

MPlan Urban Planning
About this course
Urban planning is the discipline concerned with how cities, towns and communities are shaped, developed and sustained over time. It asks how land is used, how infrastructure is designed, how housing is delivered and how the built environment serves, or fails to serve, the people who live in it. Planners must balance competing interests, from economic development and environmental sustainability to social equity and heritage preservation, working within legal and political frameworks that are constantly evolving. The discipline is highly practical but also deeply concerned with values and with questions of what kind of places we want to live in. At the University of Sheffield you will study over four years on a full-time programme that includes a sandwich year and a year abroad, alongside embedded work placement opportunities. This gives you substantial professional experience alongside your academic studies, and the international dimension allows you to engage with different planning systems, urban challenges and approaches to sustainable development. Sheffield's School of Geography and Planning has a strong research reputation across both disciplines, and teaching is shaped by that research culture. You will develop expertise in planning law and policy, urban design, housing, transport, environmental planning and community engagement, alongside the quantitative and spatial analysis skills that underpin professional planning practice. Urban planning graduates are in consistent demand across local authorities, development consultancies, housing associations, regeneration agencies and central government. Roles in development management, policy planning, infrastructure delivery, masterplanning, sustainability and transport planning are all established career paths. Many graduates pursue chartership through the Royal Town Planning Institute, typically alongside their first professional role. The programme at Sheffield provides a strong foundation for postgraduate study in planning, urban design, housing policy or environmental management for those who wish to specialise further.
Syllabus & Modules
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