MA Urban Design 23-24 Welcome to MORE 2024

David Mathewson (Course Leader), Karan Bakre, Odysseas Diakakis, Simone Gobber, Ripin Kalra, Krystallia Kamvasinou, Luz Navarro, David Seex, Abubokkar Siddiki, Louise Thomas


David Mathewson is Senior Lecturer, with over 20 years’ experience as an urban designer, architectural designer and international planner. He is currently undertaking doctoral studies in planning policy related to flooding and the link with changing urban form in Jakarta, Indonesia.

THE PG URBAN DESIGN course, with MA, Diploma and Certificate Pathways at the University of Westminster, provides a coherent approach to understanding and studying the challenges facing cities today. Combining structured academic study with live design projects, it allows students to develop practical skills alongside a theoretical understanding and an informed approach to sustainable urban development. As a multidisciplinary field, urban design overlaps with and incorporates elements of urban and regional planning, international development, architecture, landscape design, urban regeneration, geography, transport planning and infrastructure planning, drawing students from all these backgrounds.

Cities are at the centre of modern life and are the places where the majority of the world’s inhabitants make their homes. They are the hubs of economic and social life and where the majority of resources are consumed. They have evolved over time with important city images, built forms and urban profiles that attract investment while serving as cultural assets which reflect the values of their inhabitants, around whom shared experiences revolve and daily activities are shaped. This process is well understood in the West; however, in a global context the pace of change is both dramatic and accelerating, creating new challenges for city design and management, particularly in the developing nations of the global south.

Drawing on the cultural and economic forces acting in the city, the urban design course focuses on understanding and shaping the physical setting in which these processes take place.

The work presented here is based on student dissertations and studio design projects in which particular impacts on city design are identified and how, in the light of these effects, urban form can best be adapted to current and future needs. The practice of urban design has been emerging as a distinct profession globally since the 1960s and is underpinned by a growing knowledge-base informed by research and tested through spatial analysis and design proposal. These studies represent a critique of current responses to urban challenges and provide a unique contribution to urbanism’s body of knowledge.

DISSERTATION TUTORS: Andrew Boughton, Simone Gobber, Ripin Kalra, Krystallia Kamvasinou, David Mathewson, Luz Navarro, David Seex, Louise Thomas

DESIGN CRITICS AND EXTERNAL CONTRIBUTORS: Nick Bidgelow (LDA), Claudio Borsari (Momentum Transport), Corinna Dean, Evgeny Didorenko (LDA), Bill Erickson, Didem Ertem, Lorenzo Stefano Iannizzotto (ISCTE-IUL, Lisbon), Nicola Longland (LDA), Juan Oyarbide (Prior + Partners), Julie Plichon (Sustrans), Marion Roberts, Filomena Russo, Jerome Thibault (Stantec), Mark Williams (LDA), Marcus Wilshere (The Collaborative City)

STUDENTS:

PART-TIME STUDENTS:

  • Grace Allman
  • Lewis Dodds
  • Dindy Duong
  • Daniel Lusak
  • Elizabeth Warden