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Teaching > RWU
HP301 Architectural Conservation: Fall 2006 >
Syllabus
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| Saint Mary's Church, Henley-Upon-Thames,
England. |
Course
Principles of Architectural Conservation (HP 301-01)
Time and Location
Tuesday/Thursday, 11:00 - 12:20 PM
Architecture Room 206
Type
Lecture and field-based course
Instructor
Philip Cryan Marshall
Professor of Historic Preservation
Tel. 508.951.8562 (mobile)
RWU 401.254.3061
Office: SAAHP 247
Office Hours
Advising hours will be posted on my faculty office door each
week, a week in advance. Please sign up and bring an agenda.
If you plan to discuss drafts, proposals, drawings, field notes,
photographs, or similar material, please leave a copy in my
faculty mailbox with a note asking me to preview your work at
least two days before your meeting to provide enough
time to consider carefully your work before getting together.
Course Description
"Provides and overview of the professional role of the
architectural conservator in the preservation of historic structures.
Addresses architectural styles, construction technology, and
dating techniques; the composition properties, uses, and conservation
of traditional building materials (wood, metal, masonry, decorative
finishes, and glass); and conservation standards and treatments.
Site visits supplement lectures and readings." (3 credits)
Roger Williams University Undergraduate Catalog
Prerequisites
HP224 or Junior standing.
Goals and Objectives
Through lectures, readings, assignments, and site visits this
course will address:
- the role and training of the architectural conservator;
- professional and organizational resources in the field;
- the development of building technology, and inherent conservation
issues of specific architectural styles;
- assessing historic structures (significance, style, date,
condition, and treatment);
- preservation standards, philosophies, and treatments;
- conservation of traditional building materials and systems.
The course serves two purposes:
- it is an introduction to the field of architectural conservation
for students who plan to practice in the a broader context,
and
- it is the foundation course for the architectural conservation
concentration. As such, the course does not purport to be
a broad overview of the many aspects of conservation; rather,
it provides a standard and means by which practitioners in
the field of historic preservation will be able to understand
the nature of architectural conservation and the specific
role that architectural conservators play.
Format
- Course lecturers, with discussion
- Course readings, followed by class discussion
- Course readings, followed by independent analysis
- Course readings, followed by quizzes
- Team-oriented site conservation work
- Independent, self-directed documentation of a particular site
- Guest lecturers, with your active participation in discussion
- Site visits, conducted independently by students, alone or
as a
group
- Site visits, conducted by the entire class
Student Responsibilities
Assignments handed in after their due date will be reduce by
one letter grade, at a minimum; papers will not be accepted
beyond a week after the due date; and 'incomplete' for the course
will not be considered unless there are extenuating circumstances
and a request for an extension presented in writing.
Have each week's assignments completed before the class
as you will be expected to analyze and discuss the readings
and, possibly, take a quiz.
Advising hours will be posted as soon as faculty schedules
for school, program, and committee meetings have been set. Required
and recommended reading and texts will be reviewed during the
first class.
Summary of responsibilities:
- Attend all classes, site visits, and field trips
- Work as involved, responsible member of all project teams
- Actively participate in class discussions
- Complete assignments (word-processed or electronic, when
written) by due dates
- Advise faculty about any concerns, tutoring, and special
needs
- Come to site visits prepared, with necessary tools, equipment,
and supplies.
Grading
- Attendance: participation mandatory
- Assignments (except the final project) 90%, refer to assignments
list.
- Field and class notes 10%
Bibliography and Reading
Refer to Readings.
Reading for the course will be posted on the Web. The reading
is typically referenced, and linked, in the Web-based syllabus,
which will be added to throughout the semester. As a rule, you
should check the schedule and weekly requirements, reading a
week before beginning your preparation, to make sure you have
the latest postings.
Assignments
Refer to Assignments
Schedule of Class Meetings
Schedule
Equipment and Supplies
This is a partial list of equipment and supplies needed to
undertake field recording of historic structures and sites.
When necessary, optional equipment will be provided during specific
assignments for the class.
| Equipment and Supplies |
| binder |
clip board |
graph paper (1/4" grid) |
| pens: black, blue, green, red |
tape measure (25') |
flashlight |
| architect's scale |
35mm (or digital) camera |
color film (or digital:, 64 mb
memory, minimum, for 2 mb images, minimum) |
Plagarism
Students agree that by taking this course all required assignments
may be subject to submission for textural similarity review
to Turnitin.com for the detection of plagarism. All submitted
papers will be included as source documents in the Turnitin.com
reference database solely for the purpose of detecting plagarism.
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