The course is divided into the following parts:
1. Development, infrastructure and planning the historical development of cities and the infrastructure and role, driving forces behind development in society, the actors of the planning, the Swedish administration system, regional and municipal planning, transports, traffic and sustainable city development, the concept of sustainable development.
2. Natural resources and sustainable infrastructure physical preconditions for land use (soil - water and ecology), technical infrastructure for water - and drain, waste, energy, impact of land use, EIA.
3. Real estate development planning-, building- and environmental legislation, construction, operation and funding of infrastructure and legislation about land acquisition, compensation and changes of real property division, profitability calculations and construction cost, economic policy instruments, assessment of the building from economic and social perspectives.
4. Buildings and civil engineering structure building construction (construction and installation technique), civil engineering structure (geotechnics, roads and rail, bridge structure and tunnels), building material, the environmental impact of buildings and risks.
5. The professional role and ethics the professional role, ethical aspects in the urban development and technical development, professional ethical considerations and dilemmas, working environment, risks and risk assessments.
After the course, the students should be able to:
- describe human needs and functional requirement that should underpin the urban development, account at a general level for the development of the built environment, describe the relationships between the historical development of society, infrastructure and built environment and the urban development of today and the future, and problematize these connections based on a gender and equality perspective.
- account for how natural preconditions such as soil, water and ecosystem in relation to the built environment, and account for relations between built environment and natural environment and how they are used.
- account for political, administrative and economic aspects of the urban development process, and account for how laws, regulatory system and different interested parties' action influence the indoor/outdoor environment and problematize these from a gender and equality perspective.
- account for the technical infrastructure for water, drain, waste and energy and be able to reflect on their importance for a sustainable urban development, and describe constructions and the basic technical design of buildings, roads, rails, bridges and tunnels.
- describe how the different parts of the urban development relate to sustainable development and at the basic level be able to reflect on economic, social and ecological aspects of different solutions and possible conflicts between them, account for ethical issues in the urban development process and discuss the dilemmas they can imply in the professional role of an engineer, and reflect over how you as independent professionals can influence the development in society on short and long view.