The Master of Architecture at Texas A&M University prepares students to become licensed architects. Through this program, you will develop a specialty within the built environment through the lens of practice.
Our program will challenge you to think creatively and critically as you address design problems on various scales. You will synthesize ecological, technological, social, behavioral, and aesthetic contexts and constraints into healthy, sustainable human and natural environments.
The Master of Architecture is an accredited degree that prepares students to practice architecture on a professional level.
The field of Architecture synthesizes ecological, technological, social, behavioral, and aesthetic contexts and constraints into healthy sustainable human and natural environments. The graduate program provides an opportunity to examine the past, equip for the present, and prepare for future challenges in Architecture.
Our Master of Architecture program lets students explore a range of professional directions related to faculty expertise. Our faculty's breadth and depth of knowledge allows students to engage with the discipline of architecture at an impactful level.
Faculty members encourage students to develop their own individual course of study, blending architectural design, history, theory, and criticism, design computation, and interior architecture. You will complete your education by creating a final study design project with a strong scholarly basis. Your final study project will exhibit a clear understanding of the integration of both the discipline and practice of architecture.
The Master of Architecture program provides graduates with the required educational background to enter the professional practice of architecture. Students who wish to become a licensed architect must gain professional experience and pass a licensing examination.
Other career directions include: Design and fabrication,Development, real-estate and construction, Community planning and city planning
Government and social work, Teaching, research and scholarly pursuits