Apr 19, 2024  
2005-2006 University Catalog 
    
2005-2006 University Catalog [Archived Catalogue]

Industrial Design - Master of Industrial Design


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Program Total Credits: 60

Jamer Hunt
jhunt@uarts.edu
Director
215-717-6253

The Master’s Program in Industrial Design is a graduate laboratory for postindustrial design. Students and faculty are actively exploring how to design for new social conditions in which behavioral, material, technological, and natural landscapes are shifting. We are committed to developing new models of design practice that are multidisciplinary, collaborative, and team-based. We stress process, with an emphasis on research, conceptualization, communication, and appropriate formgiving.

The program itself is a two-year, 60-credit curriculum consisting of studio, methods, and seminar courses. The curriculum is project-based, which means that each semester, course content is integrated around studio-based projects. Projects range from the development of new urban industries to incubating independent publishing labels for hard and soft design. By providing research proposals, future studies, and case studies, we are promoting a new, more proactive role for design education.

Because design is a collaborative profession, most studio projects will be team-based. During the first and third semesters of study, first year students will work with second-year students in a shared studio. Semester two is more individually oriented. The final semester of the two-year program is devoted to a master’s thesis in which the candidate will work more independently with a group of internal faculty and/or outside professionals to develop a thesis project that must advance the candidate’s chosen field of study.

Like the program itself, the faculty represent a wide range of approaches to the practice of design. This means that students have access to currently practicing design professionals with backgrounds in fields ranging from architecture, graphic design, cultural anthropology, and psychology to industrial, systems and environmental design. The Industrial Design Department thus offers a unique core faculty group who share a common philosophy and commitment to the design process. We are an interdisciplinary program, so we welcome applicants from diverse fields such as the fine arts, architecture, sociology, law, business, engineering, and information technologies. What unites the students is their enthusiasm for design and material culture, as well as an interest in the social impact of design on our society. All candidates must hold a bachelor’s degree (or equivalent). In addition, in order to be accepted at the graduate level, all qualified applicants must demonstrate some form of professional involvement in a design-related field. Each candidate is then carefully selected to assure a comprehensive balance of disciplines in the program.

Specialized Facilities

In the graduate design studio, each student is provided with an Apple computer for his/her desktop, access to the University network and the Internet, and a powerful suite of software; there are Windows NT machines as well for advanced 3-D modeling. The department also provides access to digital cameras and projectors for process documentation and presentation.

Students in the MID program have access to an Envisiontec Perfactory 3D printer. The printer automatically constructs physical models made of methacrylate (a plactis material) from digital CAD models. The Perfactory prints single objects as large as 7.5 x 6 x 9 and  larger objects may be built in sections. The plastic may be used as the final product, or it may be painted, combined with other materials, transformed into other materials, transformed into other materials using molding and casting techniques, or transformed into metal through investment casting or electroforming.

Year One Credits: 30


Spring Credits: 15


  • Elective Credits: 3 cr

Year Two Credits: 30


Fall Credits: 15


  • Elective Credits: 3 cr

Spring Credits: 15


  • Elective Credits: 3 cr

Note:


In addition to required courses, students take elective courses that enable them to pursue their specific interest, as well as overcome deficiencies in their design preparation. In certain cases, particularly for applicants from non-design undergraduate programs, it is necessary to complete specific courses in industrial design. These courses are selected from appropriate undergraduate courses and may not apply towards degree requirements.

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