What are some of the best universities in technology in the following countries that offer good material research, fabrication (and/or) facade design programme for M.Sc?
? in the Netherlands is a great university for what you are looking for, but also ? is great. Can’t go wrong with either ? or ?.
robhaw
Jul 27, 20 5:21 am
Randomised, I am student at ? but want to take some electives at ? for quarters 3&4. Weet jij als ik kan dit ook doen?
randomised
Jul 27, 20 6:54 am
Guess so, think they collaborate through the 4? Federation...
Wall-E
Jul 27, 20 1:59 pm
@randomised: son of a ?
Wall-E
Jul 27, 20 2:04 pm
Tu Delft has a tech programme, but not sure about it. It takes a lot of students (around 60) Not sure about any other institute
robhaw
Jul 27, 20 2:09 pm
The Delft B Tech programme is really good in my opinion, but fyi it doesn't lead to licensure in the NL. Also, 60 students is not large for Delft standards. Are you applying for Feb2021 entry?
randomised
Jul 27, 20 4:57 pm
Delft and Eindhoven are both excellent Technical Universities, with a great focus on Building Technology, if that’s what you’re after...Delft is a bit braver conceptually in general, a lot bigger with more variety/choices, less provincial and more internationally oriented in my experience/opinion.
Non Sequitur
Jul 27, 20 6:08 am
in Canada, it’s Waterloo, then McGill, then the rest, then UofT.
Wall-E
Jul 27, 20 2:00 pm
Thanks @non sequitur . I havent heard much about the computation & fabrication at Waterloo & Mcgill. Any insights?
Non Sequitur
Jul 27, 20 2:21 pm
Wall-E, what's you're looking for is pretty specific and outside of the regular accreditation curriculum. You would be best off looking at each school's graduate faculty's research areas and cross your fingers that prof has time/space for your thesis interests.
ham1
Jul 27, 20 4:16 pm
Love seeing @Non Sequitur STILL letting people know the hierarchy of Canadian architecture programs. Goated
Non Sequitur
Jul 27, 20 4:21 pm
^ hey, not my fault people can't do basic research.
lower.case.yao
Jul 27, 20 7:09 am
There’s a small but growing tech institute based out of Cambridge, Massachusetts.
atelier nobody
Jul 27, 20 5:18 pm
Never heard of it - is it anything like our big tech institute here in Pasadena, CA?
Neat resource. If you're looking for digital fabrication, you might be better off looking at what other programs each university has (aerospace, industrial design, etc) since these are often shared labs and available to grad students.
Wall-E
Jul 28, 20 8:35 am
Yeah. Ryerson has a lot of courses related to this subject, it seems. Also @non sequitur, how much does GPA matter in the selection process? GPA is not a big deal in european institutes, but it looks like it is in Canada and US. Are they little easy on min requirement or is it very strict?
Non Sequitur
Jul 28, 20 8:45 am
There is a min GPA required to apply, which is reasonably low... and then it matters not unless they need something as a tie-breaker when more than one "okay" applicants are fighting for the last remaining spots. The portfolio and recommendation letters hold have the biggest impact.
Hi
What are some of the best universities in technology in the following countries that offer good material research, fabrication (and/or) facade design programme for M.Sc?
Canada - I guess Ryerson? What about Waterloo?
Germany - ICD, SAC, MID (detmold) ?
UK - Emtech
US- Harvard Mdes tech & georgia tech & USC, Michigan?
Netherlands-?
? in the Netherlands is a great university for what you are looking for, but also ? is great. Can’t go wrong with either ? or ?.
Randomised, I am student at ? but want to take some electives at ? for quarters 3&4. Weet jij als ik kan dit ook doen?
Guess so, think they collaborate through the 4? Federation...
@randomised: son of a ?
Tu Delft has a tech programme, but not sure about it. It takes a lot of students (around 60) Not sure about any other institute
The Delft B Tech programme is really good in my opinion, but fyi it doesn't lead to licensure in the NL. Also, 60 students is not large for Delft standards. Are you applying for Feb2021 entry?
Delft and Eindhoven are both excellent Technical Universities, with a great focus on Building Technology, if that’s what you’re after...Delft is a bit braver conceptually in general, a lot bigger with more variety/choices, less provincial and more internationally oriented in my experience/opinion.
in Canada, it’s Waterloo, then McGill, then the rest, then UofT.
Thanks @non sequitur
. I havent heard much about the computation & fabrication at Waterloo & Mcgill. Any insights?
Wall-E, what's you're looking for is pretty specific and outside of the regular accreditation curriculum. You would be best off looking at each school's graduate faculty's research areas and cross your fingers that prof has time/space for your thesis interests.
Love seeing @Non Sequitur STILL letting people know the hierarchy of Canadian architecture programs. Goated
^ hey, not my fault people can't do basic research.
There’s a small but growing tech institute based out of Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Never heard of it - is it anything like our big tech institute here in Pasadena, CA?
Here is the link to comparison for Canadian schools - http://www.acsa-arch.org/resou...
Neat resource. If you're looking for digital fabrication, you might be better off looking at what other programs each university has (aerospace, industrial design, etc) since these are often shared labs and available to grad students.
Yeah. Ryerson has a lot of courses related to this subject, it seems. Also @non sequitur, how much does GPA matter in the selection process? GPA is not a big deal in european institutes, but it looks like it is in Canada and US. Are they little easy on min requirement or is it very strict?
There is a min GPA required to apply, which is reasonably low... and then it matters not unless they need something as a tie-breaker when more than one "okay" applicants are fighting for the last remaining spots. The portfolio and recommendation letters hold have the biggest impact.
MSD at Penn