Master of Urban and Regional Planning / Urban Design

The M.U.R.P./M.U.D. Dual Degree is a student-initiated dual degree in the programs of Architecture and Urban and Regional Planning. Spanning traditional disciplinary boundaries, the degree fosters experimental design and planning approaches in the study of contemporary urban phenomena. During their studies, students gain a broad range of skills, and courses integrate real estate and public finance, urban governance, design culture, environmental stewardship, and the humanities. Building on those areas of inquiry, the design studio sequence curates the development of analytical, projective and speculative design work addressing complex urban dynamics, globally.

The M.U.R.P. / M.U.D. Dual Degree combines the two-year/48-credit-hour M.U.R.P. professional degree with the three semester /45-credit-hour M.U.D. post-professional degree. The resulting 5-term program of study includes 78 credits, with 15 double-counted credit hours. Graduates with the dual degree are highly qualified professionals who pursue careers in academia, at a wide range of private and public agencies and in non-profit organizations.

Course of Study

Students admitted to the combined program are required to complete the first-year courses in the M.U.R.P. degree program first, and then begin the M.U.D. program during the fall of the second academic year. Students may apply for admission to both the M.U.R.P. and M.U.D. programs simultaneously, or apply to the M.U.D. program while in residence during the first year of the M.U.R.P.

Degree Requirements

The dual M.U.R.P. / M.U.D. degree requires the completion of a minimum of 78 credit hours. Specifically, a student must complete:

  • A minimum of 30 credit hours of URP courses (courses with course titles starting with “URP”).
  • Required specific core urban planning courses, including introduction to statistics (unless waived), public economics for planning (unless waived), planning history and theory, planning institutions and law, planning methods, fundamentals of planning practice, spatial thinking and environmental systems, and fiscal planning and management.
  • A minimum of 27 credit hours of urban design UD courses (courses with course titles starting with “UD”).
  • Sufficient urban design courses to satisfy the other distributional requirements for the M.U.D. program of study: a 3-credit-hour elective on Sustainability Landscape or Ecology, and a 3-credit-hour elective on Law, Policy, and Institutions.

A total of 15 credit hours may be double-counted toward the two degrees and students must earn a cumulative GPA of “B” in each unit. The courses are:

URP 500Planning History and Theory(3 credits)
URP 502/503Planning Institutions and Law (US or Comparative)(3 credits)
URP 510Physical Planning and Management(3 credits)
URP 603/UD 722Capstone or Studio II(6 credits)

Sample Course Sequence

The following sequence presents a sample or representative array of courses that would satisfy the dual degree program of study. Applicants interested in undertaking the dual degree program of study should confer with the directors of the MURP and MUD program degrees to discuss course options. Once enrolled in the dual degree program of study, the student is responsible for ensuring that all degree requirements have been met and should confer with academic advisors regularly during his/her studies accordingly.

Year 1 Graduate Study

Fall TermCredit Hours
URP 500Planning History and Theory (for UD 713)3
URP 509Public Economics for Planning (unless waived) or elective2 or 3
URPElective(s)3-6
Elective3
URP 600Expanded Horizons (Optional)1
Total12-16
Winter TermCredit Hours
URP 502/503Planning Institutions and Law (US or Comparative)3
URP 506Planning Methods3
URP 507Fundamentals of Planning Practice3
URP 550Representation and Communications for Planners (if not design)4
URPElective3
Total16

Year 2 Graduate Study

Fall TermCredit Hours
UD 712Studio I6
URP or UDElective3
UD 714Representation3
URP 510Fiscal Planning and Management (for UD 716)3
Total15
Winter TermCredit Hours
URP 603/UD 722Capstone or Studio II6
URPElective3
UD 715Theories and Methods of Urban Design3
URPElective3
Total15

Year 3 Graduate Study

Fall TermCredit Hours
UD 732Studio III6
UD 717The City and Urban Design: History, Movements, Policies and Outcomes3
*Elective(s)Number of elective hours depends on credit hour need6-9
Total15-18

Admission Requirements

Students must file separate applications to and be admitted by both programs. An application fee must accompany each application. Each program will apply its own standards in making admission decisions. Applicants may apply to both the M.U.R.P. and M.U.D. programs simultaneously, or they may apply first to the M.U.R.P. program and then, if admitted, apply to the M.U.D. program during their first year of M.U.R.P. graduate study.

Note that admission to the M.U.D. degree program requires submission of a portfolio, which is not required for the M.U.R.P. degree. M.U.R.P. applicants are encouraged to work on their design portfolio during their first year of study in the M.U.R.P. program of study. Applicants interested in this option should confer with academic advisors in the M.U.D. degree to explore this option in a timely manner.

Contact

Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning
Urban and Regional Planning Admissions
University of Michigan
2000 Bonisteel Blvd. Room 2330/2332
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2069
Phone: (734) 763-1275
Email: taubmancollegeadmissions@umich.edu

Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning
Urban Design Admission
University of Michigan
2000 Bonisteel Blvd. Room 2150
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029
Email: taubmanstudentservices@umich.edu