Spring 2025 Courses in Urbanism

URB 201 / SPI 201 / SOC 203 / ARC 207

Introduction to Urban Studies / M. Christine Boyer

This course will examine different crises confronting cities in the 21st century. Topics will range from informal settlements, to immigration, terrorism, shrinking population, sprawl, rising seas, affordable housing, gentrification, smart cities. The range of cities will include Los Angles, New Orleans, Paris, Logos, Caracas, Havana, New York, Hong Kong, Dubai among others. [Distribution area SA, core Urban Studies course]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=010204


ARC 205 / URB 205 / LAS 225 / ENV 205

Interdisciplinary Design Studio / Mario Gandelsonas and Aaron Shkuda

The course focuses on the social forces that shape design thinking. Its objective is to introduce architectural and urban design issues to build design and critical thinking skills from a multidisciplinary perspective. The studio is team-taught from faculty across disciplines to expose students to the multiple forces within which design operates. [Distribution area LA; core Urban Studies course]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=014225


CEE 262B / ARC 262B / EGR 262B / URB 262B

Structures and the Urban Environment / Maria Garlock

Known as "Bridges", this course focuses on structural engineering as a new art form begun during the Industrial Revolution and flourishing today in long-span bridges, thin shell concrete vaults, and tall buildings. Through laboratory experiments students study the scientific basis for structural performance and thereby connect external forms to the internal forces in the major works of structural engineers. Illustrations are taken from various cities and countries thus demonstrating the influence of culture on our built environment. [Distribution area SEL]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…


MUS 264 / URB 264

Urban Blues and the Golden Age of Rock / Rob Wegman

A survey of American popular music in the 1920s to 1960s. We will start with the early history of three major streams of music: Country & Western, Rhythm & Blues, and Popular music. The critical year in that history was 1954, when the streams fused into a volatile mixture that detonated with the birth of Rock 'n' Roll. From the beginning this was a story about race, politics, money, generational divides. The songs themselves will guide us on our path. And this course aims to guide our ears to a deeper understanding and appreciation of them. [Distribution area LA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…;


URB 340 / AFS 344

Everyday Urbanism and Food Systems in Contemporary Africa / Blessing Masuku

Africa is urbanizing faster than any region of the world. This course analyzes socio-spatial dynamics that create urban life in Africa and generate inequalities arising from urbanization. Students will investigate the links between urbanization, infrastructure systems and informality, and how these shape and connect to food systems and impact the food security of urban residents. Upon completing the course, students will be able to recognize and challenge reductionist narratives concerning contemporary urbanism and explore possibilities for intervention, re-design and change. [Distribution area CD or SA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=017693


URB 345 / ARC 345 / ART 357

Urban Nature and Society, 1450-1800 / Jennifer Strtak

This interdisciplinary course explores the dynamic relationship between urban development and the natural environment between 1450 and 1800. Contrary to the common perception of nature as existing solely beyond urban boundaries, this course reveals how cities have always intertwined with natural elements that required protection, restoration, and even creation. Through engaging discussions and written assignments, students will gain a deeper understanding of the complex interplay between urban growth and environmental stewardship, and how these historical insights can inform contemporary urban and environmental practices. [Distribution area HA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=017674


ARC 346 / RES 346 / EAS 336 / ART 317

Modern Architectures in Context: Cities in Asia / Da Hyung Jeong

This course examines how politico-ideological and environmental discourses have shaped cities and their architectures in colonial and postcolonial Asia. Paying close attention to select cities including Almaty, Dhaka, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Islamabad, New Delhi, Pyongyang, Phnom Penh, Seoul, Singapore, Taipei, Tashkent and Tokyo, it aims to provide a preliminary answer to the increasingly urgent questions: what are the specificities of `Asian' modernity, and how was this modernity embraced and contested in urban contexts throughout Asia? For each city under study, a notable work of architecture will be singled out and subjected to close reading. [Distribution Area HA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=017559


EGR 361 / ENT 361 / URB 361 / AAS 348

The Reclamation Studio: Humanistic Design applied to Systemic Bias / Majora Carter

Assumptions and practices by the nonprofit industrial complex, government agencies and affordable housing developers treat poor communities, especially poor communities of color as problems to be managed by those from outside these communities. The Reclamation Studio explores the humanistic design practices applied by social entrepreneurs from low-status communities near Princeton (our "clients") that counteract that history of systemic bias with innovative development projects designed to retain the talent from within their communities. Students will have the opportunity to learn from, and contribute to their efforts. [Distribution area SA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…


SOC 373 / AMS 428 / URB 373

Systemic Racism: Myths and Realities / Patricia Fernández-Kelly

This seminar focuses on the structural and institutional foundations of racial discrimination in the United States. It emphasizes the contributions of sociologists, some of whom will participate as invited guests. The course gives a historical overview followed by an investigation of key legislative actions and economic factors inhibiting racial equality. Subsequent topics include migration and immigration; urban development; and residential segregation. The end of the course reviews resistance movements and policies aimed at addressing systemic racism, including restorative justice and reparations. [Distribution area SA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…


URB 384 / AMS 386 / HIS 340 / ARC 387

Affordable Housing in the United States / Aaron Shkuda

This course introduces students to the ways that policy, design, and citizen activism shaped affordable housing in the United States from the early 20th century to the present. We explore privately-developed tenements and row houses, government-built housing, publicly-subsidized suburban homes and cooperatives, as well as housing developed through incentives and subsidies. Students will analyze the balance between public and private, free market and subsidy, and preservation and renewal. Close attention will be paid to the role of race in structuring the relationship between policymakers, property owners, renters, and homeowners. [Distribution area HA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=017175


SPI 392 / ANT 363 / AAS 369 / URB 363

Gangsters and Troublesome Populations / Hazal Hurman and Laurence Ralph

Since the 1920s, the term "gang" has been used to describe all kinds of collectives, from groups of well-dressed mobsters to petty criminals and juvenile delinquents. In nearly a century of research the only consistency in their characterization is as internal Other from the vantage of the law. This class will investigate how the category of "the gang" serves to provoke imaginaries of racial unrest and discourses of "dangerous," threatening subjects in urban enclaves. More broadly we will examine the methods and means by which liberal democratic governments maintain their sovereign integrity through the containment of threatening populations. [Distribution area SA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…


HIS 436 / RES 436 / URB 436

Socialist Cities in the 20th Century / Michael Brinley

Socialist governments saw the urbanizing project as an arena and a showcase for the transcendence of the shortcomings of past urban life. This course will explore the great variety of socialist cities with an emphasis on thematic and comparative approaches. An introductory survey of the late nineteenth-century context and the "urban question" will be followed by a roughly chronological movement through some localities of socialist urbanisms across the twentieth century. It will conclude with reflections on post-socialist transitions. No prior knowledge is required. [Distribution area HA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…


AAS 456 / HIS 456 / URB 456 / HUM 456

What Is New Orleans / Joshua Guild 

This course explores the history of what has been described as an "impossible but inevitable city" over three centuries. Settled on perpetually shifting swampland at the foot of one of the world's great waterways, this port city served as an outpost of three empires and a gateway linking the N. American heartland with the Gulf Coast, Caribbean, and Atlantic World. From European and African settlement through the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, we will consider how race, culture, and the environment have defined the history of the city and its people. [Distribution area HA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=012825


ENV 476 / URB 476

(Out)living Fossil Fuels: Histories and Futures of Energy Transitions / Bethany Wiggin

For centuries, energy infrastructure has been located in coastal communities where traditional livelihoods on the water persist. This seminar explores how these communities and other communities experiencing energy injustices offer extreme cases of 'living oil,': indebted to the fossil fuels which also imperil them. Case studies explore coal, oil, and gas histories and cultures, including emergent alliances of energy justice advocates. We pay close attention to insights of residents, and activities and assignments offer opportunities to develop embodied learning practices and to explore research methods to amplify community voices. [Distribution area CD or HA]

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=1254&courseid=017721


ARC 546 / URB 546

Technology and the City: The Architectural Implications of Networked Urban Landscape / Andrew Laing

The seminar explores the implications of technologically networked cities for architectural programming and the design of spaces and places. Key issues examined: information technology reshaping the nature of architectural programming and our ideas of spaces, places and communities; programs for spaces, buildings, and the city being transformed by increasing mobility, fluidity and `blurring' of activities in space; and, the history of ideas that shape how we understand technology and urbanism, programming and architecture, including cyborg cities, sentient and smart cities, big data, hybrid places, AI urbanism. 

https://registrar.princeton.edu/course-offerings/course-details?term=12…