Faculty of Architecture, Design and Urbanism, University of Buenos Aires

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Faculty of Architecture, Design
and Urbanism
Facultad de Arquitectura, Diseño y Urbanismo
FADU building in Ciudad Universitaria
TypeFaculty
Established1901; 123 years ago (1901)
AffiliationUniversity of Buenos Aires
DeanCarlos Venancio
Students25.748[1]
Location,
34°19′22″S 58°15′50″W / 34.3229°S 58.2638°W / -34.3229; -58.2638
Websitefadu.uba.ar

The Faculty of Architecture, Design and Urbanism (Facultad de Arquitectura, Diseño y Urbanismo; FADU) is a faculty of the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), the largest university in Argentina. Established in 1901 as the School of Architecture, it has since expanded to impart courses on graphic design and urbanism.

Most of the faculty's facilities are located at Pabellón III of the Ciudad Universitaria complex, the UBA's only centralized campus, in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Núñez. As of 2011, it was the third-largest faculty at UBA, with 25,748 regular students.[2]

History[edit]

The University of Buenos Aires officially began imparting architecture degrees in 1901, becoming the first architecture school in Argentina. The department of architecture was in the beginning part of the Faculty of Exact, Physical, and Natural Sciences, which had its seat at the Manzana de las Luces complex, in Downtown Buenos Aires. Adjacent to the faculty were the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires and St. Ignatius' Church. The university counted with under a dozen architecture students up until 1912. In its early years, the Escuela de Arquitectura was heavily influenced by French schools of architecture, following the cues of Paris' École des beaux-arts.[3]

The Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism was founded as an autonomous faculty in 1947, through Law 13.045 approved by the Argentine Senate following arduous debate. The first dean of the faculty was Ermete de Lorenzi.[4] The Night of the Long Batons, in July 1966, marked the beginning of a difficult period for the faculty. Throughout the 1960s, the faculty had its seat at two warehouses near the Faculty of Law. Its name was changed to its current "Faculty of Architecture, Design and Urbanism" in 1985, when graphic design and other design disciplines were incorporated into the graduate course offer.[3]

In 1966, the Faculty moved to its current seat in the Ciudad Universitaria complex, a purpose-built campus which originally intended to house most (if not all) UBA dependencies. Initially, the campus' Pabellón I would be assigned to the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences, Pabellón II to Philosophy and Letters, Pabellón III to Architecture and Urbanism, and Pabellón IV to Economic Sciences. The complex was also to house the rector's offices and the university's central library.[5] Nowadays, FADU and the Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences (FCEN) are the only two faculties to have their seat at Ciudad Universitaria, alongside a number of research centers and other minor facilities.[6]

Like other UBA faculties and other universities across Argentina, FADU students and professors suffered persecution under the country's last military dictatorship, from 1976 to 1983. During the dictatorship, the faculty's handpicked dean was professor Héctor Corbacho, who taught technical drawing at the Navy's Escuela de Mecánica (ESMA). In 2005, a report estimated that up to 110 FADU students, professors and personnel were arbitrarily detained and disappeared during the dictatorship.[7]

Degrees[edit]

FADU presently offers seven graduate degrees:[8]

In addition, the faculty offers a number of specialization degrees, as well as magister degrees, doctorates and post-doctoral degrees.[9]

Political and institutional life[edit]

Like the rest of the University of Buenos Aires's faculties, FADU operates under the principle of tripartite co-governance, wherein authorities are democratically elected and professors, students and graduates are represented in the faculty's governing bodies. The faculty is headed by a Dean (Spanish: decano or decana), who presides over the Directive Council (Consejo Directivo). The Directive Council is made up of eight representatives for the professors, four representatives of the student body, and four representatives of the faculty's graduates. Deans are elected by the Directive Council every four years, while elections to the council take place every two years.[10]

Since 2022, the dean of the Faculty of Medical Sciences has been Arq. Carlos Venancio, who was formerly vice-dean and assumed office upon the resignation of Guillermo Cabrera.[11]

Notable people[edit]

FADU has produced a number of prominent architects, renown both nationwide and internationally. Clorindo Testa, pioneer of the brutalist movement in Argentina, earned his degree at the (then) Faculty of Architecture in 1948.[12] The rationalist Alberto Prebisch earned his degree at the School of Architecture (predecessor of FADU) in 1921; he would later become dean of the faculty in 1955.[13] New York-based urban design theorist Diana Agrest graduated from FADU in 1967.[14] Other known UBA-educated architects include Claudio Vekstein, organic architecture proponent Patricio Pouchulu, and the Uruguayan Rafael Viñoly, who designed the Cero+infinito building at Ciudad Universitaria, completed in 2021.[15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Censo estudiantil 2011" (PDF). uba.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  2. ^ "QS World University Rankings 2016". Top Universities. 25 August 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  3. ^ a b González Montaner, Berto (7 December 2018). "La FADU cuenta la historia de sus alumnos y arquitectos desde 1930 al 2000". Clarín (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  4. ^ Longoni, René; Fonseca, Ignacio (2010). La enseñanza de la Arquitectura y el Urbanismo en el Primer Gobierno peronista (PDF). II Congreso de Estudios sobre el Peronismo: 1943-1976 (in Spanish). Caseros, Buenos Aires: Universidad Nacional de Tres de Febrero. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 July 2016 – via Red de Estudios sobre el Peronismo.
  5. ^ "Un proyecto para la Universidad de Buenos Aires" (PDF). Nuestra Arquitectura (in Spanish). Vol. 356. Buenos Aires. July 1959.
  6. ^ "El edificio". fadu.uba.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  7. ^ Ginzberg, Victoria (27 September 2005). "Arquitectura rastrea la memoria de alumnos y docentes desaparecidos". Página 12 (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 September 2022.
  8. ^ "Secretaría Académica". fadu.uba.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  9. ^ "Maestrías". fuba.uba.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 August 2022.
  10. ^ "Ricardo Gelpi fue electo rector de la UBA". rrhh.uba.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  11. ^ "Renunció el decano de la facultad de Arquitectura, denunciado por abuso sexual". Télam (in Spanish). 27 June 2021. Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  12. ^ "Clorindo Testa" (in Spanish). Artistas Argentinas. 14 April 2013. Archived from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  13. ^ Novick, Alicia (November 1997). "Alberto Prebisch. La vanguardia clásica" (PDF). Seminario de Crítica (in Spanish) (83).
  14. ^ "Diana Agrest | The Cooper Union". cooper.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  15. ^ Polack, María Elena (13 October 2021). "Cero+infinito: la UBA estrena un "pabellón inteligente" de la Facultad de Ciencias Exactas". La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 August 2022.

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