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Michael A. Larice

Associate Professor of Urban Design & City Planning
City & Regional Planning

Biography

B.A., University of California, Los Angeles
M.Arch, University of California, Los Angeles
Ph.D., City & Regional Planning (Urban Design), University of California, Berkeley

Michael Larice is an Associate Professor of Urban Design and City Planning at the University of Pennsylvania, where he coordinates the urban design concentration in City Planning at the School of Design. He teaches a variety of courses, including urban and planning theory, urban design methods and practice, as well as design studios that focus on the public realm.

Dr. Larice is an architect, urban designer and planner, who has worked in Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area and southern Africa, where he coordinated a World Bank Urban Upgrading Project in the Kingdom of Swaziland.

Over the past decade he has taught graduate and undergraduate courses at Berkeley and the University of British Columbia in urban design, city planning, comparative housing, and international development.

In 2009, Professor Larice was awarded the G. Holmes Perkins Award for Distinguished Teaching.

Work/Research

His research includes multi-case study analysis of dense livable neighborhoods, development approvals processes, and housing form. His current interests include topics in neighborhood and public realm design, streetscaping, sustainability planning, and place-making.

Publications

His edited book The Urban Design Reader (with Prof. Elizabeth Macdonald of UC Berkeley) was published in late 2006 by Routledge.

Courses

Professor Larice teaches Urban and Planning Theory. He also oversees the Public Realm studio.