Most Focused Architectural History Bachelor’s Degree Schools
Architectural History is offered at a wide range of schools across the country, but only at some does it account for a large share of the degrees the school grants. This ranking identifies the schools most focused on architectural history — those where the major represents the largest percentage of degrees awarded.
To build this ranking, College Factual compared the degree focus of the 7 schools in the United States offering architectural history.
What’s on this page:
Most Focused Schools for Architectural History in the United States
These are the schools that devote the largest share of their bachelor’s degree degrees to architectural history.
Most Focused Architectural History Schools
Leading the list of the most focused architectural history schools is University Of San Diego. Set in the city of San Diego, University Of San Diego is a private not-for-profit institution. About 1% of the degrees University Of San Diego awards are in architectural history, or about 19 graduates in the most recent year.
Read the full architectural history report for University Of San Diego
Vanderbilt University ranks #2 for architectural history by degree focus. Set in the city of Nashville, Vanderbilt University is a private not-for-profit institution. About 0.5% of the degrees Vanderbilt University awards are in architectural history, or about 9 graduates in the most recent year.
Read the full architectural history report for Vanderbilt University
Boston University ranks #3 for architectural history by degree focus. Boston University is a private not-for-profit school located in the city of Boston. At this school, roughly 0.4% of all degrees awarded are in architectural history, or about 17 graduates in the most recent year.
Read the full architectural history report for Boston University
A rank of #4 makes Northeastern University one of the most focused schools for architectural history. Northeastern University is a private not-for-profit school located in the city of Boston. About 0.4% of the degrees Northeastern University awards are in architectural history, or about 17 graduates in the most recent year.
Get the full architectural history details for Northeastern University
Drexel University is one of the most focused architectural history schools, landing the #5 spot this year. Drexel University is a private not-for-profit school located in the city of Philadelphia. Architectural History accounts for around 0.3% of the degrees granted here, or about 8 graduates in the most recent year.
See more about architectural history at Drexel University
Depaul University ranked #6 on our list of the most focused architectural history schools. Depaul University is a private not-for-profit school located in the city of Chicago. Architectural History accounts for around 0.3% of the degrees granted here, or about 8 graduates in the most recent year.
Read the full architectural history report for Depaul University
University Of Virginia Main Campus placed #7 for architectural history by degree focus. Set in the suburb of Charlottesville, University Of Virginia Main Campus is a public institution. At this school, roughly 0.2% of all degrees awarded are in architectural history, or about 8 graduates in the most recent year.
Get the full architectural history details for University Of Virginia Main Campus
Other Architectural History Degree Levels
Looking for a different degree level? Compare the most focused Architectural History schools across degree levels:
View All Architectural History Rankings >
Notes and References
The ranking above is published by College Factual. The ranking reflects how concentrated each school’s degrees are in the major (completions in the field as a share of all completions), drawn from the U.S. Department of Education (IPEDS).
- The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), a branch of the U.S. Department of Education (DOE), serves as the core of our data about colleges.
More about our data sources and methodologies.