BA (Hons) Landscape Architecture & Design
Access to advanced forms of fabrication and testing
Focused on building climate resilience in our towns and cities
Access to advanced forms of fabrication and testing
Focused on building climate resilience in our towns and cities
This course is available for applications into Year 2 or 3.
UCA’s architecture courses share an activist approach, using design to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow. On our BA (Hons) Landscape Architecture & Design degree course at UCA Canterbury, you’ll focus on the major challenge of the next 30 to 50 years – building climate resilience in our towns and cities.
This practical, hands-on course has been designed in collaboration with industry specialists, and is as attuned to horticultural knowledge as it is to design.
In the unique landscape of Canterbury, you’ll also have the ideal setting for your studies. Learning the complex vocabulary, norms of approach, drawing techniques, and collaborative skills to become a confident and forward-thinking landscape architect, you’ll graduate ready to forge a career in an exciting, vital field with rapidly evolving demands.
Please note, this course is only available for applications into Year 2 or 3 of the course. To apply for Year 2 please use the direct application link below. For entries into Year 3 please contact our admissions teams:
UK applicants: admissions@uca.ac.uk
International/EU applicants: internationaladmissions@uca.ac.uk
Launch
Launch Week for your second year is all about getting you ready for your next year of study, and re-orientating after your first summer break.
Projects 03
You’ll be encouraged to explore and interrogate a landscape and develop small spatial interventions within it. You’ll explore the relationships between interior and exterior spaces and how the architectural interventions that we make may be experienced by those who inhabit them.
Landscape for Equity 02
In this unit, you will deepen your understanding of the technological principles, regulations, and societal challenges that shape contemporary landscape design. You’ll focus on the role of cultural diversity, non-Western perspectives, and vernacular practices in creating climate resilient landscapes.
Briefs and Positions 02
In this unit, you’ll prepare a developed set of briefing materials to guide your development of a medium-scale design proposal in a subsequent design unit.
Opportunity
Opportunity Week is an intensive week of activity conceived and undertaken in collaboration with an external partner(s), and it’ll be driven by the partner’s external knowledge and area of practice – so it could cover anything from politics or law to sport and wellbeing.
Projects 04
Advancing your knowledge and skills, you’ll design a medium-scale landscape project, exploring complex relationships between productive ecologies and the city, its people, environment, and climate. You develop a deeper knowledge of contemporary agendas of permaculture, horticulture, and agriculture to produce a design proposal informed by your experiences in a real-world "test bed," where you will demonstrate the cultivation and harvesting of specimen plants and products.
Pathways and Mentors
In Pathways and Mentors, you will reflect on the design skills, knowledge and techniques you are acquiring and identify potential alternative career paths that you might not yet have considered. In the course of this unit, all students will have the opportunity to engage with a design professional in a structured series of engagement and mentoring sessions.
Critical Analysis 02
This unit builds on understandings from Critical Analysis 01, and issues introduced in the preceding Briefs and Positions unit, to consider how ideas are socially, historically, and culturally located.
PLE Digital Outcomes
The PLE Digital Outcome is a purposefully edited, self-directed record of your constructive engagement with and presence on digital media platforms across the year.
ATOM Activities
ATOM activities are tiny pieces of diverse individual learning that facilitate interdisciplinary exposure across the university’s curriculum and beyond. They are chosen by you according to your personal interest.
Launch
For your final Launch week you’ll be gearing up for your final year of study through a range of activities, which could include a multi-story guest lecture super session, an all staff pecha kucher, Canterbury and surroundings walking orientation tours or a studio launch collaborative making project.
Projects 05
You’ll develop detailed proposals for the landscape design of a housing scheme and use your design as the basis for a professional practice report related to the realisation of the project. The unit has two components - a portfolio on landscape design in relation to the home at a variety of scales, and a report that explores the legal and procedural characteristics of practicing as a landscape architect in the UK, based upon your emerging design.
Critical Analysis 03
This unit provides a framework for you to establish your own personalised research trajectory. You’ll produce a piece of self-directed research on a subject that is related to the historical, theoretical and critical concerns of your subject discipline. The subject matter will be informed by the specific interests that you have developed.
Briefs and Positions 03
In the Briefs and Positions 03 unit you will prepare an advanced set of briefing materials that will inform and guide your development of a medium-scale design for your final projects unit.
Opportunity
Opportunity Week is an intensive week of activity conceived and undertaken in collaboration with an external partner(s), and it’ll be driven by the partner’s external knowledge and area of practice – so it could cover anything from politics or law to sport and wellbeing.
Projects 06
In this final project unit you’ll undertake a large scale landscape design project. You will establish a sophisticated dialogue between topography, local, social and political issues, city scale structures, regional objectives and the way that all these impacts the lives of individuals.
You will engage pre-existing, disparate functions in new ways to generate cultural outcomes, agendas and patterns of use.
Please note, syllabus content indicated is provided as a guide. The content of the course may be subject to change in line with our Student Terms and Conditions for example, as required by external professional bodies or to improve the quality of the course.
Each year, we’re privileged to be able to share our graduates’ incredible work with the world. And now’s your chance to take a look.
Visit the online showcase
Please note: The fees listed on this webpage are correct for the stated academic year only, for details of previous years please see the full fee schedules.
At UCA we have a number of scholarships and fee discounts available to assist you with the cost of your studies.
There are lots of ways you can access additional financial support to help you fund your studies - both from UCA and from external sources. Discover what support you might qualify for please see our financial support information.
In addition to the tuition fees there may be other costs for your course. The things that you are likely to need to budget for to get the most out of a creative arts education will include books, printing costs, occasional or optional study trips and/or project materials.
These costs will vary according to the nature of your project work and the individual choices that you make. Please see the Additional Course Costs section of the Course Information Document for more details of the costs you may incur.
There are open plan studio spaces for each year of the course, used for group tutorials and personal working. Facilities for the course include: laser cutters, 3D printers, a virtual reality lab, a 3D workshop with machines for working in wood, metals, plastics and ceramics, and fully-equipped computer studios with Macs and PCs running software for design and animation.
View 360 virtual tourStudios, UCA Canterbury
FabLAB, UCA Canterbury
Digital suites, UCA Canterbury
Virtual Reality lab, UCA Canterbury
Graduates of this course can expect to leave and develop their career in several different roles. These can include:
You may also like to consider further study at postgraduate level.
That’s a big question. Get some answers from people who are studying right here, right now.
"I think that we're very lucky with the facilities; I've had the opportunity to work with many different mediums including clay, wood, laser cutter, and 3D printing. I really like the support network that is created by the university. "
BA (Hons) course - Year 2*
The standard entry requirements* for this course are:
And/or Accreditation of Prior Experiential Learning (APEL)
BA (Hons) course - Year 3*
The standard entry requirements* for this course are:
And/or Accreditation of Prior Experiential Learning (APEL)
In recognition that you may already have a relevant professional qualification, or appropriate working experience in the relevant industries, APEL may be accepted for entry on to the course. This will be based on the partnership articulations and will be assessed on a case by case basis.
Portfolio requirements
For these courses, we’ll need to see your portfolio for review. We’ll invite you to attend an Applicant Day so you can have your portfolio review in person, meet the course team and learn more about your course. Further information will be provided once you have applied. View more portfolio advice
*We occasionally make offers which are lower than the standard entry criteria, to students who have faced difficulties that have affected their performance and who were expected to achieve higher results. We consider the strength of our applicants’ portfolios, as well as their grades - in these cases, a strong portfolio is especially important.
BA (Hons) course Year 2 / Year 3 entry
The entry requirements for these courses will depend on the country your qualifications are from, please contact our International Admissions team to discuss your application: internationaladmissions@uca.ac.uk
Portfolio requirements
You will be required to submit a portfolio for review. Further information on specific portfolio requirements and how to submit your portfolio will be sent to you after we have reviewed your application.
English language requirements
To study at UCA, you'll need to have a certain level of English language skill. And so, to make sure you meet the requirements of your course, we ask for evidence of your English language ability, please check the level of English language required: