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29.04.25 - Innovative Design Research Internship Program (DRIP) entering its fourth season

In the summer of 2021, when pandemic restrictions had most people working and studying remotely, Professor Pina Petricone began experimenting with a new model of experiential learning, putting together an intensive internship for 12 undergraduate students that departed from the traditional internship model.

Taking full advantage of the multidisciplinary nature of the Faculty’s BAAS program, her format replaced the usual pursuit of “practical experience” in a design office with one that encouraged students to contribute to and advance design research initiatives in everyday practice. 

One year later, this pilot course led to the official launch of the Design Research Internship Program (DRIP) in May of 2022, when Petricone invited 13 partnering practitioners to select one or two interns to undertake a defined design-research project over six weeks. 

Last summer, the program saw its biggest cohort to date, with some 30 internships offered by a host of top Canadian design firms. 

As DRIP 2025, which was available to all undergraduate Architectural Studies and Visual Studies students who had completed one credit of ARC courses at the 300 level, prepares to kick off, Petricone reflected on the first three years of the unique initiative, including the recipe for DRIP’s rapid success and also what comes next.

You have often talked about how the unique shape of DRIP is only possible within the rigorous context of Daniels’ BA in Architectural Studies program. What sets the Faculty’s DRIP program apart from other internships?

Unique across Canada, the pedagogical positioning of our BAAS program, which is firmly rooted in the liberal arts milieu, is what allows DRIP to define models of design research that advance lessons from design studios and course work into multivalent and sometimes interdisciplinary design research problems. 

Combined with the opportunity afforded by the concentration of some of the country’s most recognized design practitioners at the University of Toronto’s doorstep, DRIP finds itself in a new category within the long history of design internships. 

As an academic internship, DRIP moves freely beyond the mandate of “practical experience” or “readiness for the profession” of most architecture internships. At once unburdened by pre-professional obligations, DRIP exposes Daniels undergraduate students to architectural design as a form of research and in turn exposes the rich community of professional design practitioners to the unique talents of our students.

Left: ERA Architects DRIP intern Thea Freer analyzed and documented the historical, present-day and future attributes of Allan Gardens in Toronto. Middle: WZMH DRIP intern Alyssa Tao created a resource for the firm’s approach to building with timber. Right: Denegri Bessai DRIP intern Kaede Sato developed model-making techniques that tested spatial arrangements in ongoing residential projects.

DRIP understands that design research is an integral part of professional practice. Student interns tap into this activity and contribute to advancing applied research projects defined by their host firms. What range of research and findings have emerged in these first years of DRIP delivery?

It has been super-interesting to trace the patterns of research projects undertaken by DRIP interns in these first three years. Each internship relies on a practitioner-defined design-research project, born from exigencies of firm-specific past, present and/or future professional projects. The list of partnering firms is curated for diversity of practice models and value-driven enterprise, and no two projects are alike.

Both prospective interns and partnering practitioners declare their DRIP areas of practice, such as Urbanism, Landscape, Building Tectonics, Building Details, Public Space, Infrastructure, Digital Fabrication, Heritage, Energy Performance, Interdisciplinary, Housing, Public Policy, Community Engagement, Exhibition, Publication, etc., as well as their DRIP research methods, such as Conceptual Drawing, Mapping, Model Making, Technical Drawing, Archival Research, Historical Research, Photo Documentation, Rendering, Computation, Diagramming, Fieldwork or Spatial Analysis.

Common areas of focus, however, still lead to a wide range of research questions and outcomes.

Using various research methods in a number of practice areas, some of the prevalent design research that has emerged in DRIP’s first three years includes Typological Diagramming, Archival Documentation, Envelope Performance, Site Analysis, Critical Cataloguing, Proof of Concept by Modeling, Historical Tracing, Iterative Tracing by Rendering and Testing Tools such as comparing AI Platforms to advance digital practices in the design and documentation phases.

Left: Hariri Pontarini Architects DRIP intern Luca Patrick created a comparative archive that explores the unifying function of the exploded axonometric across several building types. Middle: ERA Architects DRIP intern Camilla Hoang traced lost heritage of seven 19th-century Black churches in Toronto via an interactive site model. Right: ZAS Architects DRIP intern John Wu created a catalogue of effective learning spaces for the firm’s innovative educational projects.  

Your ambitions to evolve and refine DRIP as a far-reaching experiential learning model are already underway. Now that it’s entering its fourth year, what do you imagine for DRIP’s future?

I believe one of the greatest assets of DRIP is how the program embraces the opportunity to educate senior BAAS students not only with academic and technical skills but also with an understanding of the broader societal impact of their work. Our students and partnering practitioners are passionate about doing meaningful work and we are making strides to build-in a diversity of practice best matched with a diversity of students in all streams of our undergraduate program.

A big part of this is slowly but surely increase engagement of interdisciplinary design practitioners and active agencies to partner with us and expand our roster to in turn invite their own collaborators to inform not only the DRIP experience but also the research project. Critical to this growth is directed feedback each year from both students and partnering practitioners, which has proved invaluable to the development of DRIP as a more far-reaching program and we’re working on two specific fronts. 

We are now exploring DRIP grouped initiatives where the strengths and interests of graduating students are assembled to work with a partnering practitioner that invites a collaborator(s) to amplify the six-week project. This is a great opportunity for out-of-province or out-of-country practitioners to engage in DRIP without the impairing logistics of students having to travel. 

At the same time, we are investigating how we might engage international partnering practitioners via our international (and national) students that might be already relocating for the summer. I’m excited by the possibilities!

This year’s DRIP begins on May 5 and runs until June 16.

Banner image: Collage of work produced by DRIP students during each of the program’s first three years. 

Homepage image: Collage of DRIP pilot work led by Pina Petricone at her design practice, Giannone Petricone Architects, with 12 BAAS students in 2021.

19.03.25 - Daniels Faculty April 2025 Reviews (April 8-30)

Tuesday, April 8 – Wednesday, April 30
Daniels Building
1 Spadina Crescent

Whether you're a future student, an alum or a member of the public with an interest in architecture, landscape architecture or urban design—you're invited to join the Daniels Faculty for Winter 2025 Reviews taking place April 9-30.  

Throughout the month, students from across our graduate and undergraduate programs will present final projects to their instructors and guest critics from academia and the professional community. 

All reviews will take place in the Daniels Building at 1 Spadina Crescent from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (unless otherwise stated). Follow @uoftdaniels on social media for updates and join the conversation using the hashtags #danielsreviews and #danielsreviews25. 

Please note that times and dates are subject to change. 


Tuesday, April 8 | Undergraduate 

Design + Engineering I (ARC112) 
Instructors: Jennifer Davis (Coordinator), Natalia Semenova, Mohammed Soroor 
Room: 200 

Wednesday, April 9 | Undergraduate 

9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 
Drawing and Representation II (ARC200) 
Instructors: Michael Piper (Coordinator), Samantha Eby, Aziza Chaouni 
Room: Main Hall (170A, 170B) 

Design Studio I (JAV101) 
Instructors: Jeffrey Garcia (Coordinator), Phat Le, Francesco Valente-Gorjup, Mahsa Malek, Marcin Kedzior, Youssef el Helou, Scott Sorli, Mariano Martellacci, Harry Wei, Onah Jung, Danielle Whitley, Kara Verbeek 
Rooms: 215, 230, 240, 330, 340, PM: Main Hall (170A, 170B) 

Thursday, April 10 | Graduate 

Landscape Design Studio 2 (LAN1012) 
Instructors: Liat Margolis (Coordinator), Terence Radford, Agata Mrozowski 
Rooms: 230, 330 

Urban Design Studio 2 (URD1012) 
Instructors: Carol Moukheiber, Kanwal Aftab 
Room: Main Hall (170B) 

Friday, April 11 | Undergraduate and Graduate 

9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 
Design Studio II (ARC201) 
Instructors: Fiona Lim Tung (Coordinator), Anne Ma, Katy Chey, Maria Denegri, David Verbeek, Daniel Briker, Jennifer Kudlats, Lara Hassani, Kara Verbeek, Francesco Martire 
Room: Main Hall (170A, 170B, 170C), 215, 230, 240, 242, 315, 340 

Landscape Design Studio 4 (LAN2014) 
Instructors: Robert Wright (Coordinator), Todd Douglas 
Room: 330 


Monday, April 14 | Graduate 

Design Studio 2 (ARC1012) 
Instructors: Behnaz Assadi (Coordinator), Fiona Lim Tung, John Shnier, Mauricio Quiros Pacheco, Vivian Lee, Francesco Martire
Room: Main Hall (170A, 170B, 170C), 230, 330 

Tuesday, April 15 | Graduate 

MLA Design Studio Thesis (LAN3017) 
Advisors: Elise Shelley (Coordinator), Fadi Masoud, Alissa North, Peter North, Liat Margolis, Francesco Martire, Robert Wright 
Room: 209, 215, 230, 240, 242, 330 

Wednesday, April 16 | Graduate 

MLA Design Studio Thesis (LAN3017) 
Advisors: Elise Shelley (Coordinator), Fadi Masoud, Alissa North, Peter North, Liat Margolis, Francesco Martire, Robert Wright 
Room: 209, 215, 230, 240, 242, 330 

MUD Urban Design Studio Thesis (URD2015) 
Advisors: Mason White (Coordinator), Michael Piper, Zahra Ebrahim 
Room: Main Hall (170A, 170B) 

Thursday, April 17 | Undergraduate and Graduate 

9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. 
Post-Professional Thesis (ALA4022) 
Advisors: Mason White (Coordinator), Christos Marcopolous, Carol Moukheiber, Miles Gertler, Noheir Elgendy 
Room: 209, 242, Second-Floor Hallway 

10:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. 
Comprehensive Studio III (ARC369) 
Instructors: Daniel Briker (Coordinator), Mauricio Quiros-Pachecho, Fiona Lim Tung 
Room: 230, 330 

9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 
Landscape Architecture Studio IV (ARC364) 
Instructor: Peter North 
Room: 240 


Monday, April 21 | Graduate 

Architectural Design Studio 4 (ARC2014) 
Instructors: Sam Dufaux (Coordinator), Brigitte Shim, Jon Cummings, Daniel Chung 
Room: Main Hall (170A, 170B), 230, 330 

Tuesday, April 22 | Graduate 

Architectural Design Studio 4 (ARC2014) 
Instructors: Sam Dufaux (Coordinator), James Macgillivray, Maria Denegri, Christopher Cornecelli 
Room: Main Hall (170A, 170B), 230 

Wednesday, April 23 | Undergraduate 

Architecture Studio IV (ARC362) 
Instructors: Shane Williamson (Coordinator), Chloe Town, Mariana Leguia Alegria  
Room: Main Hall (170B), 230, 330 

Thursday, April 24 | Undergraduate 

9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 
Design and Community-Engagement Capstone Project (ARC490) 
Instructor: Michael Piper 
Room: Main Hall (170C)  

Architecture Studio IV (ARC381) 
Instructors: Paul Howard Harrison, Suzan Ibrahim 
Room: 230 

Undergraduate Thesis 

  • Senior Seminar in History and Theory (Thesis) (ARC457) 
    Instructor: Simon Rabyniuk 
    Room: Main Hall (170A) 
     

  • Senior Seminar in Design (Thesis) (ARC462) 
    Instructor: Jeannie Kim  
    Room: Main Hall (170B/C) 
     

  • Senior Seminar in Technology (Thesis) (ARC487) 
    Instructor: Nicholas Hoban  
    Room: 330 

Friday, April 25 | Undergraduate 

Undergraduate Thesis 

  • Senior Seminar in History and Theory (Thesis) (ARC457) 
    Instructor: Simon Rabyniuk 
    Room: Main Hall (170A) 
     

  • Senior Seminar in Design (Thesis) (ARC462) 
    Instructor: Jeannie Kim  
    Room: AM: 230, Main Hall (170B/170C)
     

  • Senior Seminar in Technology (Thesis) (ARC487) 
    Instructor: Nicholas Hoban  
    Room: 330 


Monday, April 28 | Graduate 

MARC Thesis – Architectural Design Studio (ARC3021) 

Tuesday, April 29 | Graduate 

MARC Thesis – Architectural Design Studio (ARC3021) 

Wednesday, April 30 | Undergraduate 

10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 
Advanced Topics in Architecture: Tools for Close Observation (ARC465)
Instructor: Zac Mollica 
Room: 230 

2:00-6:00 p.m. 
Advanced Topics in the Technology of Architecture: Attributes of Aliveness: Human-Computer Interaction in Design (ARC480)
Instructor: Humbi Song 
Room: 209, 230, 242

SAB2

13.03.25 - Prize recipients break bread with donors at Faculty’s annual Student Awards Breakfast

Students, donors, faculty and staff came together at the Faculty Club recently for the yearly breakfast gathering celebrating student award recipients and those who support them.

This year’s Student Awards Breakfast took place in the main room of the Club on the morning of February 26. 

A total of 216 students from across the Faculty’s disciplines were supported through 41 awards in 2024/25. Many were in attendance at the breakfast last month.

“In hosting this event today, we are very pleased to be bringing together our faculty, our many generous donors and our talented award recipients, the latter having distinguished themselves academically and as student leaders,” said Acting Dean Robert Levit, who introduced the proceedings.

“At the University of Toronto,” he continued, “awards have been a part of academic life for nearly 200 years, contributing immeasurably to U of T’s achievements and to its global reach. Today, as the funding of post-secondary institutions by government continues to decline, the support by donors of endowed scholarships, awards, prizes and bursaries at universities is crucial.”

Among the new awards singled out by Dean Levit (pictured below) was the Nelda Rodger Indigenous Student Award in Architecture and Design, a renewable award that provides financial support to full-time Canadian students of First Nations, Inuit and Métis heritage in the Faculty’s Architectural Studies program.

This award, he noted, is the first of its kind devoted to the study of architecture at U of T. 

Matthew Arnott, a third-year Master of Landscape Architecture student, was one of two award winners to address the breakfast gathering. The recipient of this year’s Claude Cormier Award in Landscape Architecture, he expressed how much the award, which was established by the acclaimed landscape architect and alumnus before he passed away in 2023, meant to him personally.

“Claude, being queer, Canadian and unapologetic in his design approach, has long served as a source of personal inspiration, blazing a trail for so many young designers like myself that previously did not exist,” Arnott said.

“To Claude and the folks at CCxA [Cormier’s Montreal-based practice], I’d like to express great thanks for establishing an award that makes graduate education so much more accessible and, more broadly, for their celebration of creativity, whimsy and humour in their approach to design.”

Olivia Carson, a student in the Bachelor of Arts in Architectural Studies program, also addressed the breakfast. She is a recipient of a John and Myrna Daniels Foundation Opportunity Award.

“I have been fortunate to have my family, peers and professors as my greatest supporters and inspirations,” Carson said. “But even with that support, there are moments when external recognition is needed—a reminder that what we are doing [as students] matters.”

“These awards,” she continued, “do just that; they nurture curiosity, fuel ambition and enable students to embrace learning as more than just an academic pursuit, but as a lifelong endeavour. Their support reminds us that education is not just about meeting requirements but [also] about exploration, creativity and growth. I would like to express my gratitude to the John and Myrna Daniels Foundation for the award I have been granted and for their generous contributions to the Daniels Faculty.”

In concluding the event, Dean Levit thanked both Carson and Arnott for sharing their experiences.

“You have painted a touching picture of the importance of recognition by others,” he said, “and of the impact of the kind of financial support shared by all of the award recipients who have joined us this morning.”

As of this year, the Daniels Faculty administers more than 125 donor-supported funds, a large proportion of which are devoted to student aid and recognition.

All photos by Richard Ashman

07.03.25 - From South Africa to Toronto: Onu Okoli’s journey as an international architecture student

At the start of the 2023-24 school year, Onu Okoli boarded a flight from her home in South Africa, her life packed into several suitcases, ready to begin her studies in Toronto. We get a firsthand view of Okoli’s journey in the 22-minute documentary International Students: First 48 Hours in Canada. Now in her second year of the Bachelor of Arts in Architectural Studies (BAAS) program at the Daniels Faculty, Okoli reflects on her experiences as an international student at the University of Toronto, offering valuable insights for others considering a similar path. 

From grappling with the decision to pursue architecture to settling into residence and immersing herself in the vibrant culture of Toronto, Okoli shares her perspective on life as a student in one of the world’s most diverse and exciting cities.

To go back to the beginning: What influenced your decision to study at the University of Toronto? Was architecture always the subject that you wanted to pursue?

I honestly was not certain about what I wanted to study, and struggled a lot to make the decision as I was finishing high school. It always seemed like a far away idea that I had played around with in thought, but then suddenly I was confronted with the need to make a decision when university applications started opening up. I think I always knew deep down inside I wanted to pursue architecture, I just kept ignoring and avoiding it because I didn't know much about architecture at all. I had never even met an architect in person and thought it was an unrealistic desire. Eventually, after many hours spent on aptitude tests, and long, hard conversations with those close to me, I dove head first into my pursuit of becoming an architect.

I grew up in South Africa but was always very interested in studying abroad and experiencing life in another country while completing my studies. Eventually, along my long and wide search through hundreds of universities, I came across University of Toronto's Architectural Studies program at Daniels and really liked the idea of studying in the center of a city as bustling as Toronto and a school as notable as the University of Toronto. I did not expect to get in whatsoever but still submitted my portfolio by compiling my best works and was lucky enough to be afforded this opportunity. 

In the documentary International Students: First 48 Hours in Canada, you shared your journey to Canada from South Africa (including the airline losing your luggage!) After filming stopped, how did you find settling into your new home on campus? 

Settling into residence was surprisingly one of the most exciting parts of my journey. Living in residence, surrounded by other first-year students who were often new to the city or even the country, gave me the chance to explore the city with others and slowly learn our way around. The first few weeks in residence were filled with excitement, and I had the opportunity to make new friends and try new things. 

Being so close to campus made life much more convenient, especially as an architecture student, traveling back and forth with huge rolls of paper and models. Residence life has definitely been a big part of my journey here—so much so that I’m now working as a Don, which is pretty funny considering where I started.

What are your top tips for future international students thinking of attending U of T or the Daniels Faculty in the fall? Was there one thing in particular that prepared you the most before you left home?

I think you just have to dive into the process head first. No matter how many “days in my life as a U of T” student videos I watched or how many notebooks and drawing materials I packed, nothing can really prepare you for an experience as new as university life. 

I think it takes some adjusting, especially coming from a different country, but it's important to remind yourself that you were admitted into the school for a reason. The University of Toronto receives over 150,000 applications each year, meaning that someone clearly thought you were capable of and highly deserving of the chance to be here. Trust in yourself and try your best! Everything will eventually end up just fine. 

Now that you’ve made it through your first year in the BAAS program here at Daniels (and first semester of second year), what has been your favourite course so far? 

ARC200 Drawing and Representation II was definitely one of my favourite courses so far. We had the opportunity to choose a study street anywhere in Toronto and complete a set of studies on it, culminating in us providing a proposal for the site. Me and my partner chose a portion of Danforth under the Greektown BIA. I've now visited that area a dozen times and could probably map it from memory but the experience of being there, talking to locals and even eating amazing Greek food on the street patio will stay with me forever.

This project gave me the opportunity to explore a new side of the city in extreme depth. Lectures were very enjoyable because it taught me a lot about Toronto as a city and how it developed along with its main streets. My instructor, Reza Nik, was extremely encouraging, making the course enjoyable every step of the way,  and I am proud of the work we produced in the end.

Project drawings by Okoli for ARC200 Drawing and Representation II.

What's the most surprising thing you’ve learned? 

I think the most surprising thing I’ve learned is just how diverse Toronto is. Coming from South Africa, I didn’t expect such a mix of cultures, and it’s been pretty cool to see how much I can learn from meeting people from all over.

What are you excited about as you look ahead to summer and your third year on campus? 

I look forward most to the weather warming up again! It's definitely still going to take a long while for me to get used to the cold and the snow. I'm really excited for the summer to recharge and explore more of Toronto. As for third year, I’m looking forward to having a more tailored academic experience with streams being introduced. It will be interesting to see how things develop. I’m also excited to continue meeting new people and simply gaining more life experiences.

It feels like every year brings something new and challenging, and I can’t wait to see what this next one holds!

summer 2025

21.02.25 - On offer in Summer 2025: Studies Abroad, Internships and Design Build opportunities

Whether you want to explore Berlin through film, design an agrarian prototype in Costa Rica, get hands-on experience with AI tools and robotic fabrication or intern at one of Toronto's top design firms, there is plenty for Daniels Faculty students to choose from this summer. 

Watch the Summer 2025 Info Sessions on YouTube and read the full Course Descriptions to learn more. 

Interested current students must submit the online application form by 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, February 26.

Studies Abroad

Learn more about the Faculty’s two global studios this summer:

Berlin, a City in Film
Instructor: Peter Sealy

Costa Rica: No Artificial Ingredients
Instructor: Mauricio Quirós Pacheco

These courses are available to undergraduate Architectural Studies and Visual Studies students in all streams who have completed 1.0 credit of ARC courses at the 200-level before Summer 2025 (including fourth-year students graduating this June). MARC, MLA and MUD students are also invited to apply. 

Design Build

Design Build offers a hands-on approach to course material:

Robot Made
Instructors: Nicholas Steven Hoban, Aryan Rezaei Rad (U of T Engineering), AnnaLisa Meyboom (UBC SALA)

social/technological
Instructor: Humbi Song

These courses are available to undergraduate Architectural Studies students in all streams who have completed ARC200H1 and ARC201H1 before Summer 2025 (including fourth-year students graduating this June). MARC, MLA and MUD students are also invited to apply. 

Design Research Internship Program (DRIP)

The Design Research Internship Program places third- and fourth-year Architectural Studies students with leading Toronto design practices for a period of six weeks during the May-June summer period. Check out @drip_daniels.uoft for testimonials and examples of student work.

Larger image of Scaffold* Journal Volume 1

29.11.24 - First print volume of Scaffold* Journal is out

Volume 1 of Scaffold* Journal, created and published by the student-run SHIFT* Collective, has been released. 

It’s the first print edition of the rebooted publication, which evolved out Shift Magazine, a previous Daniels publication.

Shift Magazine, an undergraduate risograph journal, was released nine times between 2014 and 2019. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic shut down all Shift operations until 2022, when they were revived by the members of the SHIFT* Collective. 

Since 2022, the collective has published four additional risograph zines while planning the reimagined Scaffold* Journal. Its members consist of students from across all years and programs within the Daniels undergraduate cohort.

“Our current team created Scaffold* in response to a gap that we had perceived in access to research within our academic context,” says the collective. “All of the research we had seen was perfect, it was pedestaled, and we wanted to provide a clearer path through which students could pitch themselves into the pits of scholarship.” 

Their goal with the new publication, team members add, was “a process-oriented research journal platforming the work of emerging scholars in disciplines of the built environment.” To that end, the editing team met “prolifically” with student contributors and faculty advisers “to understand their practices and our responsibility in representing them.”

Volume 1 of the journal, whose contributions include students and faculty members across programs, contains “a multitude of disparate perspectives that all fall under the constructed-environment umbrella.” According to its creators, the edition explores methodologies ranging from collage and board gaming to junk appropriation and speculative fabulation.

Scaffold* only attempts to represent the diversity of work that goes on within disciplines of architecture, art and the built environment. Ultimately, it is a testimony to what we, as a community within the Daniels Faculty and beyond, have learned and continue to learn from each other.”

With the first print edition of Scaffold* now complete, the SHIFT* Collective is already at work on Volume 2, submissions for which “will open soon.”

Print copies of Volume 1 are currently available for purchase at Cafe 059 in the Daniels Building at 1 Spadina Crescent. A digital version can also be accessed at theshiftcollective.net.

Above: Contributors and faculty recently joined members of the SHIFT* Collective to mark the launch of Scaffold* Journal’s first print edition. Scaffold* is a new iteration of Shift Magazine, a previous Daniels publication.

hart house talking walls exhibition curated by angel levac

06.11.24 - BAVS student Angel Levac (Brant) curates Hart House exhibition on Indigenous climate action

Angel Levac (Brant), a first-year student in the Faculty’s Bachelor of Arts in Visual Studies (BAVS) program, has been featured on the Hart House website in relation the Talking Walls exhibition she has curated. Called United Goals: Empowering Climate Justice and Indigenous Ways of Knowing, it’s currently on view at 7 Hart House Circle until February 28, 2025.

Talking Walls provides a venue for socially conscious, thought-provoking artwork, which Levac’s exhibition—a celebration of Indigenous youth standing at the forefront of the fight against land and resource exploitation as well as climate change—highlights through myriad images.

Born to the Opaskwayak Cree Nation and adopted by Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte, Levac has been working with Indigenous artists to create a zine that shares the experiences of Indigenous youth through artistic expression. The publication also discusses divestment in relation to land, rights, sovereignty and climate action.

Levac hopes that the United Goals exhibition will raise awareness of and spur young Indigenous people and U of T students to get involved in climate action.  

“Being an ally and an advocate for Indigenous youth really does set a standard for the future in terms of mutual support,” Levac says in the Hart House interview. “I’m looking forward to having Indigenous youth present and seeing themselves as part of the school, the community and the city. It’s going to be a beautiful experience.”

Read the full interview by Megan Wykes on the Hart House blog and visit the Talking Walls show on the first floor of Hart House.

Peter Sealy portrait

30.09.24 - New BAAS director Peter Sealy aims to strengthen program’s four streams, broaden teaching formats

As the new director of the Daniels Faculty’s Bachelor of Arts in Architectural Studies (BAAS) program, Assistant Professor Peter Sealy has to take both a day-to-day and a long-term approach to his duties, he says.

“The BAAS program is the Daniels Faculty’s largest, and it takes an immense amount of behind-the-scenes work from many different faculty and staff members to make it run as smoothly as possible,” he notes. “Making sure it does is my first priority.”

At the same time, “the BAAS program’s curriculum dates from the late 2010s. I think now is a good moment to consider what’s working, what needs minor adjustments, and what should be rethought. In particular, I want to make sure that each of the program’s four ‘streams’ is offering its students a wide range of opportunities. This year’s new studio course for comprehensive stream students (ARC 369) is a great beginning.”

Although the 2024/2025 academic year has just begun, Sealy has been thinking about such matters since July 1, when he took over as BAAS director from Petros Babasikas, Assistant Professor, Teaching Stream. Babasikas had directed the BAAS program from July of 2021 to July of this year. Until December of 2023Sealy served as Interim Director of the PhD in Architecture, Landscape, and Design (ALD) program. 

In addition to bolstering the BAAS program’s four streams, Sealy aims, he says, to also broaden the ways in which its students are taught, building on the foundations already in place.

“A major challenge for the BAAS program is to offer excellent teaching in a wide range of formats: large lectures courses, design studios, smaller classes, workshops. While our core required courses offer students a common foundation of shared knowledge, other offerings, such as our senior seminar and capstone projects, summer design builds and studies abroad courses, provide unique experiences.”

It’s the breadth of the program and the possibilities that come with it that thrill Sealy most about his role.

“The BAAS program’s greatest strength is its students,” he says. “Drawn from all over the Greater Toronto Area, Canada and the globe, they bring such a multitude of experiences, interests and skills to bear on everything they do inside and outside the classroom. This is what makes teaching at Daniels so exciting and convinced me to embark upon this new role. In so doing, I am honoured to follow in the footsteps of the previous directors, Professors Jeannie Kim and Petros Babasikas."

Both the University of Toronto and the city around it offer a perfect setting—and springboard—for the program’s students, Sealy adds.

“Toronto’s role as a global, urban metropolis is crucial to Canada’s cultural, ecological and economic future,” he says. “I want to see our students making a difference in shaping this city as it continues to evolve.”

In addition to the BAAS program, the Master of Architecture (MARC) program also saw a change in leadership this past summer. 

Having concluded a one-year Research and Study Leave, Wei-Han Vivian Lee (Associate Professor, Teaching Stream) reassumed the role of MARC director as of July 1. Prior to her leave, Lee (pictured above) had directed the program since July of 2020. 

In her absence, the MARC program had been directed on interim basis by Adrian Phiffer, Associate Professor, Teaching Stream. 

Daniels Orientation 2024

04.09.24 - Welcome from Acting Dean Robert Levit 2024-2025

Welcome to the start of the 2024-2025 academic year! Whether you’re a returning student at Daniels or this term is your first, I hope that your time at the Faculty is a happy and productive one. Our school is a special place at the University of Toronto and within the city of Toronto, and we want you to reap as much from your experience here as possible.

Over the next few weeks and months, I’ll look forward to connecting with as many of you as I can. If you have any questions or concerns now or throughout the coming year, please reach out to either the Office of the Dean (daniels-dean@daniels.utoronto.ca) or the Office of the Registrar and Student Services (registrar@daniels.utoronto.ca) at any time. 

This year as in previous ones, your coursework will be complemented by an exciting roster of extracurricular offerings. Launching this month, our Fall 2024 Public Program series includes lectures and presentations by some of the leading designers and thinkers in their fields. 

Among them this term are Chris T Cornelius of Wisconsin-based studio:indigenous (September 26), multidisciplinary artist Pio Abad (November 4) and Canadian architect Omar Gandhi (November 21). The series will kick off next week, on September 12, with a lecture by this year’s holders of the Frank O. Gehry International Visiting Chair in Architectural Design: Jing Liu and Florian Idenburg of New York practice SO-IL. 

In addition, look out for the staging of two new exhibitions at 1 Spadina this term—Urban Domesticity (opening September 12 in the Larry Wayne Richards Gallery on the ground floor of the Daniels Building) and Shaping Atmospheres (in the lower-level Architecture and Design Gallery starting October 2)—as well as a range of year-round activities planned around the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, Black History Month and other noteworthy dates. 

Your schoolwork, of course, will keep you very busy, but I urge you to attend and to take in as many of these inspiring and illuminating events as you can. The Public Program at Daniels is a valuable resource available to our entire community and we hope that you’ll take advantage of it to the fullest. 

Have a great first semester!

Robert Levit (he/him)
Acting Dean
John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design

orientation 2023

14.03.24 - You’ve been accepted to U of T! Here’s what comes next

Congratulations on your admission to the University of Toronto’s John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design—an unparalleled centre for learning and research offering graduate programs in architecture, landscape architecture, forestry, urban design and visual studies, as well as unique undergraduate programs that use architecture and design as bases for pursuing a broader education.     

When you choose to join us at Daniels, you’ll be a part of and have access to:  

  •   The No. 1 university in Canada, the most sustainable university in the world, plus the fourth-best public university in North America and 12th worldwide 
  • A dynamic downtown campus in the heart of Canada’s largest and most diverse city 
  • Unparalleled extracurricular opportunities, including varsity athletics, clubs, international exchange programs and leadership/mentorship  
  • Canada’s No. 1 university for graduate employability and top 20 globally 
  • The highest scholarship and financial funding amongst all Canadian universities 

At the Daniels Faculty, the environment in which our students learn and congregate is as unique as our program offerings. Our hub at 1 Spadina Crescent—the Daniels Building—is a bold work of architecture and landscape on a prominent urban site between U of T’s St. George campus and the vibrant centre of Toronto. Across Spadina Crescent, the North and South Borden buildings (home to our visual studies programs) and the Earth Sciences Centre (HQ for forestry studies) complete the Faculty’s trifecta of sites. 

Whether you’re travelling to Canada to begin your studies, navigating a move to Toronto, or choosing our Faculty to continue your academic journey—we’re here to support you in all the steps ahead.   

So, what comes next?

Visit the Newly Admitted Students section of the Daniels website for resources, key contacts and important dates. 

Have a question? Get in touch with us!

Please feel free to contact the Office of the Registrar and Student Services.