The STEM-designated Master of Architecture (M.Arch) program is fully accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). Our program prepares students for entry into the architecture profession and licensure.
In a rapidly changing world where unprecedented challenges emerge with ever-increasing frequency, the education of an architect must remain adaptive. The University of Colorado Denver Department of Architecture fosters the capacity to ask bold questions, take risks, think independently, and approach the work of architecture with curiosity. In doing so, we strive to be agile, flexible, visually adept thinkers and makers who contribute to addressing global challenges over a lifetime of active, inquisitive learning.
In September 2023, the CU Denver Master of Architecture program was recognized among 22 programs from 14 institutions nationwide to receive a U.S. Department of Energy Zero Energy Design Designation. This designation recognizes college programs that prepare students for 21st-century clean energy-building careers. Learn more about the ZEDD program: https://www.energy.gov/eere/buildings/us-doe-zero-energy-design-designation-programs.
We offer two tracks for completing your Master of Architecture (M.Arch) degree based on your experience level. If you have a bachelor's degree that is not in architecture or a related bachelor's degree, you should plan on at least three years to earn your M.Arch degree. If you have a pre-professional bachelor's degree in architecture or a related design field, you may receive advanced standing credit for your previous coursework and can expect to complete your M.Arch degree in about two years. You can learn more about the curriculum for each track below.
Our Master of Architecture is a STEM-designated program, officially approved by the Colorado Board of Higher Education (CIP code: 04.0902). The STEM designation allows our Masters of Architecture students to apply for the Department of Homeland Security’s optional practical training (OPT) extension program for F-1 students with STEM degrees. Upon completion of a STEM-designated degree, students may extend their stay in the United States for an additional 24 months.
Access to Technologies
You will have access to a fully-equipped design fabrication shop and a visual resource center to develop both digital and analog graphics skills. You will learn sketching and drawing as well as the latest parametric and digital fabrication design technologies. You will have opportunities to engage in LIDAR 3-D laser scanning technology to document structures through work in the CAP centers.
Sustainability Focus
You will have a broad range of courses in Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design (LEED) and the opportunity to apply your thinking about carbon-neutral new buildings and renovations to the 2030 Challenge.
Design-Build Certificate
This award-winning program takes you out of the classroom and immerses you in hands-on work for a diverse set of cultures and communities. Projects take place with regional Colorado nonprofits.
Leading Preservation
You will have opportunities to seek training in spatial, technical, and design aspects of the broader field of preservation and adaptive reuse encompassing architecture, cultural landscapes, planning, building technology, project management, documentation, interpretation, and representation.
Hands-on Training
The Aspen Summer Design Workshop puts you to work on weekly sketch problems with noted architects at their offices. You will also have exclusive tours of their built and under-construction projects.
Real-World Engagement
You can gain valuable experience as a paid intern with the college’s University Technical Assistance Program or as a paid research assistant.
International Exploration
We encourage you to think, collaborate, and network globally by offering foreign study courses in locations such as Rome, Finland, Turkey, and Amsterdam.
Recognition and Reward
Your work will be recognized. Build your resume and reputation with Studio Awards, Design Excellence Awards, and AIA Denver’s Young Architects Awards.
Classical Architecture Special Topic Area
Courses qualify students to apply for the Certificate in Classical Architecture from the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art in New York.
The Amache Japanese American Confinement Site or Granada War Relocation Center was located in southeast Colorado near the town of Granada. Amache was named after a Cheyenne chief’s daughter, wife of John Prowers.
The relocation center was in operation from August 27, 1942 and closed in 1945. The maximum population was 7,300. Most of the internees were from southern California including Los Angeles. The central section of Camp Amache was 640 acres (one square mile), made up primarily of 29 blocks of Army-style barracks. Each block had a mess hall, laundry, toilets, and a shower room. There were also shared administrative facilities such as a hospital, school, recreation buildings, a public library, dry goods store, barber shop, sewage plant, and post office. The internees were encouraged to make improvements to the center and responded by constructing three koi ponds and gardens, and planting trees between rows of barracks. A barbed wire fence surrounded the central section of the center with six watch towers along the perimeter. As in most of the relocation centers, armed military police manned the towers.
This site was documented using LiDAR, 3D laser scanning for the purpose of generating a highly accurate 3D model of the site, buildings and structures. In addition to scanning the Amache site, buildings and objects that had been moved off site to museums were also scanned. This allowed for the documentation of additional objects such as the koi pond bridge and original barrack buildings. The scanning and post processing was completed by The Center of Preservation Research’s Mike Nulty and Student Research Assistant Tucker Hancock.
This effort was completed in partnership with the National Park Service’s Japanese American Confinement Site Grants Program and the University of Colorado Denver, College of Architecture and Planning.
If you are a student without a related bachelor's degree, this track enables you to pursue a professional Master of Architecture degree in a minimum of three years.
The Six Studio Track curriculum for the M.Arch program is divided into six major components totaling 105 semester hours in residence at the University of Colorado Denver.
Course Type | Semester Hours Required |
Design Studios and Seminar | 39 semester hours |
Representational Studies | 6 semester hours |
Historical/Cultural Studies | 12 semester hours |
Technological Studies | 21 semester hours |
Professional Studies | 12 semester hours |
Electives | 15 semester hours |
A wide array of electives in these areas allows you to tailor your graduate studies to your interests. Of 15 general elective semester hours, nine must be fulfilled with courses taken in the Architecture Department. Students may choose to take elective courses in the summer session. It is highly suggested that students use the summers to study abroad or participate in a professional internship.
If you are a student with a pre-professional bachelor's degree, this track enables you to pursue a professional Master of Architecture degree in a minimum of two years.
To qualify for the Four Studio Track M.Arch, you must hold a Bachelor of Science in
Architecture, Bachelor of Art in Architecture, or Bachelor of Environmental Design in Architecture.
Any degrees awarded by universities outside the United States will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis. The admissions committee will determine
the appropriate track.
The Four Studio Track curriculum for the M.Arch program is divided into six major components totaling 60 semester hours in residence at the University of Colorado Denver.
Course Type | Semester Hours Required |
Design Studios and Seminar | 27 semester hours |
Representational Studies Required Elective | 3 semester hours |
Historical/Cultural Studies Required Elective | 3 semester hours |
Technological Studies Required Elective | 3 semester hours |
Professional Studies | 9 semester hours |
Open Electives | 15 semester hours |
A wide array of electives in these areas allows you to tailor your graduate studies to your interests. Of 15 general elective semester hours, nine must be fulfilled with courses taken in the Architecture Department. Students may choose to take elective courses in the summer session. It is highly suggested that students use the summers to study abroad or participate in a professional internship.
In order for a student to complete the M.Arch course of study within the 60 semester hours (two years of study), a student must have already completed the following courses with a grade of B or better.
If any of the above courses have not been completed at the time the student enrolls in the program, the courses will be added onto the 60 semester hours and will need to be completed at the University of Colorado Denver prior to graduation. An official review of the student's previous course work will be conducted in the spring following admissions and will be sent to the student upon the receipt of the student's intent to attend.