The School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape has a quota on the number of students accepted into the Bachelor of Design in City Innovation. Admission is competitive and meeting the minimum admission requirements does not guarantee admission. See for the minimum competitive average for the Bachelor of Design in City Innovation program.
Specified selection criteria are described in A.5 Undergraduate Degree Admission Requirements.
High School applicants: see section A.5.1 Canadian High School Students.
Transfer (including Change of Program) applicants: see sections A.5.3 Transferring from Another Post-Secondary Institution.
Students accepted to the Bachelor of Design in City Innovation program have the option to pursue a Concentration in Architecture or Landscape Architecture in the second or third year of the program. It is recommended that students apply for the Concentration in their second year. Admission to the Concentrations will be competitive and in accordance to the eligibility requirements noted in 3.1.2.1 Architecture or Landscape Architecture Concentration.
Repeated courses may only be counted once in a student’s degree program but all instances (that fall within the group of courses used to calculate admission) are used in the calculation of the admission grade point average.