May 03, 2024  
2019-2020 Graduate Catalog 
    
2019-2020 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Urban and Regional Planning


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: College of Architecture and Planning

Chair: Austin Troy
Office: CU Denver Building 330F
Telephone: 303-315-1000
Fax: 303-315-1050

Faculty

Professors:
Nan Ellin, PhD, Columbia University
Austin Troy, PhD, University of California, Berkeley

Associate Professor:
Jeremy Németh, PhD, Rutgers University 

Assistant Professors:
Carrie Makarewicz, PhD, University of California, Berkeley
Manish Shirgaokar, PhD, University of California, Berkeley
Andrew Rumbach, PhD, Cornell University

Assistant Professors (Clinical Teaching Track):
Ken Schroeppel, MURP, University of Colorado Denver  
Jennifer Steffel Johnson, PhD, University of Colorado Denver

Additional information about faculty in this department is available on the college website.

Overview

The Department of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Colorado Denver has evolved to become one of the strongest, most unique graduate planning programs in the United States, offering a real-world, experientially-oriented program that uses Colorado as a classroom and engages students with the community. It offers the Master in Urban and Regional Planning degree, the only accredited graduate planning degree in the state of Colorado.

We believe that successful city-building requires expertise, breadth, interdisciplinary understanding, and creativity. Our program looks beyond traditional professional silos and instead centers on issues at the forefront of planning practice. Our three Initiatives - Healthy Communities, Urban Revitalization, and Regional Sustainability - form the basis of our research, instruction, and community outreach.

We encourage all students to follow their passion and develop expertise in the areas that matter most to them. Our unique, self-directed curriculum that allows students to understand the breadth of the planning field while gaining the technical expertise demanded by the profession.

Our list of program faculty includes some of the most respected researchers and educators in the planning field, as well as top local planning practitioners, all of whom bring a wealth of experience to the classroom. All of our faculty make teaching a top priority.

Our presence in a College of Architecture and Planning ensures that our approach to planning education has a strong connection to design, and our location in the heart of downtown Denver offers students endless opportunities for experiential learning and interaction with the community.

Program Mission and Values

Our vision is to be a national leader in educating skilled, engaged planners and creating vibrant, sustainable communities.

Inspired by our setting in the downtown of a thriving urban center in the dynamic Rocky Mountain region, our mission is to:

  • Teach - Teach our students the knowledge, skills, and values they need to be confident, principled, and visionary planners, using Colorado as our classroom to engage students in real-world, experiential learning.
  • Advance - Advance the field of planning through insightful, relevant research that directly informs policy and improves our built, natural, and social environments.
  • Serve - Serve as a vital resource for communities and professionals, and help develop sustainable solutions to our region’s complex planning challenges.

Several core values inspire all the work we do:

  • Advocacy - We believe planners must be visionary in their work, politically engaged, and articulate proponents for positive change.
  • Collaboration - We believe planners must understand and value the principles and perspectives of allied disciplines that participate in planning and city building.
  • Engagement - we believe students should learn planning by interacting directly with professionals and the public to solve real-world planning challenges.
  • Interdependency - We believe cities are inextricably tied to each other and to their ecological, regional and global contexts.
  • Service - We believe our program should serve as a resource for planning professionals and the public by offering ideas, solutions, research, advocacy, and inspiration.
  • Sustainability - We believe planning must be based on the principles of economic viability, environmental resiliency, and social equity.
  • Urbanism - We believe in the potential of cities and towns to be the most efficient, equitable and inspiring forms of human settlement.

Our Faculty

The faculty of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning consists of a purposeful mix of full-time tenured/tenure-track faculty, full-time clinical-track faculty, and a diverse group of part-time lecturers who keep one foot in the professional practice of planning and one in the classroom. The MURP program and its students benefit from the rich contributions of the scholarly research accomplished by our tenured/tenure-track faculty, and the practice-oriented instruction provided by our lecturers and instructors. To learn more about our MURP faculty members, please visit the college website.

Our Students

Our commitment to our students extends across many areas: providing them with exceptional instruction and research-backed knowledge about planning; inspiring them to achieve great things in their personal and professional lives; exposing them to planning professionals, real-world planning situations, and state-of-the-art learning resources; and helping them choose their best academic and career paths through advising and mentoring.

Curricular Approach

Program Features

Our passion for teaching students the knowledge, skills and values they will need to be confident, principled, and visionary planners is reflected in the five key features we’ve integrated across our program and curriculum:

  • Physical Planning and Design - We emphasize physical planning and design throughout our curriculum. Housed within the College of Architecture and Planning, we work closely with the College’s Architecture, Urban Design, Landscape Architecture, and Historic Preservation programs to provide our students access to an expanded design-focused education.
  • Experiential Learning and Engagement - Throughout the program, we provide significant opportunities for students to gain hands-on planning experience and have direct interaction with Colorado’s planning professionals. We use Denver’s diverse urban landscape as a real-world classroom for students to experience and analyze the built, social, political, and economic environments.
  • International Learning Opportunities - We provide students the opportunity to study planning from an international perspective. By offering lecture courses that focus on global planning issues and studios that involve on-site coursework in other countries and collaborations with partner universities abroad, we help students expand their personal and educational worldview.
  • Innovative Planning Technologies - We integrate innovative planning technologies into many of our program’s courses and activities. We capitalize on the Denver region’s entrepreneurial spirit and tech-focused economy by providing access to state-of-the-art planning technologies and teaching students how these tools can support the planning process.
  • Self-Directed Curriculum - We offer our students the unique ability to craft an education suited to their career goals and personal interests. Students may choose any combination of elective courses, whether oriented towards one of our three Program Initiatives, a traditional specialization, or a generalist survey of the planning field.

Program Initiatives

We focus on teaching students how to address critical issues and complex problems facing cities and regions today. For planners to take the lead in the city-building process, they need to understand the breadth of their field and know how to work in cross-disciplinary teams. Therefore we have structured our whole program - research, curriculum, faculty and student efforts, etc.- around three issue areas, which we call Initiatives.

Our three Program Initiatives (Healthy Communities, Urban Revitalization, and Regional Sustainability) represent issues at the forefront of the planning profession today and are also prominent topics in Denver and Colorado.

Healthy Communities

The link between human health and the built environment has become a key factor in planning cities and regions. Colorado is known for its physically fit and active adult population, but our vulnerable populations face significant challenges such as childhood obesity, disconnected neighborhoods, and lack of access to healthy food. Colorado has become a national leader in finding ways to plan and design healthier environments, and the MURP program’s Healthy Communities Initiative is part of that effort. We work with partners at the local, state and federal levels, as well as the non-profit, educational and private sectors, to provide students comprehensive and interdisciplinary training in the tools, innovations and policies necessary for creating physically, socially, and economically healthy communities.

Urban Revitalization

After decades of suburbanization, segregated land uses, and automobile-dependent development, the U.S. is now experiencing a resurgence of traditional urbanism and a reorientation toward central cities. Nowhere else is that phenomenon more evident than in Denver, where infill and transit-oriented development, historic preservation, adaptive reuse, and multi-modal transport are transforming the urban landscape. The MURP program’s Urban Revitalization Initiative gives students opportunities to engage with local developers, planners, designers and policymakers to help revive and enhance established cities, retrofit the suburbs, and plan sustainable new developments.

Regional Sustainability

Climate change, environmental degradation, resource scarcity, and sprawling development present critical challenges to planners worldwide. In the Rocky Mountain West, the impacts are evident in habitat loss, wildfire risk, and conflicts over water and energy resources. The MURP program’s Regional Sustainability Initiative explores ways that Colorado and its neighbors can tackle these issues together. At the metropolitan level, Denver and its adjacent communities already serve as a model for regional planning and cooperation, exemplified by the visionary FasTracks transit program. Our Initiative draws on Denver’s success in regional land use, transportation, economic development and resource planning to help students understand how built and natural environments can co-exist more sustainably at various regional scales.

Dual Degrees

As part of encouraging among planners an appreciation for and a knowledge of the perspectives and practices of the other disciplines that participate in planning and city-building, we offer several dual degree opportunities, both with programs within the College of Architecture and Planning and with other units across the University of Colorado system. In every instance, the total credit requirement of the Dual Degree is considerably less than would be needed if each degree were independently pursued. The degrees that may be combined with the Master of Urban and Regional Planning include:

  • Master of Architecture (MURP+MARCH)
  • Master of Landscape Architecture (MURP+MLA)
  • Master of Public Health (MURP+MPH)
  • Master of Public Administration (MURP+MPA)
  • Master of Business Administration (MURP+MBA)
  • Master of Science degree in Historic Preservation (MURP+MSHP)
  • Juris Doctorate (Law Degree) (MURP+JD-in collaboration with the CU Boulder Law School)

Information about the dual degrees can be found on the College website.

Programs

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: College of Architecture and Planning