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This course strives to meet two goals:
-To provide a lucid and engaging introduction to research
and professional practice in building technology, as illustrated
by the core Building Technology faculty.
-To prepare students for thesis research.
Faculty presentations will be organized as a series of topics,
each 1-3 weeks in length. These sessions will consider problems
through a combination of readings, discussion, experimental
or analytic investigation, and design projects. Topics, drawn
from the research interests of the instructors, may include
building energy simulation, design of insulating materials
appropriate for developing countries, airflow simulation,
analysis of the failure of structural materials, and development
of design tools for architects. This term there will be considerable
emphasis on the concept of sustainable buildings.
Student presentations are a very significant part of the
seminar. This course serves as a thesis preparation course
for SMBT and Ph.D. BT students. It also serves as the methods
course for those SMArchS students interested in technology.
It is essential for BT students and highly profitable for
SMArchS students to start their graduate education by grappling
with the challenging problem of clearly defining an area of
intellectual inquiry suitable for a thesis. To that end, students
will be asked to both develop a research topic and make two
oral presentations and one written report on this topic. For
SMBT students, the written presentation will serve as a thesis
proposal. For Ph.D. BT students, the written presentation
will serve as a required example of writing proficiency.
Building technology may be described as a body of scientific
knowledge important to the design, construction and operation
of buildings. It is not a static field. As is appropriate
at a research institution, knowledge of building technologies
is expanded through the investigations of faculty and students.
This seminar is not an overview of fundamentals, which are
taught in detail in other courses, but instead focuses on
the research enterprise itself, the methods by which new problems
are tackled and knowledge is expanded.
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