IAAC’s Master in AI for Architecture & the Built Environment is a unique program oriented towards leading the change in decarbonising human activities and crafting a more sustainable, resilient future urbanisation for our planet. Through an innovative curriculum deeply rooted in AI applications, the program pioneers novel AI-driven solutions that not only respond to the pressing challenges of our time but also set a new standard for environmentally and socially conscious co-design and planning. The Master in AI for Architecture & the Built Environment is training the professionals that city administrations, governments, industries, and communities need, to transform the built environment in the era of digital technologies.


Barcelona Housing & Metro Analysis Explorer

Throughout the course of Urban Data, we learnt several different ways of handling multiple datasets to finally form a dashboard for the same. In this exercise, we worked using VS Code to create a Dashboard for the comparison of Barcelona’s available rental or buyout housing like what idealista does but the also have it depended … Read more

Urban Data: Interactive Dashboard

As part of the Urban Data course, the main goal was to create an interactive dashboard in Python to visualize multiple dataframes. We wrote a proper Python file and ran it locally with VS Code. US Fast Food Restaurant Dashboard combines a population dataset and a US fast food restaurants dataset. Several visualization methods have … Read more

Unified Disaster Intelligence : Mapping Live Social Signals onto Historical Risk

Context This dashboard explores how real‑time tweets about disasters can be read against a global catalogue of events such as droughts, earthquakes, and eruptions between 2010 and 2025. By combining these two layers, the project asks how public, noisy, bottom‑up signals might complement slower institutional data in climate‑driven risk scenarios Framing the question Over the … Read more

Flap-alona – butterflies, pollinators and Barcelona’s gardens

Pollinators, bees, butterflies, moths, bumblebees, quietly keep our ecosystems alive. They enable flowering plants to reproduce, sustain wild biodiversity, and support much of our food supply. Yet many of these species are in decline worldwide, threatened by habitat loss, chemical use, urban sprawl and climate change. In cities like Barcelona, where green spaces, gardens, parks … Read more