• Master of Architecture at the University of Melbourne is offered as a 3-years program.
  • It is an on-campus program offered on a full-time basis only.
  • The Master of Architecture is a professional program that prepares graduates for employment as architects. The ethos of the program emphasises the central role of design in the studio. 
  • The Master of Architecture offers you flexibility so students can take a two-year program if students already have a three-year undergraduate degree in Architecture or the three-year program if students’ first degree is not in architecture and students are making a career change.
  • With over thirty full-time academics and a broad range of leading architectural practitioners, the program has a depth and breadth of teaching and research performance unmatched within the Southeast-Asian and Australasian regions.
  • Graduates will be equipped with the creative and critical thinking skills to push the envelope of architectural change in terms of the design and production of buildings as well as critique of their technical, aesthetic, social and environmental performance.
  • Students undertake a sequence of intensive design studios culminating in a research thesis.
  • In the studios, students cover architectural design in the context of the creative invention of architectural futures, integrating aesthetic, technological, programmatic, environmental, and social issues in the production of buildings. Students can take elective subjects in areas such as digital architecture, history and conservation, production, practice and sustainability, and society and culture.
  • The MArch program consists of 3Possible career opportunities are:00 credits.
  • The Master of Architecture aims to provide you with:
    • Highly developed skills to manage an architectural practice and lead or work within cross-discipline project teams
    • A sustainable outlook with the ability to use new materials and technologies to create environmentally sustainable buildings
    • A grounding in architectural history, theory, and technology that leads to the creation of innovative architecture.