Course summary
The new Conservation and Reuse programme (MA/PG Dip) approaches working with existing things from the perspective of climate change, driven by an urgent need to cultivate the careful use and reuse of materials and spaces – from the cathedral to the car park. This is central to a set of school-wide strategies at the AA that ask how innovation in materials and fabrication can address problems of relative value, resource conservation and cultural significance. The programme’s emphasis reaches beyond buildings to include landscapes, environments and wider material culture, both tangible and intangible. Its curriculum explores historical and theoretical frameworks of conservation, encouraging students to engage with questions of value and heritage from a critical standpoint and grounding their work in awareness of the ‘spheres of implication’ in which objects and buildings are embedded. This enquiry takes place alongside practical investigations into new and established construction techniques for making and remaking, and a focus on developing practical skills. The programme fosters future-orientated practice by considering how regulatory frameworks, commercial attitudes and practical actions could be transformed by a better understanding of the factors that influence what we choose to conserve, and how we do so. Students synthesise theoretical, technical and practical knowledge in a design thesis targeting a situation of their choice, taking responsibility for a rich existing environment and exploring how it could change. The AA sees the need to equip a new generation of practitioners with the ethical, critical and technical skills to tackle a complex world, and to put design at the centre of responses to questions of value. This new programme will nurture practitioners who are able to work with existing things, make beneficial judgements about design and bring about change with precision, optimism and grace.
Assessment method
Module 1: Introduction to History, Theory and Ethics of Conservation and Reuse Module 2: Value and Contemporary Issues in Conservation and Reuse Module 3: Comparative Construction and Carbon Awareness Module 4: Understanding, Reusing and Changing Existing Things Module 5: Circularity, Reuse and Practical Skills Module 6: Future-orientated Practice Module 7: Design Thesis
Qualified teacher status (QTS)
To work as a teacher at a state school in England or Wales, you will need to achieve qualified teacher status (QTS). This is offered on this course for the following level:
- Course does not award QTS
Entry requirements
Academic Entry Requirement - Bachelor’s degree (minimum second class honours) in architecture, engineering or a related discipline from a United Kingdom university or a degree of equivalent standard from a recognised university or higher education institution from outside the UK. English Language Entry Requirement - Students whose first language is not English require IELTS 6.5 or equivalent (with a minimum 6.0 in each component). See Taught Postgraduate Admissions page for full list of acceptable English Language tests: https://www.aaschool.ac.uk/admissions/postgraduate
Fees and funding
Tuition fees
EU | £30840 | Whole course |
International | £30840 | Whole course |
England | £30840 | Whole course |
Northern Ireland | £30840 | Whole course |
Scotland | £30840 | Whole course |
Wales | £30840 | Whole course |
Channel Islands | £30840 | Whole course |
Republic of Ireland | £30840 | Whole course |
Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website .
Additional fee information
Provider information
Architectural Association School of Architecture
36 Bedford Square
Camden
WC1B 3ES