The architecture profession in the U.S. is overwhelmingly white, with only 1 out of 5 new architects identifying as an ethnic or racial minority, according to the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards, a nonprofit licensing group.
Most graduates of university architecture programs also are white, with the National Architecture Accrediting Board reporting that 18% of 2019 graduates were Hispanic/Latino, 9% were Asian and 5% were Black.
The architecture program at Arizona State University is trying to change the profession by more closely aligning with the university’s charter: broadening access, increasing support and better preparing students for careers, according to Marc Neveu, head of the program.
“There is no other architecture program in the U.S. that is based on the idea of being inclusive rather than exclusive,” said Neveu, who also is a professor of architecture, which is in The Design School at ASU.
“Every program in architecture is about being exclusive.”
One change will be in the curriculum. ASU’s Master of Architecture is considered a professional degree program that leads to licensure, while the Bachelor of Science of Design degree has been considered nonprofessional.
“What we’ve done is taught the entire thing as a professional program, which doesn’t leverage ASU in any way. It mimics the rest of the world,” Neveu said.
“So we rethought what a nonprofessional degree program would be, with ways of thinking, ways of making, ways of learning, collaborating and innovating.”
The undergraduate programs will be “the architecture of,” he said, such as the architecture of systems, the architecture of music, etc.
The undergraduate program also has been accepting more students, growing from about 350 students three years ago to more than 700 next year.
Neveu said the goal is to change the profession, which is already happening in many architecture firms in the Valley.
“They are thinking about the entire building environment, not just the building,” he said.
“They’re thinking about real estate development, construction management, facilities management, the entire breadth of the built environment.”
The graduate program has been streamlined to encompass 12 units per semester, with students encouraged to pursue an additional credential, such as in construction management or real estate development.
Not only will that revised curriculum better equip students to enter the profession, it also will allow them to work while in school because they’ll have full days without classes, Neveu said.
In addition, the program will support student success.
“In most architecture programs, especially the one I went to, it was all about weeding out the ones who couldn’t cut it. Our attitude is the opposite. We want to support everyone,” said Neveu, who has been at ASU for three years.
“We don’t promote staying up all night. We don’t promote doing architecture and nothing else.
“We want to create a more holistic experience for students, and that is unique in the United States.”