Origins
Architecture at the University of Oregon has a long and rich
history. It has been at the forefront of innovation in architectural
education since its inception in 1914. It was the first school
to adopt completely two basic elements of the "modern" movement
in architectural education, an affiliation with the allied
arts (painting, crafts and sculpture), rather than with
engineering, and a non-competitive, individual approach to
learning.
Ellis F. Lawrence became the first Dean of the School of Architecture
and Allied Arts. Lawrence believed that architecture, the crafts
and fine arts should be integrated into one school. The school
originally adopted many tenets of the "Beaux Arts System," but
structural alliance with the arts resulted in breaking away
from the hierarchical, competitive and conservative European
system. The final break was initiated when W. R. B. Willcox
became the architecture curriculum head in 1922.
Willcox's theory of education included an underlying premise
that architecture was, along with other arts, an expression
of the values, aspirations and character of the society which
produced it. It was vital that the architect have a broad understanding
of the culture's history and values, and beyond that, that the
architect be a positive influence in helping forge those values.
This premise is still alive today at the UO.
The maverick intellectual image of the School was enhanced by
Willcox's many articles on architectural education. Kindred
spirits were attracted to Eugene. Bernard Maybeck was a frequent
visitor and Frank Lloyd Wright came to spar with Willcox. Eric
Mendelsohn taught successive summer studios, presenting studio
lectures illustrated with flowing charcoal sketches.
In 1919, the UO architecture program was accepted as a member
of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, an
early form of accreditation. The UO was the first program ever
admitted after only five years of existence; and it was one
of only twelve special programs accepted that year out of the
40 schools that applied. Interior architecture coursegallery
was introduced in 1921; in 1928, a Bachelor of Architecture
in Interior Design degree was first offered.
The Programs Evolution
Lawrence and Willcox guided the program through the first
three decades of life. The school's reputation for producing
'creative' designers grew; yet the Lawrence/Willcox tradition,
with its modernist vision rooted in the Arts and Crafts Movement,
was often at odds with the mainstream modernists and their
bias toward a technological ideal.
After World War II, enrollment at the UO exploded. The number
of architecture majors grew from 75 in 1925 to 410 in 1951.
It would increase to over 800 in 1979, before pulling back
to around 600 currently. The student population in the AAA
school became too large for effective central administration
by the Dean's office. Consequently, each curricular area of
the school became a department. In 1964, the Department of
Architecture, with programs in Architecture and Interior Architecture,
was created.
There had been very little change in the curriculum through
the first 50 years of the program. A set palette of courses
was required for all students. The curriculum was broadly
inclusive; sculpture, watercolor, painting, and figure drawing
courses were required as part of an architecture curriculum
centered around design studio. But the curriculum did not
allow students much choice in directing their education.
As dramatic social change swept through society in the late
1960s and early 1970s, students began demanding more rights
and more choice. The rigid curriculum of the past years was
replaced by a more open set of program requirements allowing
students almost unlimited freedom in selection of courses.
In the 1980s a third curricular model appeared with a more
balanced set of required and elective credits. That model,
with slight modifications, continues in place today.
During the final three decades of the century, many new programs
were initiated. Some of the highlights are listed below:
- Christopher Alexander's The Oregon Experiment, the published
master planning strategy based on pattern language principles,
became the official policy of campus planning on the U of
O campus.
- Oregon faculty were instrumental in the creation of the
Foundation for Interior Design Education Research (FIDER).
FIDER is now the recognized accrediting body in interior design/architecture.
In 1976, Oregon's Interior Architecture program was the first
West Coast program to be accredited.
- The Center for Housing Innovation was established in 1988
to address substantive research issues in the field of housing.
- The Energy Efficient Industrialized Housing Research Program
was begun.
- Endowed faculty positions were initiated, including the
Frederick Charles Baker Chair in Lighting and Architectural
Design and the Pietro Belluschi Chair in Architectural Design.
- A wide range of advanced offerings in computer graphics
and analytical procedures such as energy modeling were introduced.
One of the most significant developments in the history of
the program occurred in the mid-1990s. The department instituted
a Portland-based M.Arch Option II degree program in urban
architecture. The first M.Arch class began the Portland Program
in 1994-95. In Fall Term 1997, the Portland program moved
into its new home in the university-owned Willamette Block
Building in downtown Portland; the Portland M.Arch degree
program received its NAAB accreditation the same year.
The Portland Program, an extension of the Eugene programs,
is also open to advanced Eugene-based students who wish to
broaden the context of their studies. This urban program has
opened many possibilities for collaboration between the Eugene-
and Portland-based students and faculty, as they are able
to utilize Portland as a laboratory for the study of urban
architecture. This involvement engenders valuable interaction
between the academic and professional communities.
The department still sees its educational mission as rooted
in Willcox's visionary realm of freedom and responsibility.
The curriculum is design-centered. Comprehensiveness is aided
by a subject area of substantial breadth and depth, while
integration is aided by skills courses and practiced in studio.
Faculty enjoy substantial freedom with respect to curricular
innovation and research within areas of expertise and are
expected to maintain a collective responsibility to integrative
and comprehensive design.
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