
Note: 大发彩票平台鈥檚 new Course Catalogue will replace the eCalendar. The Course Catalogue is expected to go live the week of April 22nd. When the new site is published, "mcgill.ca/study" will be redirected to the new Course Catalogue website.
Note: 大发彩票平台鈥檚 new Course Catalogue will replace the eCalendar. The Course Catalogue is expected to go live the week of April 22nd. When the new site is published, "mcgill.ca/study" will be redirected to the new Course Catalogue website.
Urban planning is the set of processes by which communities shape their environments to meet their needs and to realize their aspirations for the future. Urban planning is also the profession of those who facilitate this process. While the practice of planning is as old as the cities themselves, the profession of urban planning is only about a century old. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, architects, landscape architects, engineers, government reformers, lawyers, public health specialists, and others joined forces to tackle the serious social and environmental problems of the industrial city. They created new techniques and institutions to improve living conditions and decision-making processes, with an eye to improving cities in terms of health, safety, efficiency, equity, beauty, identity, etc. Today, people who enter the profession come from diverse backgrounds as well, including the design professions, engineering and applied sciences, environmental and social studies, and other fields. Their chief task is to reinvent tools, procedures, and processes to meet new challenges in making metropolitan areas socially, economically, and environmentally resilient and just. A key feature of planning education is learning to view issues in a multidisciplinary way, to manage processes of collaboration and of conflict, and to generate equitable and efficient solutions to complex problems of growth and development.
The School of Urban Planning offers three graduate degrees; a professionally accredited M.U.P., a thesis-based M.Sc., and a Ph.D. For more information, please see the graduate e-calendar.
The following courses taught by faculty in the School of Urban Planning are open to undergraduate students:
Undergraduate Courses in Urban Planning | ||
---|---|---|
URBP 201 | (3) | Planning the 21st Century City |
URBP 501 | (2) | Principles and Practice 1 |
URBP 503 | (3) | Public Transport: Planning and Operations |
URBP 504 | (3) | Planning for Active Transportation |
URBP 505 | (3) | Geographic Information Systems |
URBP 506 | (3) | Environmental Policy and Planning |
URBP 514 | (3) | Community Design Workshop |
URBP 530 | (3) | Urban Infrastructure and Services in International Context |
URBP 536 | (2) | Current Issues in Transportation 1 |
URBP 537 | (2) | Current Issues in Transportation 2 |
URBP 541 | (1) | Selected Topics in Planning |
URBP 542 | (1) | Selected Topics in Visual Analysis |
URBP 543 | (1) | Selected Topics |
URBP 551 | (3) | Urban Design and Planning |
URBP 553 | (3) | Urban Governance |
URBP 555 | (3) | Real Estate and Planning |
URBP 556 | (3) | Urban Economy: A Spatial Perspective |
URBP 557 | (3) | Rethinking Zoning |