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This course serves as an introduction to principles of contractual law as applied to the relationship between the interior designer and the client.
Demonstrate mastery of the skills and thought processes at the core of the practice of interior architecture.
This course is designed for students to understand the process of brewing beer from raw materials into the package and out to the customer.
This course is part of the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science (HSSEAS) Master of Science in Engineering Online (MSOL) program. It is available only to students pre-approved by HSSEAS. For more information contact msol.ucla.edu.
Using the plants of Southern California, students learn plant taxonomy through observation using illustration and journaling.
Students develop a solid knowledge of 3D Modeling with Rhinoceros in the context of landscape representation.
Gain an introduction to the essential basic commands of AutoCAD and their applications.
This course is part of UCLA’s Undergraduate Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) Program. It is available only to cadets participating in ROTC through UCLA.
Covers professional contract relations, responding to a request for proposal (RFP), and other areas of landscape architecture ethics and practice.
Students who successfully complete the course will be able to develop and produce professional 3-D project models using SketchUp.
This advanced course covers the basics of managing axial images' relationships, creating and editing 3-D drawings, file sharing, and external references, and file management for construction drawings.
This internship gives students an opportunity to acquire hands-on industry experience.
Utiltizing methods of environmental research and analysis, students invstigate the natural, historical, and cultural factors impacting land-use.
Focusing on understory plants and their communities, instruction focuses on selecting and placing appropriate plant material to influence the landscape architect's overall site composition.
This course concentrates on trees, shrubs, and companion plant groupings, planting location, etc. as design elements. Participants study plant texture, density, form, color, and other characteristics as articulators of space.
As the precursor for Capstone, with an instructor-selected site, design process, and site analysis, the student refines a program, selects goals and objectives, and prepares a design solution and documentation booklet.
Covering the evolution of the designed and human-built landscape, students study how designed exterior spaces are informed by cultural ideas, landform, structures, infrastructure, and the existing natural environment.
Ecological and cultural contexts are examined as determinants for using plants in design.
This third course in the Design Graphics Sequence takes the same site plan and designs and renders with digital media. A full graphic package is prepared with digital renderings, sections, and elevations.
Build upon drafting, lettering, and drawing techniques learned in Design Graphics 1, advanced applications of color and presentation are applied to final projects.
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