Study programme competencies |
Code
|
Study programme competences / results
|
A12 |
Ability to conceive, calculate, design, integrate in buildings and urban units and execute building structures (T) |
A13 |
Ability to conceive, calculate, design, integrate in buildings and urban units and execute interior partition walls, carpentry, stairs and other finished work (T) |
A14 |
Ability to conceive, calculate, design, integrate in buildings and urban units and execute exterior walls and cladding, roofing and other structural work (T) |
A16 |
"Ability to conceive, calculate, design, integrate in buildings and urban units and execute supply systems, water treatment and sewage, heating and air conditioning (T) " |
A17 |
Ability to apply technical and construction standards and regulations |
A18 |
Ability to maintain building structures, foundations and civil works |
A19 |
Ability to maintain the finished work |
A20 |
Ability to assess the construction works |
A21 |
Ability to maintain the structural work |
A22 |
Ability to project building and urban transformers and power supply systems, audiovisual communication, acoustic conditioning and artificial lighting |
A23 |
Ability to maintain systems |
A24 |
"Adequate knowledge of solid mechanics, continuous media and soil, as well as plastic and elastic qualities and strength of materials in heavy construction " |
A27 |
Adequate knowledge of industrialized building systems |
A28 |
Knowledge of the deontological code, professional association and structure and civil liability |
A29 |
Knowledge of administrative, management and professional procedures |
A33 |
Knowledge of real estate management |
A34 |
Ability to design, implement and develop sketches and drafts, concept designs, developed designs and technical designs (T) |
A35 |
Ability to design, implement and develop urban projects (T) |
A36 |
Ability to design, implement and develop construction management (T) |
A37 |
Ability to develop functional programs for buildings and urban spaces (T) |
A40 |
Ability to practise architectural criticism |
A44 |
Ability to develop civil work projects (T) |
A51 |
Adequate knowledge of the methods of studying the social requirements, living conditions, habitability and basic housing programmes |
A52 |
"Adequate knowledge of ecology, sustainability and the principles of conservation of energy and environmental resources. " |
A53 |
Adequate knowledge of the architectural, urban and landscape traditions of Western culture, as well as their technical, climatic, economic, social and ideological foundationsxicos. |
A55 |
Adequate knowledge of the relationship between cultural patterns and social responsibilities of the architect |
A56 |
Adequate knowledge of the foundations of vernacular architecture |
A57 |
Adequate knowledge of urban sociology, theory, economics and history |
A61 |
Knowledge of feasibility analysis and the surveillance and coordination of integrated projects |
A63 |
Development, presentation and public review before a university jury of an original academic work individually elaborated and linked to any of the subjects previously studied |
A64 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Expresión Gráfica Arquitectónica no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
A65 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Matemáticas no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
A67 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Proxectos no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
A69 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Urbanismo no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
A70 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Construción no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
A71 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Instalacións no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
A72 |
Coñecemento avanzado de aspectos específicos da materia de Estruturas no contemplados expresamente na Orde EDU/2075/2010 |
B1 |
Students have demonstrated knowledge and understanding in a field of study that is based on the general secondary education, and is usually at a level which, although it is supported by advanced textbooks, includes some aspects that imply knowledge of the forefront of their field of study |
B2 |
Students can apply their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional way and have competences that can be displayed by means of elaborating and sustaining arguments and solving problems in their field of study |
B3 |
Students have the ability to gather and interpret relevant data (usually within their field of study) to inform judgements that include reflection on relevant social, scientific or ethical issues |
B4 |
Students can communicate information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialist and non-specialist public |
B5 |
Students have developed those learning skills necessary to undertake further studies with a high level of autonomy |
B6 |
Knowing the history and theories of architecture and the arts, technologies and human sciences related to architecture |
B10 |
Knowing the physical problems, various technologies and function of buildings so as to provide them with internal conditions of comfort and protection against the climate factors in the context of sustainable development |
B11 |
"Knowing the industries, organizations, regulations and procedures involved in translating design concepts into buildings and integrating plans into planning " |
B12 |
Understanding the relationship between people and buildings and between these and their environment, and the need to relate buildings and the spaces between them according to the needs and human scale |
C1 |
Adequate oral and written expression in the official languages. |
C3 |
Using ICT in working contexts and lifelong learning. |
C4 |
Exercising an open, educated, critical, committed, democratic and caring citizenship, being able to analyse facts, diagnose problems, formulate and implement solutions based on knowledge and solutions for the common good |
C5 |
Understanding the importance of entrepreneurial culture and the useful means for enterprising people. |
C6 |
Critically evaluate the knowledge, technology and information available to solve the problems they must face |
C7 |
Assuming as professionals and citizens the importance of learning throughout life |
C8 |
Valuing the importance of research, innovation and technological development for the socioeconomic and cultural progress of society. |
Learning aims |
Learning outcomes |
Study programme competences / results |
1. Knowing the political and social rights related with inhabitation: right to the habitat, right to the house and right to the city. |
A28 A33 A34 A37 A51 A53 A55 A56
|
B6 B12
|
C1 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8
|
2. Recognizing the formal and non-formal processes of the construction of habitat from a complex perspective, which includes the analysis of class and gender conflict, the consideration of environmental impact, the understanding of existing tensions between different nations and their political systems and among the actors that take action in the process of habitat construction. |
A28 A29 A33 A55 A56 A57 A64 A65 A67 A69
|
B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B12
|
C1 C3 C4 C5 C6 C8
|
3. Identifying the processes of participation for the social construction of habitat and the architectural and urbanistic tactics associated with them. |
A28 A33 A34 A35 A51 A52 A53 A55 A56 A57
|
B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B12
|
C1 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8
|
4. Developing technical capacities for the implementation of appropriate and appropriable technologies in basic habitat projects. |
A12 A13 A14 A16 A17 A18 A19 A20 A21 A22 A23 A24 A27 A44 A70 A71 A72
|
B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B10 B11 B12
|
C1 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8
|
5. Making visible the links between the different branches of knowledge that act on basic habitat: architecture, engineering, economics, law, politics, anthropology, social sciences, education, health, etc. |
A36 A40 A51 A53 A55 A57 A61 A63
|
B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B12
|
C1 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8
|
Contents |
Topic |
Sub-topic |
1. Presentation of the subject |
Organization, objectives and evaluation.
The place of the subject in the Plan of Studies and the content in the exercise of the professions of the field of architecture. |
2. Presentation of the course |
Explanation of the course's argument: work dynamics, objectives.
Proposal of the first "Case study" as a methodological try. |
3. Conceptualization |
Concepts of basic habitability and basic habitat.
Basic Habitability and Basic Habitat in the world and in history. Recognition of exemplary cases. |
4. Basic Habitability as a process |
Transversal approaches in Basic Habitability: gender, human rights and environment.
Economic strategies of Basic Habitability. |
5. Actors |
a) Architecture professionals: utopians, insurgents and accomplices. Pro bono activity
b) Specialized operators: NGOs and global agencies.
c) People: Citizen participation; from beneficiaries to self-managers. |
6. Architectural tactics |
a) From design: growth, perfectibility, compartibility, versatility.
b) From production: DIY, assisted construction, squatter, cession of use, social housing ...
|
7. Technologies |
a) Comfort and stability of the building.
b) Human health and sustainability.
|
8. Basic Habitat |
a) The non-formal city: morphology, management strategies, construction and use.
b) Global commitments to Basic Habitat: the Chart of Quito and the Habitat Summits. The 2030 agenda, the SDG.
c) The right to the city: from Lefevbre to Harvey.
|
9. Singular habitabilities |
Emergency, right to use, homelessness and squatter |
Planning |
Methodologies / tests |
Competencies / Results |
Teaching hours (in-person & virtual) |
Student’s personal work hours |
Total hours |
Guest lecture / keynote speech |
A27 A37 A40 A51 A57 A64 A65 A67 A69 B2 B3 B6 B11 C4 C6 C7 C8 |
15 |
0 |
15 |
Workshop |
A12 A13 A14 A16 A17 A18 A19 A20 A21 A22 A23 A24 A29 A34 A51 A52 A53 A55 A56 A57 A61 A63 A70 A71 A72 B3 B4 B5 B12 C1 C3 C4 |
41 |
82 |
123 |
Events academic / information |
A40 A51 A55 A56 A57 B6 B12 C1 C4 C6 C7 |
5 |
0 |
5 |
Mixed objective/subjective test |
A17 A18 A28 A29 A33 A35 A36 A40 A44 A51 A52 A53 A55 A56 A57 A63 A70 A71 A72 B1 B2 B3 B4 B6 B10 B12 C1 C3 C4 C5 |
4 |
0 |
4 |
|
Personalized attention |
|
3 |
0 |
3 |
|
(*)The information in the planning table is for guidance only and does not take into account the heterogeneity of the students. |
Methodologies |
Methodologies |
Description |
Guest lecture / keynote speech |
Aimed at the conceptual introduction and providing the information necessary for the development of theoretical-practical exercises. |
Workshop |
Students will apply concepts and methodologies to the proposed cases of study, with support and supervision from the teaching staff.
This includes for each student oral presentation of the practical work carried out, response to control tests of the training process and the production of a final document which explains the analysis made of their respective case study or intervention proposal.
In the direction of what has been practiced in previous years, collaborations will be drawn up with other schools and/or entities, whenever circumstances allow it. This fact can modify the teaching calendar by carrying out trips or activities outside the classrooms, which in any case will be agreed with the enrolled students. |
Events academic / information |
Attendance at activities organized by the center, the UDC, or other knowledge actors, which are recommended by teachers and which involve attendance and/or participation in scientific and/or informative events (congresses, conferences, symposia, courses, seminars, conferences, exhibitions and other types of events) with the aim of deepening the knowledge of study topics related to the subject. |
Mixed objective/subjective test |
It is a theoretical-practical test in which the student must obtain a grade higher than five (5) out of ten (10) points to pass the subject. |
Personalized attention |
Methodologies
|
Mixed objective/subjective test |
Workshop |
|
Description |
The evaluation is a continuous process in which the activity that the student develops during the sessions of the course is observed and registered. Periodically -and, in any case, whenever the students so require- they are informed of the adequacy of the level reached by their activities in relation to the programmatic objectives of the subject.
At all times during the course, the faculty will provide the students with complementary and individual support, at a known time.
The final evaluation will be carried out by the faculty on the final work produced by the student, verifying the acquisition of the personal analysis skills, the skills to communicate their ideas and the acquisition of the theoretical and practical contents of the subject. |
|
Assessment |
Methodologies
|
Competencies / Results |
Description
|
Qualification
|
Mixed objective/subjective test |
A17 A18 A28 A29 A33 A35 A36 A40 A44 A51 A52 A53 A55 A56 A57 A63 A70 A71 A72 B1 B2 B3 B4 B6 B10 B12 C1 C3 C4 C5 |
It is a session in which the students convened for it will demonstrate the acquisition of the skills and knowledge of the subject through a theoretical-practical test. |
34 |
Workshop |
A12 A13 A14 A16 A17 A18 A19 A20 A21 A22 A23 A24 A29 A34 A51 A52 A53 A55 A56 A57 A61 A63 A70 A71 A72 B3 B4 B5 B12 C1 C3 C4 |
The objective of the subject is to train students in the analysis and practical work on cases related to Basic Habitability.
All this is formalized in an original and unpublished theoretical-practical work, which must be carried out throughout the teaching period, matching the theoretical knowledge taught by the teaching staff.
It will result in a final document, made with scientific methodology that will be manifested with the communication strategies of architecture professionals.
The performance of the theoretical-practical work includes the management of the necessary information for its execution and its exhibition and defense in the work sessions of the course. |
66 |
|
Assessment comments |
Minimum assistance Attendance is compulsory to, at least, 80% of the sessions that make up the course. Without this requirement, students will not be able to pass the subject by course. Students with recognition of part-time dedication and academic exemption from attendance, as established in "NORMA QUE REGULA O RÉXIME DE DEDICACIÓN AO ESTUDO DOS ESTUDANTES DE GRAO NA UDC" (Arts. 2.3; 3.b e 4.5) (29/5/212), must attend to not less than 50% of sessions. Regarding the activities that arise, related to the work in the workshop, and that involve some modification of the calendar or school schedule, they will be voluntary and an alternative will always be offered within the stipulated hours of compulsory attendance. Late registration Those enrolled after the start of the academic year must attend the theoretical and practical lessons from the date of enrolment, with the possibility of recovering the practices carried out to date. Assessment To pass the subject, students will have two opportunities: June and July. At the first opportunity, students will be evaluated upon the outcomes content on theirsupervised work. Failure to submit the supervised work at the time of the first evaluation opportunity implies a "Not Submitted" mark. Those who do not pass this first opportunity will be able to attend a second one, which will consist of an objective theoretical-practical test in July, according to the official calendar. In order to attend this second opportunity, students must submit their work, duly supervised by the faculty at the time of the test. Dedication measures for part-time students: they are not contemplated, because it is a matter in which the workshop is the fundamental methodology. Academic waiver: it is not contemplated, as it is a subject in which the workshop is the fundamental methodology. The detection of plagiarism, as well as the fraudulent performance of tests or evaluation activities, once verified, will directly imply the grade of failing "0" in the subject in the corresponding call, thus invalidating any grade obtained in all evaluation activities. ahead of the extraordinary call.
|
Sources of information |
Basic
|
VV.AA. (2018). Aportaciones feministas a las arquitecturas y las ciudades para un cambio de paradigma. Número monográfico da revista Hábitat y Sociedad, n. 11. 2018. Universidad de Sevilla
Montaner, J.M. e Muxi, Z (2011). Arquitectura y política. Ensayos para mundos alternativos. Barcelona: Editorial Gustavo Gili
Morales Soler, Eva (2012). Casa Más o Menos. Blog en torno á vivenda e o hábitat entendidos como proceso
Harvey, D. (2013). Ciudades Rebeldes. Del derecho a la ciudad a la revolución urbana. Madrid: Akal
Lacol (2018). Construir en colectivo. Participación en arquitectura y urbanismo. Barcelona: Pol·len edicions
Lefevbre, H (1973). El derecho a la ciudad. Barcelona: Península
Colavidas Espinosa, F., Salas Serrano, J. e Oteiza San José, I. (2006). Hacia una manualística universal de habitabilidad básica . Madrid: Mairea Libros
Hall, P (1996). La Ciudad de la Difícil Equidad en: Las Ciudades del Mañana. Historia del Urbanismo en el Siglo XX. Barcelona: Ediciones del Serbal
Turner, J. e Fitcher, R (1976). Libertad para construir: el proceso habitacional controlado por el usuario. Madrid: Siglo XXI Ediciones
Naciones Unidas (s.d.). Programa das Nacións Unidas para os Asentamentos Humanos. Repositorio institucional de UN Habitat
Lizancos e Ergosfera (2012). Una investigación universitaria, análisis comparativo de las máquinas arquitectónicas de vivienda para contextos de crisis de habitabilidad. A Coruña: Universidade da Coruña
Col·lectiu Punt6 (2019). Urbanismo feminista. Barcelona: Virus editorial |
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Complementary
|
Proyecto Esfera (2011). Carta Humanitaria y normas mínimas para la respuesta humanitaria. Proyecto Esfera
Montaner, Josep M. (2014). Del diagrama a las experiencias, hacia una arquitectura de la acción.. Barcelona: Editorial Gustavo Gili
Calo, E. (dir.), Rufer, H.C., Lizancos, P. (dir.), Lloyd, S. (dir.) (2018). Empty Coruña?: reimagining the city through agency, objects and processes: summer school. A Coruña: Universidade da Coruña
Lacol y La Ciutat Invisible (2018). Habitar en comunidad. La vivienda cooperativa en cesión de uso. Madrid: Catarata
Lizancos, P. (2017). La casa autogestionada: análisis de la estrategia del emigrado gallego para proveerse de hogar.. Revista Internacional de Estudios Migratorios, Vol. 7, Nº. 2, págs. 339-369. Universidad de Almería |
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Recommendations |
Subjects that it is recommended to have taken before |
|
Subjects that are recommended to be taken simultaneously |
Landscape and Sustainable Habitat/630G02056 |
|
Subjects that continue the syllabus |
Final Degree Work/630G02059 |
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