students preferred to employ more symbolic and poetic elements for the design than real projects, second, to create their concepts under influences of supervisors and juries than research, third, to follow personal procedure than the structured process of the course. In conclusion, the results revealed that the students adopted a personal procedure under the influences of the supervisors to design a concept that is closely aligned with a subjective approach, rather than a structured research process.

Proceedings of DARCH 2022- 2nd International Conference on Architecture & Design

AIDA KESUMA AZMIN

Robertus Willy

Human Dynamics and Design for the Development of Contemporary Societies

Michele Santos

The achievement of a balanced and consistent PhD Thesis proposal is a challenge for each PhD student. This paper intends to unfold and reflect on the tactics used by the authors in the course named "Seminário de Projeto de Tese" (Thesis Project Seminar) lectured at the Doctoral Program in Design at the Lisbon School of Architecture, Univ. of Lisbon. The main goal of this reflection is to present and question the key elements of this "kick-off" moment, but mostly, to convey the way they are worked along with the students and later concatenated in a robust proposal that maps the research project. In methodological terms, we will be using literature review to frame the work and we will assess the didactics used in class. As a result of this work, we show a step-bystep didactic process explained and open to be used. These guidelines have proven to be very assertive.

RELATED PAPERS

miguel eliseo

Tạ Lương Thái An

Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine

Feridoun Karimi-busheri

Physical Review D

Ethan Honda

Ciencia & Desarrollo

JOSÉ QUISPE

Journal of Physical Chemistry C

emilia giorgetti

Skeletal radiology

Giovanni Zoccali

BMC Family Practice

Nadine Allain-Boulé

Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology

philippe mateo

Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira

Milton Gael Gomez Vargas

Computers & Industrial Engineering

Zhou-Jing Wang

Didier Ledoux

SIVAPRASAD KUMAR

Journal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL

Hanumant poul Patil

Goran Čular

Congreso Ibérico de Agroingeniería

franleenh bustafer

Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

Sikha Bagui

DR. Santi Ranjan Dey

Fertility and Sterility

Christine Briton-jones

Revista Latinoamericana de Ciencias de la Comunicación

Sandra Massoni

The Ecumenical Review

Angel Santiago-Vendrell

WAN NURUL HUDA WAN ZAINAL

Fibers and Polymers

Déogratias Nurwaha

SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500-1900

Harriet Linkin

Anthony Grooms

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

University of Cambridge

Study at Cambridge

About the university, research at cambridge.

  • Undergraduate courses
  • Events and open days
  • Fees and finance
  • Postgraduate courses
  • How to apply
  • Postgraduate events
  • Fees and funding
  • International students
  • Continuing education
  • Executive and professional education
  • Courses in education
  • How the University and Colleges work
  • Term dates and calendars
  • Visiting the University
  • Annual reports
  • Equality and diversity
  • A global university
  • Public engagement
  • Give to Cambridge
  • For Cambridge students
  • For our researchers
  • Business and enterprise
  • Colleges & departments
  • Email & phone search
  • Museums & collections
  • Current Students
  • Information for Graduate Students
  • Information for PhD Students
  • Department of Architecture
  • About the Department overview
  • The Faculty of Architecture and History of Art
  • A History of the Architecture Department
  • Scroope Journal overview
  • Current Issue
  • Call for Abstracts
  • Past Issues
  • The Faculty Library
  • 100 Years of Drawings
  • Support Us overview
  • Dalibor Vesely Fund overview
  • The Cultural Significance of Architecture: A conference in memory of Dalibor Vesely overview
  • Session 1: History and Philosophy of Architecture overview
  • To the conference in memory of Dalibor Vesely - José de Paiva
  • Low Relief - or, articulation tied to embodiment - David Leatherbarrow
  • Dalibor Vesely and The Primacy of Orality - Perez-Gomez
  • Karsten Harries - Remembering Dalibor Vesely
  • Robin Middleton - Dalibor Vesely statement
  • The Cultural Significance of Architecture - In Memory of Dalibor Vesely - Mari Hvattum
  • Hvattum_Presentation1
  • What is the cultural significance of architecture - Peter Carl
  • The Presence of Dalibor Vesely - K Frampton
  • Dalibor Vesely's Flat - The Dwelling as a Communicative Field - Dagmar Weston
  • Session 2: Design and the European City overview
  • Drawings: David Dernie
  • Chatting about the city - Diana Periton
  • Dalibor Reflections - Mohsen Mostafavi - March2016
  • Creative Intelligence in Architecture - Phil Meadowcroft
  • Design and the European City - Kalliope Kontozoglou
  • Athanasios Spanomaridis with DALIBOR VESELY
  • To DALIBOR - Athanasios Spanomaridis
  • E.Parry_Dalibor Vesely conference (Session 2)_11 April 2016
  • CWFrost. Fragment Craft Tradition
  • David Bass - Architecture Laughter and Animals
  • Diana Periton - slides
  • Session 3: Legacy, New Horizons overview
  • Carolyn Steel - conference slides
  • Hand Drawings - P Lynch
  • Sitopia – a tribute to Dalibor by Carolyn Steel
  • The Cultural Significance of Architecture - In Memory of Dalibor Vesely - Stephen Witherford
  • Dalibor Vesely and the criticism of architecture - Rowan Moore060416
  • P LYNCH PRESENTATION - DV SYMPOSIUM EMMANUELLE COLLEGE-opt
  • Architecture's Contribution - Wendy Pullan
  • Biba Dow - Dalibor conf_Session 3
  • Homa - diffused digital
  • Homa - Conference Slides
  • William Mann - Ruins of the Baroque - slides
  • William Mann - Ruins of the Baroque - Slides and text
  • Dalibor Vesely Memorial Conference Programme
  • Conference videos via the Department YouTube Channel
  • Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity
  • Athena Swan
  • Privacy Policy
  • People Overview
  • Head of Department
  • Deputy Heads of Department
  • Associate Professors
  • Assistant Professors
  • Visiting Professors
  • Emeritus Faculty
  • Affiliated Lecturers
  • Research Staff
  • Teaching Associates
  • MDes Advisory Group
  • Design Fellows
  • Professional Staff
  • Courses overview
  • Undergraduate overview
  • Architecture Tripos overview
  • Year One Architecture
  • Year Two Architecture
  • Year Three Architecture
  • Architecture FAQs
  • Design Tripos (MDes) overview
  • Year One Design
  • Year Two Design
  • Year Three Design
  • Year Four Design
  • Teaching and Assessment
  • Student Life
  • Preparing a Portfolio
  • Reading list for candidates
  • Outreach and Widening Participation
  • Postgraduate overview
  • Master of Architecture (MArch) Degree (ARB/RIBA Part 2)
  • Postgraduate Certificate in Professional Practice in Architecture - ARB/ RIBA Part 3 overview
  • HOW TO APPLY for the Postgraduate Certificate in Professional Practice in Architecture
  • Dates for Cohort 2022-23
  • Dates for Cohort 2023-24
  • Dates for Cohort 2024–25
  • MSt Architecture Apprenticeship overview
  • Requirements
  • Teaching and Assesment
  • Fees and Funding
  • MPhil in Architecture & Urban Studies (MAUS) overview
  • How to apply for the MPhil in Architecture and Urban Studies
  • MPhil in Architecture
  • PhD in Architecture overview
  • How to apply for the PhD in Architecture
  • MSt Building History overview
  • Contributors
  • Course Structure
  • Core Modules
  • Optional Modules
  • Testimonials
  • Building History Newsletter - Issue 11 April 2022
  • Building History Newsletter March 2021
  • Building History Newsletter December 2019
  • Building History Newsletter July 2018
  • Building History Newsletter March 2018
  • Building History Newsletter July 2017
  • Building History Newsletter April 2017
  • Building History Newsletter December 2016
  • Building History Newsletter March 2016
  • Building History Newsletter 2 February 2015
  • Building History Newsletter April 2014
  • MSt in Interdisciplinary Design for the Built Environment
  • Research overview
  • Natural Materials and Structures overview
  • Natural Material Innovation
  • EcoHouse Initiative
  • Structural Bamboo Products (SBP) overview
  • Structural Bamboo Pavilion. International Association of Shell and Spatial Structures (IASS 2015). Muziekgebouw. Amsterdam
  • Polymer Modified Timber
  • Masonry Vaulting overview
  • Tile Vaulting
  • Ladrillo Recargado
  • The Martin Centre: Sustainable buildings and Cities overview
  • Global Urban overview
  • Global Land Enclosures, Urban-Technology, and Experimental Property in Medellin’s Comunas
  • African Modernism: Architecture of Independence
  • The Centre for Urban Conflicts Research
  • AHRC Filming Energy Research Network (FERN) overview
  • Network Members
  • Policy Workshops 2021-22
  • Filming Workshops (2020-22)
  • A Room in Mumbai
  • Clean cooking and energy transitions in Mukuru (2023-24) overview
  • Conflict in Cities overview
  • Conflict in Cities website
  • Polish-German Border Towns: Models of Transnationalism?
  • MINE: Machine learning Intelligence Network for Epidemics overview
  • Research & Network Workshop
  • Sustainable Design Group
  • Cities and Transport overview
  • Aviation Integrated Modeling (AIM)
  • Cambridge Futures
  • Energy Efficient Cities initiative
  • SOLUTIONS - Sustainable Land Use and Transport
  • ReVISIONS – Regional Visions of Integrated Sustainable Infrastructure Optimised for Neighbourhoods
  • Multimodal Efficient Transportation at Airports: Collalborative Decision Making (MetaCDM)
  • Low Carbon Urban Design Project
  • Sustainable Building overview
  • Robust Hospital Environments in a Changing Climate
  • Natural and Hybrid Environmental Design Strategies
  • Activity-Space Research
  • Sustainable Building Policies
  • The Architecture of Light
  • Light in Libraries
  • Health, Wellbeing and Buildings
  • Heating Historic Churches
  • Digital Studio overview
  • Digital Studio Symposium 2017
  • Cambridge University Centre for Risk in the Built Environment (CURBE) overview
  • Eyewitness Reports of the 26.12.04 South Asian Tsunami
  • Building damage and casualties in the Kashmir Earthquake of 8.10.05
  • Indicators for Measuring, Monitoring and Evaluating Post-Disaster Recovery
  • Flood Narratives
  • Pan-participatory Assessment and Governance of Earthquake Risks in the Ordos Area (PAGER-O)
  • Learning from Earthquakes: Building Resilient Communities Through Earthquake Reconnaissance, Response and Recovery
  • Expertise Under Pressure
  • Behaviour, Buildings, Performance and Policy overview
  • The B-bem project: The Bayesian building energy management Portal
  • The User-TEC project: User Practices, Technologies and Residential Energy Consumption
  • Circular maker cities: The European Pop-Machina research project overview
  • Publications
  • An Urban Room for Cambridge
  • Public Map Platform project supporting green transition secures major funding
  • History and Theory overview
  • Building Histories overview
  • The Development of the Timber Roof Truss 1660-1710
  • History of Brick overview
  • The Development of Brickwork in England 1610-1710
  • Brick: a World History
  • Wren, St Paul’s and 17th Century Craftsmen
  • Staircases: History, Repair and Conservation
  • History of Doors
  • Proceedings of the Construction History Society Conferences
  • Erasmus Summer Schools on Construction History 2011-2013
  • Applying to Study Building History
  • Completed PhD Research overview
  • Wartime Huts
  • Female Architectural Patronage in Eighteenth-Century Britain
  • Wallpaper and Decorating Records 1824-1938
  • Local Tradition and British Influence in Building Construction in Shanghai (1840-1937)
  • Timber Railway Bridges in the Nineteenth Century
  • Seventh Annual Conference on Construction History April 2020 overview
  • Conference Programme
  • Conference Proceedings overview
  • Iron and Steel
  • Before the Eighteenth Century
  • Eighteenth Century
  • Nineteenth Century
  • Twentieth Century
  • Eighth Annual Conference on Construction History, August 2021
  • Ninth Conference of the Construction History Society
  • The Library in History
  • The Soane and Freemasonry
  • Water and Civilisation
  • Informal Cities in Latin America
  • Domestic Devotions: the place of piety in the Italian Renaissance home
  • Alvar Aalto’s church architecture in Germany
  • Modern Architecture and the Sacred
  • Hans Döllgast (1891-1974): Witness and Protagonist of Modern Architecture in Germany
  • Projection: Alvar Aalto and the Moving Image
  • Cambridge Design Research Studio
  • UNFOLD: Decolonising Architecture at Cambridge website
  • Research Events overview
  • The Martin Centre Research Seminar Series
  • Cambridge City Seminars: Urban Guilds in contemporary placemaking
  • The Cambridge Architectural History Seminars
  • Ax:son Johnson Centre for the Study of Classical Architecture Seminars
  • Conferences overview
  • Applied Urban Modelling (AUM) overview
  • AUM2024: Reconnections
  • AUM2022: Understanding common challenges
  • AUM 2020 overview
  • AUM2020 Global Workshop (online) - weblink for call for abstracts
  • Session 1: Launch of the Applied Urban Modelling Symposium 2020 (AUM2020)
  • Session 2: Status report: Around the globe (22 Oct 2020)
  • Session 3: Emerging insights into autonomous driving (26 Oct 2020)
  • Session 4: Taking a long view: the effects of transport investments (29 Oct 2020)
  • Session 5: Modelling from micro to meso and macro scales (2 Nov 2020)
  • Session 6: Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic: from monitoring to modelling (5 Nov 2020)
  • Session 7: Urban mobility: now and future (9 Nov 2020)
  • Session 8: The economics of cities (12 Nov 2020)
  • Session 9: Modelling Large City Regions (16 Nov 2020)
  • Session 10: The microscopic dimensions (19 Nov 2020)
  • Session 11: Urban modelling and the planning of the built environment (23 Nov 2020)
  • Session 12: Spatial modelling as rapid response to mitigate the pandemic (26 Nov 2020)
  • Session 14: Concluding session (3 Dec 2020)
  • Urban Modelling Archive
  • Joint Cambridge-Berkeley Urban Design Charrette overview
  • John G. Ellis: Urban Design Seminar: Teaching Urban Design: A Hands-on Experience
  • Old Oak Common, London: ‘Fundamental Questions’
  • Old Oak Masterplan:Question & Answer Session for shortlisted tenderers
  • Old Oak and Park Royal: Guided Tour Briefing Pack
  • PARK ROYAL ATLAS: An Employment Study of London’s Largest Industrial Area
  • Spectres of Time in Space: Tracing Phantom Temporalities with Architectural Methodologies
  • Current PhD Research in the Department overview
  • Ibrahim Abdou: Cairo’s Vacant Houses: Trajectories of accumulation, regulation, and improvisation
  • Karam Alkatlabe: How can Digital Participatory Planning and Collaborative Urban Design reshape the urban recovery process in post-disaster cities? The case of Damascus
  • Sam Aitkenhead: The unintended consequences of designing out friction from the home of the future
  • Anna Michelle Behr: Understanding the English Country House Hotel: Early Hotel Conversions in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
  • Anna Boldina: Urban Hiking. Factors that can persuade pedestrians to choose more physically challenging routes in urban environment, in connection with their physical abilities overview
  • Fatma Beyza Celebi: Cosmopolitan Nostalgia: Examining local memory in contemporary Istanbul focusing on spatial and visual representations of the city’s cosmopolitanism in the 1920s and 1930s
  • Michael Collins: The transformative potential of urban agriculture: Re-framing architectural theory and practice
  • Mohamed Derbal: Space, time and community: German architectural discourse and the search for national unity, 1890-1914
  • Joshua Dimasaka: Global Disaster Risk Audit using Artificial Intelligence and Earth Observation Data
  • Hamideh Farahmandian: An Investigation into the Cinematic Representations of Urban Informality in Iran
  • Nicholas Frayne: Spaces of Violence and Healing: the material agency of architecture in peacebuilding in Kenya
  • Vendela Gambill: Land use planning and applied urban modelling: natural limits to growth in London
  • Yelda Gin: Emerging Earthen Architecture: Digital Design and Fabrication for Building with Earth
  • I-Dec Goh: Bias mitigated data-driven façade design of social housing in Singapore using thermal and imaging information
  • Elizabeth Baldwin Gray: Conceptions of the Gothic: Romantic Medievalism in Early Modern German Architecture
  • Charlie Hamilton (FCILT): Mass Transit in Small to Medium Sized Cities
  • Juliet Harrison-Egan: Spaces of Education: the role of schools in the post-apartheid city
  • Yu Hu: The Evolution of Urban Office Space in The Age of Information and Communication Technology
  • Sean Hughes: The 21st Century Suburb: A Method for Transit Driven Redevelopment in North American Suburbia
  • Yasser M. Khaldi: Governing Renewable Energy Transition in Conflict Contexts: The Case of Palestine
  • Bing-Tao Lee: Biophilic Design and Mental Wellbeing: The Relationship Between Indoor Plants, Positive Emotions and Behaviour
  • Yufei Li: Atlas in Motion: Visualising Manchuria through Moving Images
  • Mariana Llano Valencia: Challenging the influence of coloniality, whiteness and patriarchy in urban planning in Cartagena, Colombia
  • Yusi Luo: Housing Choices of Young graduates in the UK
  • Fatma Mhmood: Social Narratives and Women’s Spatial Experiences of Parks and Desert Landscapes in the UAE
  • Heather Mitcheltree: Geographies of gendered and domestic violence in Australia
  • Ekaterina Mizrokhi: Life in Anachronistic Space: Awaiting Demolition in Moscow's Soviet-era Standardised Housing
  • Ummiye Seyda Mutlu: Urban Rooms: Places of Mediation, Participation, and Urban Change
  • Jiayu Pan: Redesigning interior spaces to accommodate social distancing for the rare events
  • Lingzi Pan: The role of social connectedness in quality-of-life measurement and urban modelling
  • Zhikai Peng: Exploring Urban Spatial Behaviour Under Thermal Stress: How variations in sun and wind conditions due to urban form affect public space use?
  • Georgia Politi: The life and work of Sir Horace Jones, PRIBA (1819-1887)
  • Natcha Ruamsanitwong: Modernising Britain: Sir Leslie Martin (1908-2000) and his role in shaping the Architectural Education in Britain
  • Filomena Russo: Restorative characteristics of intermediate architectural environments
  • Michael Salka: The Role of Geospatial Data in Developing Nature-Based Value Chains for the Built Environment
  • Aisha Sobey: Urban futures: The implications of smart cities and digital living for wellbeing
  • Lei Song: Fountains, Baths, and Urban Water Supply in England, 1400 - 1800
  • Maoran Sun: Scenario-based strategies for decarbonizing Hard-to-Decarbonize housing
  • Cleo Valentine: Architectural Neuroimmunology: Assessing the Impact of Architectural Form on Human Neuroinflammation
  • Jeroen van Ameijde: Quality of life in high-density urban environments: Data-driven analysis of Hong Kong’s public housing environments and social interaction
  • Eimar Watson: The British Marble Industry 1748-1905
  • Jonathan Weston: Beyond the Pretty Picture: Exploring the Aesthetic and Function of the Architectural Visualisation
  • Eduardo Wiegand: The Life Cycle Design of Multi-storey Wood Buildings: opportunities for efficiency across the construction value chain
  • Yue Ying: Understanding variability in neighbourhood responses to regeneration initiatives
  • Di Zhao: European Railway Buildings in China 1890-1940: an example of cross-cultural exchange
  • Lingzheng Zhu: Mediating Nature: The Practice of Synthetic Media in the Contemporary Eastern Context
  • Shanshan Xie: An investigation of heterogeneous commute mode choices to link travel demands to flexible working policies: using an Early Stopping Bayesian Data Assimilation
  • Visiting Scholars
  • Visiting Students
  • News overview
  • Events overview
  • Past Events
  • Professional Studies Advisors (PSA) overview

List of Architecture PhD Theses held by University Library

  • About the Department
  • Professional Studies Advisors (PSA)
  • Postal Address: Department of Architecture 1-5 Scroope Terrace Cambridge CB2 1PX Tel: 01223 332950
  • Information provided by:     [email protected]
  • Site Privacy & Cookie Policies
  • How to find us: click here for our location on a map

© 2024 University of Cambridge

  • Contact the University
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Privacy policy and cookies
  • Statement on Modern Slavery
  • Terms and conditions
  • University A-Z
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • Research news
  • About research at Cambridge
  • Spotlight on...

ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst

Home > HFA > Department of Architecture > Architecture Masters Theses Collection

Architecture

Architecture Masters Theses Collection

Theses from 2023 2023.

Music As a Tool For Ecstatic Space Design , Pranav Amin, Architecture

Creating Dormitories with a Sense of Home , Johnathon A. Brousseau, Architecture

The Tectonic Evaluation And Design Implementation of 3D Printing Technology in Architecture , Robert Buttrick, Architecture

Designing for the Unhoused: Finding Innovative and Transformative Solutions to Housing , Hannah C. Campbell, Architecture

Investigating Design-Functional Dimension Of Affordable Housing With Prefabrication On Dense Suburbs Of Chelsea, MA , Siddharth Jagadishbhai Dabhia, Architecture

Architecture of Extraction: Imagining New Modes of Inhabitation and Reclamation in the Mining Lifecyle , Erica DeWitt, Architecture

Utopian Thought and Architectural Design , Anthony L. Faith, Architecture

Building Hygge In-Roads into Incremental Living , Tanisha Kalra, Architecture

NATURE INSPIRED ARCHITECTURE , Salabat Khan, Architecture

Sustainable Architecture in Athletics: Using Mass Timber in an Old-Fashioned Field , Zach C. Lefever, Architecture

Off-grid Living for the Normative Society: Shifting Perception and Perspectives by Design , Patsun Lillie, Architecture

The Evolution of Chinese Supermarkets in North America: An Alternative Approach to Chinese Supermarket Design , Ruoxin Lin, Architecture

Refreshing Refinery: An Analysis of Victorian Architecture and How to Translate its Elements for Contemporary Architecture , Richard J. Marcil, Architecture

After Iconoclasm: Reassessing Monumental Practices and Redesigning Public Memorials in Twenty-First-Century Massachusetts , Lincoln T. Nemetz-Carlson, Architecture

Earthen Materials In Organic Forms: An Ecological Solution to the Urban Biosphere? , Rutuja Patil, Architecture

Adaptive (Re)purpose of Industrial Heritage Buildings in Massachusetts A Modular Strategy for Building a Community , Riya D. Premani, Architecture

Community Design: A Health Center Serving the Greater Boston Population , Brandon E. Rosario, Architecture

The Food Hub as a Social Infrastructure Framework: Restitching Communities in Boston After the Pandemic , Connor J. Tiches, Architecture

Theses from 2022 2022

Equitable Housing Generation Through Cellular Automata , Molly R. Clark, Architecture

Beneficial Invasive: A Rhizomatic Approach to Utilizing Local Bamboo for COVID Responsive Educational Spaces , Megan Futscher, Architecture

Architectural Activism Through Hip-Hop , Micaela Goodrich, Architecture

Addressing Trauma Through Architecture: Cultivating Well-being For Youth Who Have Experienced Trauma , Megan Itzkowitz, Architecture

Buildings Integrated into Landscape & Making People Care for Them: Exploring Integrated Land-Building Ecosystems and the Lifestyles Needed to Support It , Sara Mallio, Architecture

Reimagining Black Architecture , Esosa Osayamen, Architecture

Prefabricated Homes: Delivery At Your Doorsteps , Obed K. Otabil, Architecture

Memory and Resistance , Cami Quinteros, Architecture

Mycelium: The Building Blocks of Nature and the Nature of Architecture , Carly Regalado, Architecture

IN-BETWEEN SPACES: ATMOSPHERES, MOVEMENT AND NEW NARRATIVES FOR THE CITY , Paul Alexander Stoicheff, Architecture

Theses from 2021 2021

Creating New Cultural Hubs in American Cities: The Syrian Diaspora of Worcester, Massachusetts , Aleesa Asfoura, Architecture

Firesafe: Designing for Fire-Resilient Communities in the American West , Brenden Baitch, Architecture

The Beige Conundrum , Alma Crawford-Mendoza, Architecture

Cultivating Food Justice: Exploring Public Interest Design Process through a Food Security & Sustainability Hub , Madison J. DeHaven, Architecture

Physical to Virtual: A Model for Future Virtual Classroom Environments , Stephen J. Fink, Architecture

Detroit: Revitalizing Urban Communities , David N. Fite, Architecture

The Homestead Helper Handbook , Courtney A. Jurzynski, Architecture

An Architecture of a New Story , Nathan Y. Lumen, Architecture

Border Town: Preserving a 'Living' Cultural Landscape in Harlingen, Texas , Shelby Parrish, Architecture

Housing for Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): Creating an Integrated Living Community in Salem, MA , Tara Pearce, Architecture

From Sanctuary to Home in the Post-Interstate City , Morgan B. Sawyer, Architecture

Exploring the Use of Grid-Scale Compressed Air Energy Storage in the Urban Landscape , Connor S. Slover, Architecture

Bridging the Gaps in Public Conversation by Fostering Spaces of Activism , Karitikeya Sonker, Architecture

Re-envisioning the American Dream , Elain Tang, Architecture

Tall Timber in Denver: An Exploration of New Forms in Large Scale Timber Architecture , Andrew P. Weuling, Architecture

Theses from 2020 2020

Urban Inter-Space: Convergence of Human Interaction and Form , Clayton Beaudoin, Architecture

The Hues of Hadley Massachusetts: Pioneering Places for Preservation and Growth , Elisha M. Bettencourt, Architecture

Reinvigorating Englewood, Chicago Through New Public Spaces and Mixed-Income Housing , Givan Carrero, Architecture

Architectural Agency Through Real Estate Development , Hitali Gondaliya, Architecture

Multimodal Transit and a New Civic Architecture , Samuel Bruce Hill, Architecture

Rethinking The Suburban Center , Andrew Jones, Architecture

Resilient Urbanism: Bridging Natural Elements & Sustainable Structures in a Post-Industrial Urban Environment , Nicholas McGee, Architecture

Adaptive Airport Architecture , Yash Mehta, Architecture

Rethinking School Design to Promote Safety and Positivity , Emily Moreau, Architecture

The Built Environment and Well-Being: Designing for Well-Being in Post-Industrial Communities During the Age of Urbanization , Tyler O'Neil, Architecture

Brutalism and the Public University: Integrating Conservation into Comprehensive Campus Planning , Shelby Schrank, Architecture

Spatial Design for Behavioral Education , Madeline Szczypinski, Architecture

Theses from 2019 2019

THERAPEUTIC COMMUNITY: FOR REFUGEES , Raghad Alrashidi, Architecture

From Archaic To contemporary : Energy Efficient Adaptive Reuse of Historic Building , Nisha Borgohain, Architecture

(RE)Developing Place: The Power of Narrative , Kinsey Diomedi, Architecture

Rethinking Ambulatory Care Delivery , Senada Dushaj, Architecture

Photosynthesizing the Workplace: A Study in Healthy and Holistic Production Spaces , Kaeli Howard, Architecture

Museum Design As A Tool For A City , Cunbei Jiang, Architecture

Architecture and Wilderness: An Exchange of Order , Ashley Lepre, Architecture

Cross-Species Architecture: Developing an Architecture for Rehabilitative Learning Through the Human-Canine Relationship , Jake Porter, Architecture

Intermodal Transit Terminal: Integrating the Future of Transit into the Urban Fabric , Guy Vigneau, Architecture

Theses from 2018 2018

Bangladeshi Cultural Center: for the Bangladeshi Population Living in New York City , Sabrina Afrin, Architecture

THE ENHANCEMENT OF LEARNING THROUGH THE DESIGN PROCCESS: RENOVATING THE FORT RIVER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IN AMHERST, MA , Reyhaneh Bassamtabar, Architecture

LEARNING SPACES: DISCOVERING THE SPACES FOR THE FUTURE OF LEARNING , Michael Choudhary, Architecture

ARCHITECTURAL SYNERGY: A FACILITY FOR LIFELONG LEARNING IN ACADEMIA AND PRACTICE , Ryan Rendano, Architecture

Resilient Architecture: Adaptive Community Living in Coastal Locations , Erica Shannon, Architecture

Theses from 2017 2017

New York City 2050: Climate Change and Future of New York | Design for Resilience , Abhinav Bhargava, Architecture

The Performance of Light: Exploring the Impact of Natural Lighting in the New UMass School of Performance , Dylan Brown, Architecture

Regional Expression In The Renovation Of Remote Historic Villages , Jie chen, Architecture

An Incremental Intervention In Jakarta: An Empowering Infrastructural Approach For Upgrading Informal Settlements , Christopher H. Counihan, Architecture

UMASS Dining Hall. A Path to Resiliency , Lukasz Czarniecki, Architecture

LIVING CORE OF THE FUTURE: PROPOSING NEW APPROACH FOR THE FUTURE OF RESIDENTIAL COMPLEX IN METROPOLITAN AREAS , Mahsa G. Zadeh, Architecture

HUMANITY IN A CHILDREN’S CANCER HOSPITAL , Sara Jandaghi Jafari, Architecture

Designing Symbiosis for the New Church Community , Evan Janes, Architecture

A Visible History: A Synthesis of Past, Present and Future Through the Evocation of Memory Within Historic Contexts , Nicholas Jeffway, Architecture

Creating A Community A New Ecological, Economical, and Social Path to Uniting a Community , Andrew Stadnicki, Architecture

Z-Cube: Mobile Living for Feminist Nomads , Zi Ye, Architecture

Theses from 2016 2016

Music and Architecture: An Interpresence , Rachel J. Beesen, Architecture

Intervening in the Lives of Internally Displaced People in Colombia , Amy L. Carbone, Architecture

Designing Waste Creating Space: A Critical Examination Into Waste Reduction Through Building Techniques, Architectural Design, and Systems , Courtney M. Carrier, Architecture

Umass September 11 Intervention , Mohamad Farzinmoghadam, Architecture

Merging Social Science and Neuroscience in Architecture: Creating a Framework to Functionally Re-integrate Ex-Convicts , Kylie A. Landrey, Architecture

From Shelters to Long Living Communities , Yakun Liang, Architecture

Building Hope: A Community + Water Initiative, La Villa de San Francisco, Honduras , Christopher D. Mansfield, Architecture

THE SPATIALITY IN STORYTELLING , Xiang Yu, Architecture

Innovation of the Residential Buildings and Community in the Emerging City Rongcheng , Xing Yu, Architecture

Art and Life - Make invisible visible in Cao changdi village, Beijing, China , peng zhang, Architecture

Theses from 2015 2015

The Dialogue of Craft and Architecture , Thomas J. Forker, Architecture

MOSQUE IN THE VALLEY: A SPACE FOR SPIRITUAL GATHERING & CULTURAL LEARNING , Nabila Iqbal, Architecture

EXPLORATION OF CONNECTIVITY BETWEEN URBAN PLAZA AND MIXED USE BUILDINGS , Youngduk Kim, Architecture

Design Of A Housing For Urban Artisan-Living Work , Fahim Mahmud, Architecture

Membranes and Matrices: Architecture as an Interface , Nayef Mudawar, Architecture

Building for the Future: Revitalization through Architecture , Rebecca N. Perry, Architecture

Developing Maker Economies in Post-Industrial Cities: Applying Commons Based Peer Production to Mycelium Biomaterials , Grant R. Rocco, Architecture

Design of Children's Event and Cutural Center in Osu, Accra, Ghana , Rudi Somuah, Architecture

Sustainable Design of Student Centers Retrofitting and Adaptive Reuse of UMass Student Union , Tianye Song, Architecture

Design/Build in Architectural Education: studying community-focused curriculum , Matthew K. Sutter, Architecture

Advanced Search

  • Notify me via email or RSS
  • Collections
  • Disciplines

Author Corner

  • Login for Faculty Authors
  • Faculty Author Gallery
  • Expert Gallery
  • University Libraries
  • Architecture Website
  • UMass Amherst

This page is sponsored by the University Libraries.

© 2009 University of Massachusetts Amherst • Site Policies

Privacy Copyright

  • Free Samples
  • Premium Essays
  • Editing Services Editing Proofreading Rewriting
  • Extra Tools Essay Topic Generator Thesis Generator Citation Generator GPA Calculator Study Guides Donate Paper
  • Essay Writing Help
  • About Us About Us Testimonials FAQ
  • Architecture Research Proposal
  • Samples List

An research proposal examples on architecture is a prosaic composition of a small volume and free composition, expressing individual impressions and thoughts on a specific occasion or issue and obviously not claiming a definitive or exhaustive interpretation of the subject.

Some signs of architecture research proposal:

  • the presence of a specific topic or question. A work devoted to the analysis of a wide range of problems in biology, by definition, cannot be performed in the genre of architecture research proposal topic.
  • The research proposal expresses individual impressions and thoughts on a specific occasion or issue, in this case, on architecture and does not knowingly pretend to a definitive or exhaustive interpretation of the subject.
  • As a rule, an essay suggests a new, subjectively colored word about something, such a work may have a philosophical, historical, biographical, journalistic, literary, critical, popular scientific or purely fiction character.
  • in the content of an research proposal samples on architecture , first of all, the author’s personality is assessed - his worldview, thoughts and feelings.

The goal of an research proposal in architecture is to develop such skills as independent creative thinking and writing out your own thoughts.

Writing an research proposal is extremely useful, because it allows the author to learn to clearly and correctly formulate thoughts, structure information, use basic concepts, highlight causal relationships, illustrate experience with relevant examples, and substantiate his conclusions.

  • Studentshare
  • Research Proposal

Examples List on Architecture Research Proposal

  • TERMS & CONDITIONS
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • COOKIES POLICY
Welcome to the on-line version of the UNC dissertation proposal collection. The purpose of this collection is to provide examples of proposals for those of you who are thinking of writing a proposal of your own. I hope that this on-line collection proves to be more difficult to misplace than the physical collection that periodically disappears. If you are preparing to write a proposal you should make a point of reading the excellent document The Path to the Ph.D., written by James Coggins. It includes advice about selecting a topic, preparing a proposal, taking your oral exam and finishing your dissertation. It also includes accounts by many people about the process that each of them went through to find a thesis topic. Adding to the Collection This collection of proposals becomes more useful with each new proposal that is added. If you have an accepted proposal, please help by including it in this collection. You may notice that the bulk of the proposals currently in this collection are in the area of computer graphics. This is an artifact of me knowing more computer graphics folks to pester for their proposals. Add your non-graphics proposal to the collection and help remedy this imbalance! There are only two requirements for a UNC proposal to be added to this collection. The first requirement is that your proposal must be completely approved by your committee. If we adhere to this, then each proposal in the collection serves as an example of a document that five faculty members have signed off on. The second requirement is that you supply, as best you can, exactly the document that your committee approved. While reading over my own proposal I winced at a few of the things that I had written. I resisted the temptation to change the document, however, because this collection should truely reflect what an accepted thesis proposal looks like. Note that there is no requirement that the author has finished his/her Ph.D. Several of the proposals in the collection were written by people who, as of this writing, are still working on their dissertation. This is fine! I encourage people to submit their proposals in any form they wish. Perhaps the most useful forms at the present are Postscript and HTML, but this may not always be so. Greg Coombe has generously provided LaTeX thesis style files , which, he says, conform to the 2004-2005 stlye requirements.
Many thanks to everyone who contributed to this collection!
Greg Coombe, "Incremental Construction of Surface Light Fields" in PDF . Karl Hillesland, "Image-Based Modelling Using Nonlinear Function Fitting on a Stream Architecture" in PDF . Martin Isenburg, "Compressing, Streaming, and Processing of Large Polygon Meshes" in PDF . Ajith Mascarenhas, "A Topological Framework for Visualizing Time-varying Volumetric Datasets" in PDF . Josh Steinhurst, "Practical Photon Mapping in Hardware" in PDF . Ronald Azuma, "Predictive Tracking for Head-Mounted Displays," in Postscript Mike Bajura, "Virtual Reality Meets Computer Vision," in Postscript David Ellsworth, "Polygon Rendering for Interactive Scientific Visualization on Multicomputers," in Postscript Richard Holloway, "A Systems-Engineering Study of the Registration Errors in a Virtual-Environment System for Cranio-Facial Surgery Planning," in Postscript Victoria Interrante, "Uses of Shading Techniques, Artistic Devices and Interaction to Improve the Visual Understanding of Multiple Interpenetrating Volume Data Sets," in Postscript Mark Mine, "Modeling From Within: A Proposal for the Investigation of Modeling Within the Immersive Environment" in Postscript Steve Molnar, "High-Speed Rendering using Scan-Line Image Composition," in Postscript Carl Mueller, " High-Performance Rendering via the Sort-First Architecture ," in Postscript Ulrich Neumann, "Direct Volume Rendering on Multicomputers," in Postscript Marc Olano, "Programmability in an Interactive Graphics Pipeline," in Postscript Krish Ponamgi, "Collision Detection for Interactive Environments and Simulations," in Postscript Russell Taylor, "Nanomanipulator Proposal," in Postscript Greg Turk, " Generating Textures on Arbitrary Surfaces ," in HTML and Postscript Terry Yoo, " Statistical Control of Nonlinear Diffusion ," in Postscript

IMAGES

  1. Masters design thesis in architecture 0 6 a by Infanta mary

    architecture phd proposal sample

  2. Phd Research Proposal Template 4 Facts That Nobody Told You About Phd

    architecture phd proposal sample

  3. Engineering PhD Research Proposal Sample

    architecture phd proposal sample

  4. Sample Architectural Thesis Proposal

    architecture phd proposal sample

  5. Well-Written PhD Research Proposal Sample

    architecture phd proposal sample

  6. Architectural Design Proposal Template

    architecture phd proposal sample

VIDEO

  1. Architecture Thesis Presentation 2023

  2. How to make a research proposal for Ph.D. / Research Grant by Prof. Mahima Kaushik II Important tips

  3. How I applied to Architecture Schools

  4. How to write a Research Proposal (Free sample with step by step explanation)

  5. My Architecture Thesis Project (Masters Portfolio)

  6. Free Me Research Proposal Kaise Banaye? Free Sources #shorts #shortsfeed #ugcnetjrf

COMMENTS

  1. Successful thesis proposals in architecture and urban planning

    1. Introduction. After the postgraduate student completes her/his coursework in a master programme or passes the comprehensive exam and becomes a doctoral candidate in a doctoral programme, s/he is allowed to submit a "Thesis Proposal" (TP) to her/his department whose main concern is to assess whether the topic is suitable for a graduate study and for the time and resources available ...

  2. Successful thesis proposals in architecture and urban planning

    impacts: (1) The students 'understanding of the components of thesis proposals has improved as. follows: They better understood the meanings of each component (97% agree and. strongly agree and ...

  3. PDF Doctoral Studies in Architecture Graduate Student Handbook 6

    HANDBOOK 6.0. Fall 2018 To our students: Welcome to Doctoral Studies in Architecture at the University of Michigan. This handbook for Doctoral Studies in Architecture provides a practical guide to degree requirements, including information about coursework, examinations, and the doctoral dissertation. Within Doctoral Studies, three main ...

  4. PDF Guidance on writing a PhD Research Proposal

    Architecture (BEA) will assist students in refining their proposals where appropriate. Typically, a RP has a standard set of sections which are presented in the following table. The length of your Research Proposal (RP) should be a maximum of 2000 words. Section Description Working title A 'working' title is relatively short and simple.

  5. Architecture with Landscape Methods (PhD plan 1st year proposal)

    Architecture with Landscape Methods Architecture Landscape Methods with Daniel Jauslin Doctoral Thesis Proposal and SANAA Rolex Learning Center Lausanne Sample Field Trip Supervisors Prof. Dr. Ir. Clemens Steenbergen Ass. Prof. Ir. Steffen Nijhuis Chair of Landscape Architecture TU Delft 1 Table of Contents Part I Doctoral Thesis Proposal I.1.

  6. PDF Letter of Intent Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Architecture Submitted

    Architecture program, comparable programs and professional practice, from which we anticipate to attract candidates. 1.0. Letter of Intent 1.1. Degree Name and Description Proposed Program Name - PhD Program in Architecture Proposed Degree Designation - PhD (Architecture)

  7. How to Write a Great PhD Research Proposal

    The best place to look for a PhD proposal sample is your university. Consider asking your supervisor if they can share a good proposal from a previous student in your subject - or put you in touch with a current student you can ask. #3 Confuse the proposal with the PhD. We've covered this on the blog, but it's simple enough to include here too.

  8. Writing a research proposal

    The research proposal constitutes the main way in which the department of Urban Studies and Planning evaluates the potential quality of your proposed PhD. Your proposal should be approximately 1,500 words in length and include: A title. An overview of the topic and the main research aim. A brief literature review of relevant research in the ...

  9. Research Proposal Example (PDF + Template)

    Detailed Walkthrough + Free Proposal Template. If you're getting started crafting your research proposal and are looking for a few examples of research proposals, you've come to the right place. In this video, we walk you through two successful (approved) research proposals, one for a Master's-level project, and one for a PhD-level ...

  10. PhD (Architecture & Design)

    The province of the PhD is the exploration of new territories of design research, contributions to the knowledge base of the discipline, and steps toward the redefinition of aspects of design. The program also develops advanced technical research skills to prepare you for a career in industry, academia and other settings in which systematic and ...

  11. How to Write a Research Proposal

    Research proposal length. The length of a research proposal can vary quite a bit. A bachelor's or master's thesis proposal can be just a few pages, while proposals for PhD dissertations or research funding are usually much longer and more detailed. Your supervisor can help you determine the best length for your work.

  12. PhD Admissions

    Doctor of Philosophy - Environmental Design (PhD) Applications for the PhD of Environmental Design program are accepted between September 1 and February 1 . All applicants admitted to the PhD program typically start in the fall term. Decisions from the selection committee will be provided by end of April. The application process is competitive ...

  13. Successful thesis proposals in architecture and urban planning

    DOI10.1108/ARCH-12-2019-0281. 504. s/he is allowed to submit a"Thesis Proposal " (TP) to her/his department whose main concern is to assess whether the topic is suitable for a graduate study and for the time and resources available (Afful, 2008; Kivunja, 2016; Reddy, 2019).

  14. PDF Proceedings Series 2018-1 THE PRODUCTION OF KNOWLEDGE

    It follows in the wake of the 2016 NAF/NAAR Symposium titled The Production of Knowledge in Architecture by PhD Research in the Nor-dic Countries, which took place in Stockholm, Sweden, at the KTH School of Architecture on 19-20 May 2016. The symposium, which was a joint venture between NAF and the KTH School of Architecture (KTH Royal ...

  15. Examples of Research proposals

    Research proposals. Your research proposal is a key part of your application. It tells us about the question you want to answer through your research. It is a chance for you to show your knowledge of the subject area and tell us about the methods you want to use. We use your research proposal to match you with a supervisor or team of supervisors.

  16. PDF Sample Phd Proposal Architecture

    Sample Phd Proposal Architecture Philip D. Plowright The Architecture Annual 2005-2006. Delft University of Technology ,2007 The Journey to Dissertation Success Elizabeth Laycock,Tim Howarth,Paul Watson,2016-06-10 Are you about to embark on a research project for the first time? Unsure which data collection methods are right for your study?

  17. PDF A&D Writing a Research Proposal Guidelines

    In your research proposal you need to provide a preliminary indication of how you will undertake your research. Two key questions to consider are: How you will gather or generate data and/or information (e.g. archives, interviews, fieldwork, literature, experimentation, etc.) What conceptual lenses you will employ to assess this data and/or ...

  18. Examples of doctoral proposals

    Examples of doctoral proposals Example doctoral proposal 5 Example doctoral proposal 4 Example doctoral proposal 3 Example doctoral proposal 2 Example doctoral proposal 1. Last update: 08 Apr 2024 Comments on the content and accessibility: Institute of Philosophy. Log in Quicklinks Study Research About us News & Events ...

  19. Successful thesis proposals in architecture and urban planning

    The achievement of a balanced and consistent PhD Thesis proposal is a challenge for each PhD student. ... (Pautasso, 2013). The preliminary literature review in the TP is a "pilot review" or a sample of the extensive literature review to be made later in the actual thesis. ... Successful thesis proposals in architecture ARCH # Research ...

  20. List of Architecture PhD Theses held by University Library

    Narrative space a theory of narrative environment and its architecture. Macarthur,John Peter. DAR. The Ornamental Cottage: Landscape And Disgust. Manchanda,Shweta. CHU. Energy use and end-user satisfaction: with reference to ventilation and space conditioning in buildings. Marinescu,Joseph Sever. CHU.

  21. Architecture Masters Theses Collection

    Theses from 2023. PDF. Music As a Tool For Ecstatic Space Design, Pranav Amin, Architecture. PDF. Creating Dormitories with a Sense of Home, Johnathon A. Brousseau, Architecture. PDF. The Tectonic Evaluation And Design Implementation of 3D Printing Technology in Architecture, Robert Buttrick, Architecture. PDF.

  22. Examples List on Architecture Research Proposal

    In our online database you can find free Architecture Research Proposal work for every taste: thesis, essays, dissertations, assignments, research and term papers etc. - easy and free. Choose any document below and bravely use it as an example to make your own work perfect! Samples List. An research proposal examples on architecture is a ...

  23. CSSA Sample PhD proposals

    CSSA Sample PhD proposals. Purpose. Welcome to the on-line version of the UNC dissertation proposal collection. The purpose of this collection is to provide examples of proposals for those of you who are thinking of writing a proposal of your own. I hope that this on-line collection proves to be more difficult to misplace than the physical ...