Brian J.
Kelly, Jr., AIA
Assistant
Professor of Architectural Technology
State
University of New York College of Agriculture and Technology at
Morrisville
111 Galbreath Hall
State University of
New York
College of
Agriculture and Technology
Morrisville, New
York 13408
Telephone:
315-684-6281 or 315-684-6079
FAX: 315-684-6496
For information on the Architectural
Technology program here at SUNYMorrisville please feel free
to email me at ArchitecturalTechnology.
Please include your mailing address so I can send you the
literature that I haveon the profession of architecture. This
information is in addition to any that our admissions office will
supply.
I'm also including here what I consider the best architecture
related link Ihave found. Check it out!!!!!

Last Revised: Tuesday, November 2, 1999 at 04:21:40 PM
Courses taught fall of 2000:
This is the second course in a sequence of four design
courses. This course addressthe design process, the vocabulary of
design, presentations means and methods as a means toexpression.
This is realized principally through design problems in pure
composition, followedby three dimensional design problems in the
architectural media.
This is the second course in the sequence of two courses. The
course builds onthe knowledge developed previously, by exploring
building materials and how they are used.The students explore
materials like concrete (site cast, precast, and reinforced), and
howarchitects design with it from beams, columns and plates, to
board forming and bush hammering. Other materials and topics to
covered will be roofing, accessibility, site manipulation,
solarenergy concepts and glass.
CAD283-Design Applications with Computer-Aided Drafting
This course allows the students to apply various CAD software
packages as adesign tool to several mechanics (statics) problems.
Primary areas of interest will be thegraphical solution of
determining loads on static structures such as beams, trusses and
frames. The students with also explore the use of drawing
procedures using external referencing andscale factor
manipulations. The course concludes with the students exploring
and experimentingwith three dimensional modeling software.
CAD181-Introduction to Computer-Aided Drafting
This course introduces the concepts of two-dimensional
computerized draftingusing drawing utilities, line modifications,
graphic transformations and dimensioning. Involvesfile
management, text editor, plotting and related CAD system
operations.