Research Opportunities
Tyler graduate students have access to the abundant resources of a large, tier-one public research university and accomplished faculty who model a culture of inquiry through their own research and professional practice.
Graduate students can participate in research opportunities in areas as diverse as sculpture, art history, architecture, environmental design, city/regional planning and community development, and visual studies.
Faculty research spans diverse categories, including climate change, cultural landscapes, ecological recovery, seed germination, social equity in urban design, urban ecology and health, virtual and augmented reality, and visual representation. Learn more about faculty at Tyler.
Tyler and Temple University are closely tied to the city of Philadelphia, providing opportunities for graduate students to participate in hands-on, collaborative opportunities in the city. The richness of arts practice, architecture, landscape architecture, planning and allied professional fields across the Philadelphia region offers limitless possibilities for experiential learning. Learn more about research opportunities for Tyler students.
Research Funding
In 2016, the National Science Foundation placed Temple University among the top 100 in terms of research expenditures, which amounted to $242 million. Learn more about the university’s research support efforts.
Facilities & Makerspaces
The Tyler experience is defined in part by access to exceptional facilities. Graduate students have the space, the technology and the tools they need to go wherever their creative vision takes them, including
- dedicated practice studio spaces for architecture, environmental design, and graphic and interactive design graduate students; and
- individual practice studios for MFA students.
Tyler's 255,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility on Temple’s Main Campus is home to makerspaces of all shapes and sizes to support graduate students in their studies. These include
- an acid room for copper etching;
- an 18-station wheel throwing room;
- computer studios;
- digital fabrication labs;
- high-ceilinged, light-drenched painting studios;
- hot and cold glass shops;
- a media output center;
- two large wet labs and darkrooms; and
- wood and metal fabrication shops.
Spaces also include an outdoor classroom, study nooks, café, spacious green courtyard with natural dye garden, exhibition galleries and Temple Contemporary—Tyler's visionary center for exhibitions and public programming.
Architecture Facilities
Tyler’s 50,000-square-foot Architecture Building features three floors of open, loft-like studios as well as digital and analog fabrication shops to materialize students’ ideas, equipped with table, band and miter saws, planer, jointer, router table, drill press, and sanding machines, among other power and hand tools.
Tyler’s landscape architecture and horticulture programs are based at Temple’s expansive, suburban Ambler Campus, where students have access to greenhouses, a 187-acre arboretum, an aquaponics lab, a technology center and more.
Loretta C. Duckworth Scholars Studio
The Loretta C. Duckworth Scholar’s Studio at Temple’s Charles Library provides a space for collaborative work and individual research, offering technology for textual analysis, mining big data, working in and creating 3D spaces, geospatial technology, gaming, visualizations, and more. Its makerspace, VR Lab, Specialized Computing Lab and Tech Sandbox provide students with tools to stretch their creativity.