Master in Landscape Architecture
The professional Master of Landscape Architecture (MLA) degree at the University of Toronto John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design is a nationally accredited program that uses intensive studio-based courses to address current global design challenges.
Landscape architects are uniquely positioned to engage complex contemporary issues: climate change, urbanization, ecological resilience, social equity, and cultural reconciliation. Complementary lecture and seminar courses in history, theory, technology, and environmental studies serve as a forum to examine landscape architecture’s synthetic role in design and planning at scales ranging from the garden to the region and beyond, all while providing the comprehensive training needed for professional accreditation.
Through a four-term core curriculum over three years of study, MLA students develop independent research directions that culminate in the final term’s thesis studio. The program’s goal is to develop progressive models for landscape architecture practice: we encourage work that explores and extends the discipline’s ties to the humanities, environmental and social sciences, and engineering.