The Foundation Programme is a one-year full-time course that focuses on observation, conversation and the development of key skills. This course is aimed at students who are at the very start of their architectural studies, and facilitates individual and group project work.
The Intermediate Programme (BA(Hons)) is a three-year full-time programme. The First Year is characterised by its shared, open studio, where students work individually and together across a series of projects. Years two and three introduce students to the unit system, in which small design studios (12–14 students) operate a vertical structure of Second and Third Year students.
The Diploma Programme (MArch) is a two-year full-time programme that accepts students who have completed the Intermediate Programme at the AA, as well as eligible new students who have studied elsewhere. The programme leads to the AA Final Examination (ARB/RIBA Part 2) and is structured around a unit system, in which small design studios (12–14 students) operate a vertical structure of Fourth and Fifth Year students.
The AA offers ten Taught Postgraduate Programmes for students with prior academic and professional experience. Most of the programmes are full-time courses of advanced study, except for Conservation and Reuse, which provides a part-time study option.
Professional Practice is a RIBA Part 3 course and examination that allows successful candidates to register as architects with the Architects Registration Board (ARB). The course is open to AA RIBA Part 2 graduates and eligible non-graduates.
The Visiting School encompasses diverse learning programmes, workshops and site-based agendas shaped by participants working intensively in small groups over varying periods of time from one to two weeks. Central to each programme is the idea that experimental, new and provocative forms of architecture are best learned by doing.
The Visiting School encompasses diverse learning programmes, workshops and site-based agendas shaped by participants working intensively in small groups over varying periods of time from one to two weeks. Central to each programme is the idea that experimental, new and provocative forms of architecture are best learned by doing. These programmes take place all over the world, including Bedford Square in London and Hooke Park in Dorset. The Visiting School welcomes applicants in any moment of their studies and careers, from within and outside of the architectural realm. The AA Summer School Programme, also part of the Visiting School, is equally open and takes place for three weeks during the summer period.
DTA Students’ education and architectural practices post AA
Join one of our Visiting School short courses happening around the world.

A non-refundable £60 deposit is required from all applicants upon application and will be deducted from the total fees below:
• £880 — Standard Programme Fee (including a 1-year AA Digital Membership)
• £820 — AA Member Fee
• £656 — AA Full-time Student Fee
• £757 — Fee for Full-time students of Melbourne University (including a 1-year AA AA Digital Membership)
Fees do not include flights, food or accommodation, but accommodation options can be advised. Owing to some site locations being outside of urban areas, food during the field trip may need to be ordered and paid for in advance.
Applications for this program will open soon.
The programme is open to current architecture and design students, PhD candidates and young professionals.
Software requirements: Adobe Creative Suite, Rhino (SR7 or later), QGIS 3, Blender.
All participants travelling from abroad are responsible for securing any visa required, and are advised to contact their home embassy early. After full payment of course fees, the AA School can provide a letter confirming participation in the workshop.
All participants are responsible for securing their own travel and health insurance. Please ensure that your travel insurance also covers your personal belongings i.e. laptop, equipment, tools, passport etc. The AA takes no responsibility for lost/ stolen property.
Programme Heads
Oskar Frederick Johanson (AA Dipl’19) is a PhD candidate at the Climates Rights program at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). Since 2021 he has been co-program head of the AA Visiting School Sydney. From 2021-22 he was an Agent of Change for the 10th Architecture Biennale Rotterdam. From 2020-21 he was a Research Fellow at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, Amsterdam. He has taught short courses at the AA, UCL, Cambridge, the University of Melbourne, and Iowa State University. He has written for AA Files, The Avery Review, and The Sydney Morning Herald, among others. His research was recently featured in The Architecture of Staged Realities, an exhibition at Het Nieuwe Instituut, Rotterdam, and is currently on show as part of L'architecture des réalités mises en scène: (re)construire Disney, an exhibition at arc en rêve, Bordeaux
Adolfo Del Valle Neira (ARB/RIBA Part I, UdK MA‘20) is a Peruvian-American architect and writer. He is co-program head of the Architectural Association Visiting School Sydney. He was a collaborator at Raumlabor. After that he worked for ZUsammenKUNFT eG, an interdisciplinary urban development cooperative, on the About Urban Praxis project at the Haus der Statistik until 2021. His work and writing on the Making Futures was featured in the Making Futures book published by Spector Books in April 2022. He continues to work as an Architect based in Berlin. G, an interdisciplinary urban development cooperative, on the About Urban Praxis project at the Haus der Statistik.