Studioemner er 24 studiepoeng, og noen tilbys også på tvers av studieprogram. Se emnebeskrivelser for studioemner i nedtrekksmenyen under.
Søren S. Sørensen
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
Preliminary skills in computational design are advised.
English
ACDL (Advanced Computational Design Laboratory) studio series.
Master level architecture students
The ACDL studio is part of a series running since 2014, placing a strong emphasis on computational tools as part of the design process and communication of ideas. The studio is research and practice based, with an experimental approach to environmentally conscious architectural design, design processes and methodologies. Students will delve into the intersection of computation and architecture to develop innovative design solutions for the built environment.
The project assignment is to design a Museum over the Medieval ruins in Oslo’s old town; “Gamle Oslo Ruinpark.
Parametric computational modeling will be introduced and used in an iterative manner incorporating design generation and analysis to refine the associative model that defines spatial organization, required building program and activity distribution. Central themes for the studio are performance oriented; site specific climate analysis as part of the research and basis for design, - and various simulations to analyze and optimize design and performance as part of the architectural design process.
Throughout the course, emphasis will be placed on an iterative design process, encouraging students to experiment with computational tools and analog techniques to refine their architectural proposals. By fostering a collaborative studio environment, participants will have the opportunity to exchange ideas, critique each other's work, and push the boundaries of design innovation.
The projects should integrate sustainable principles, new materials, and technology in a suitable and innovative manner.
Rolf Gerstlauer, Wenkai Xu
The studio allows for its master students to develop their work over two to three semesters - finalizing it in their diploma work.
B&SM - Acting and The Collective in a More-Than-Human World
Body and Space Morphologies (B&SM) is a research-based teaching program in the Building Art department. Dedicated to Phenomenology in Architecture, the program offers Trans-Disciplinary master studios in explorative – architectural, pre-architectural and post-architectural - making, sensing and thinking.
We aim at preparing and enabling students to conduct their own interest driven investigation into Architectural Phenomenology - understood as Research Creation; a working mode creating an inspired, process focused and reflective Material Practice. We consider this to be the Artistic Parallel to both Traditional Scholarly Research and Common Architectural Design Practice.
Based on performativity and affordance theories, performance and performance studies, disability and neurodiversity studies as well as phenomenology and perception theories, the B&SM Studio Works investigate primal and/or pre-architectural material/processes/phenomena/conditions and develop or perform a series of experienced distinct objects that behave relational, that inspire imagination, that provide new knowledge, strong architectural interests and/or architectural narratives.
Ethnopoetics is a form of narrative analysis designed, initially, for the analysis of folk stories and based on an ethnographic performance-based understanding of narrative emphasizing that meaning is an effect of performance. It offers opportunities for analyzing `voice'. The ways in which speakers themselves organize stories along indexical patterns of emphasis, focus, super- and subordination and so on. As such, it is a potentially very useful tool for tracking `local' patterns of meaning-making in narrative.
[…] ethnopoetics could be productively applied to data in which different systems of meaning-making meet — a condition that defines many important service-providing systems in globalizing contexts.
[…] the potential usefulness of such an applied ethnopoetics stretches into many other types of service encounters in which crosscultural storytelling is crucial.
Blommaert, Jan. (2006). Applied Ethnopoetics. Narrative Inquiry. 16. 181-190. 10.1075/ni.16.1.23blo.
Jørgen Johan Tandberg
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
Architecture and the Archives
Ute Groba
Norwegian or English, depending on the student group
Circular Prototyping / Timber Studio (merged)
The Circular Prototyping studio offers students a comprehensive understanding of architecture within the context of environmental sustainability. The curriculum centres on the principles of circular building practices, with a specific focus on building materials and construction techniques that substantially mitigate environmental impact. These principles are investigated within a design-build studio format, equipping students with vital tools to guide form-finding processes and facilitate critical evaluation of sustainability measures as an integral part of the design process.
The studio’s core activities revolve around collaborative design-build projects that mirror architectural practice. The hands-on experience with building allows students to apply theoretical knowledge in a practical manner and foster a deeper understanding of possibilities and challenges at hand as we move forward into a future with circular material economy and ecological awareness. Each studio semester focuses on in-depth investigations of different regenerative materials, building techniques or components in relation to utilizing their inherent properties and environmental potentials.
During the spring semester 2025, the focus will be on “Design for Reassembly” – asking how regenerative materials can be coupled with construction details for repeated cycles of prefabrication, instalment, use, dismantlement, transport, storage, repair and reassembly. Focussing on the architecture of a modular pavilion, the design-build task will investigate how temporary structures can achieve extended and/or repeated lifespans, how the choice of construction systems and materials can minimize the environmental footprint, and how different design choices influence the adaptability to various spatial configurations, aesthetic expressions, and contextual or programmatic needs.
The semester will culminate in the construction of two pavilion structures, both built at AHO in May. The first one, a Landscape Laboratory, will support landscape architecture students’ fieldwork as a storage unit, in addition to occasionally hosting cultural “pop-up” events linked to AHO activities, such as the school’s 80th anniversary. The second one, a music performance pavilion serving the Ultima Festival program, will be prefabricated at AHO in May, re-erected at Oslo Central Station (Tigerplassen) in September, and further transported to a new location to host the Oslo Triennale Program in October (TBD). Both structures will aim for extending their primary use by contributing to the public spaces they are located in, for example by serving as outdoor furniture for social gatherings. Both pavilion structures will be based on the same modular load-bearing system made from reclaimed wood, and its joining principles. The design will also include additional exterior and interior layers as needed, based on context and function, such as weather protection, acoustic performance, flooring and roofing, as well as theft protection. Here, regenerative resources and various related techniques may complement the wooden structure, such as hemp, straw, wood shingles, sand, and clay. The concurrent material explorations and program development will involve key partners such as AHO’s Landscape Architecture Program and Ultima in collaboration with the Norwegian Academy of Music.
Throughout the semester, the students will conduct in-depth research on regenerative materials, timber construction techniques, design-for-reassembly principles, and programmatic analysis. A foundational understanding of the constructive elements will feed into the conceptual ideas and the full-scale prototyping of a modular, transportable and storable pavilion construction system. Through different stages of a design competition and in varying group constellations, the students will explore the potential of different ideas and develop them further. The course’s final assignment is a comprehensive report (individual or group work) that summarizes and reflects upon the findings from the design-build process in order to uncover barriers and opportunities for future circular practices. Together with an exhibition of the competition entries (individual or group work) and the built prototypes (common studio efforts), these reports will set the agenda for discussions with invited guests from academia and the industry at the studio’s final review.
Jonas Løland og Kim Pløhn
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
English
HES – Housing Exhibition Studio
Housing Exhibition Studio 01 aims to understand the minimum dwelling and first-time buyer homes (“førstegangskjøp”) in Oslo. We will question the lower limit of housing quality and the mechanisms that secure our basic human needs in the built environment, while at the same time explore possibilities for the Norwegian ideal of universal home ownership.
The studio will address urgent housing issues through the research and design of state of the art minimal dwellings in Oslo. The final output of the semester will be a publicly accessible housing exhibition. We will engage actively with the politics and finance of housing, its design methodology and the architectural quality of housing in different situations, ranging from the scale of the city to the scale of furniture. A hundred years after CIAM’s Existenzminimum, we again ask what density of life might achieve ecological, social and economic sustainability.
The liberalization of the market during the past four decades has fundamentally altered housing architecture. This has occurred in parallel throughout Europe, but the sharp contrast between the housing policies of the post war welfare state, and the market that succeeded it, has made this development perhaps most readable in Norway. In just a few years, housing went from being developed by cooperatives on municipal plots of land with money loaned from the State, to becoming a commodity built speculatively by a few, large housing developers. Today it is clear that the quality of our housing has subsequently decreased, meanwhile the cost of housing has skyrocketed. Recently the new municipal plan of Oslo proposed a reduction of the smallest permissible dwelling unit from 35 m2 to 30 m2, seemingly against all professional advice. Following widespread public outcry, the Housing Question is back on the political agenda, pressuring both the architectural profession and its educational institutions.
How can we live small, yet acceptable? What is the role of the architect in regards to the Housing Question in 2024? How do we as a profession advocate publicly for quality in our built environment? Could the tradition of the Housing Exhibition still serve as a useful tool in the discussion on how to achieve affordable high-quality homes in Norway?
The studio is done in connection with Ny Boligplan, an association and architectural journal working to promote a critical and constructive dialogue on a housing policy for our time.
The students will be encouraged to engage in a creative and critical way with urgent societal and architectural issues, to develop a sense for qualities within the domestic, and to communicate these to a wider public.
Housing Exhibition Studio 01 is organized towards the shared goal of producing a housing exhibition accessible to the public. The course is divided into three phases followed by an exhibition showing the collected work of the studio.
Each week of the course consists of a pre-planned schedule combining workshops and seminars, desk-crits and pin-ups. Students will be supported and instructed in the neccesary tools.
Starting from an existing plan atlas of 196 small apartments in Oslo, published in the journal NY BOLIGPLAN issue nr. 1, the first phase deals with surveying small first-time buyer apartments in Oslo through fieldwork, user questionnaires and large scale plan drawings/models, including exact furniture layouts.
The second phase will study various aspects of minimal dwelling requirements in groups through methodically documented experiments using models, mockups, drawings and diagrams. These studies will be contextualized critically through reading seminars on the historical discourse on the minimal dwelling.
The third phase will focus on developing concrete proposals for state of the art minimal dwellings in Oslo, addressing the relationship with site, apartment organization within the building complex and shared facilities, down to the spatial qualities of the individual dwelling. Proposals will be communicated through large scale plan drawings, models and perspectives.
The studio ends with the curation and production of a public housing exhibition made up of the collected work of the semester, as well as additional material related to the history of the housing question.
We will arrange a study trip to Copenhagen to visit relevant examples of historical building projects and to speak with professionals working at the forefront of the housing issue today.
Combination of individual and group assessment. Assessment folder and presentations at the end of each phase.
Erik Langdalen and Nicholas Coates
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
Re-Store: Energy
Energy and architecture are inseparable phenomena. Throughout history, the manufacturing of buildings has been governed by the human-, horse- or machine-power available at the time of conception. The question of heating and cooling of interior environments has continually resulted in spatial innovations. Energy, in the form of speed and flight, has spurred architects´ imaginations since the industrial revolution.
Energy production has resulted in spectacular buildings and infrastructure that are today considered an essential part of our built heritage. Today, buildings are measured as “embodied energy”, manifested as energy consumed when sourcing and transporting the material to site and energy spent during construction, through operation and maintenance, and through recycling, transformation, and demolition. Knowing that buildings represent 30% of the world´s total material consumption, 35% of greenhouse gas emissions, and 42% of total energy consumption, an intense focus on energy is inevitable.
However, to tackle today´s climate crises require not only quantitative considerations; it demands serious qualitative examinations of how architecture will be affected in regard to its historical, aesthetical, and ethical sides. This studio aims to develop wholistic alternatives for how to tackle our time´s climate crises through, innovative and radical architectural propositions.
Taking the “Dampsentralen” building in Oslo as a point of departure, students will undertake a broad examination of the relationship between energy and architecture, spanning from studies on how energy has affected architectural form through time, how the operations of energy production and distribution have evolved, how energy is manifested through networks and shifting ownership, and how energy is handled in popular culture and society at large. The building in question will be thoroughly examined through archival studies, on-site surveys, and qualitative explorations. Students will develop concrete design projects proposing how to transform the building for the future. The course has a strong emphasis on form and tectonics, and encourages the students to conduct architectural investigations and develop their own architectural language through model-making, drawing, and 1:1 experiments throughout the whole semester.
The studio is part of the research project Provenance Projected. Architecture Past and Future in the Era of Circularity.
Speculative futures #4
Excursion /BIP workshop, 8 days international workshop in Belgium.
BIP/Erasmus+ teaching collaboration, Rural areas facing climate change.
Belgium
English or Norwegian, depending on the student group.
Material intelligence is the practice of approaching materials as active components of architecture, rather than as passive substances. Materials offer inherent properties — strength, flexibility, texture, durability, thermal capacity — that shape their use in building. But materials need first to be extracted for our use, whether from the lithosphere, in quarrying and mining; the biosphere, through forestry and harvesting, or the technosphere, in the practice of salvaging and circularity, and each of these displacements has its own challenges. Material intelligence studies these practices with an eye to understanding the implications of the built world and our intervention into it. In previous semesters, we have focused the entire class on a single material. This process has given rise to a method of investigation which we now believe is the real substance of the subject matter series. This method includes a study of a material’s provenance, the formal organization that a material suggests, and a hands-on, model based exploration of its use in building:
This semester, we invite students to pursue an individual or collective investigation of material(s) of their choice. In this way, the course’s ethical dimension is student-driven.
English or Norwegian, depending on the student group.
Nordic Light in Architecture (Elective course)
Gro Bonesmo + Halvor Weider Ellefsen
Mastercourse(s)
In the TAP studio we teach building design with an emphasis on conceptual clarity, constructional logic and architectural form. The studio is oriented towards professional practice, giving students architectural training as well as design skills by focusing on architectural design of a given brief on a specific site.
Students develop their work individually based on individual programs. Collectively the studio production will be an exploration of a specific building category.
The brief for the spring 2025 semester will be to design a medium sized venue for a specific sport. The programs will vary from individual to combat and team sports. Formal, spatial, structural, material and tectonic responses to the program will be explored and cultivated.
The studio discussions will be based on the acknowledgement that architectural quality depends on our care for the tangible and measurable requirements, as well as for the emotional and immeasurable dimensions of the program.
Fordypningsemner er 6 studiepoeng, og noen tilbys også på tvers av studieprogram. Se emnebeskrivelser for fordypningsemner i nedtrekksmenyen under.
Kristian Edwards and Tine Hegli
Spring semester seminars, Technology and practice
The seminar introduces advancements in digitalization, computation and machine learning technologies relevant to design practices. Looking beyond the immediate sphere of the creative disciplines, “Decoding” aims to demystify and open discussion, opportunities and development pathways for computation and Machine Learning (ML) technologies at a pivotal moment in the design fields.
During the Spring Semester 2025 we will hear from leading voices across numerous fields, on computation, automation, algorithms, machine learning and AI – broad scaling, pathways and projections.
The course is built up around a series of lectures, both live and recorded.
Weekly group and/or individual assignments will be connected to lectures either in retrospective or a preparational context.
Elective week will be used to complete a final report.
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
Norwegian or English, depending on the student group
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
English
This seminar is organised around hands-on material investigations, analysis and critical readings. The seminar will start with a brief scientific history of material measure and innovation, laying down the foundation for a material discourse. We will investigate materials and their inherent properties, examining their full life cycle from the extraction, production of elements, building application and potential for reuse.
Throughout the course, students will explore the impact of material use, the potential of regenerative and recycled composites and their role in today's practice.
There will be several characterization workshops and students will develop a collective library. We will engage in discussions with different actors in the construction industry.
Tim Anstey
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
Håkan Edeholt
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
English
Amandine Kastler and Erlend Skjeseth
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
English or Norwegian, depending on the student group.
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
English
Sabine Muller
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS) in Architecture or Landscape Architecture.
Experience with use of CAD 2D and 3D (Rhino), Adobe Suite, hand drawing, and analogue model making.
Experience with GIS and digital model fabrication. Interest in urbanism and landscape “materials” such as landform, water, soil, plants.
English
The studio will provide students with the conceptual categories to address adaptation to climate change in an urbanising regional context through a landscape architectural perspective. The studio will enter design through the scales of hydrology, and enforce the understanding of landscape as infrastructure as well as a mode of perception. Form will be discussed in relation to performance as well as to space and place.
Giambattista Zaccariotto
Admission to AHO and successful completion of three years bachelor level studies (180 ECTS).
English