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MIT Subject Listing & Schedule
My Course Selections

11.433[J] Real Estate Economics
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Graduate (Fall)
(Same subject as 15.021[J])
Prereq: 14.01, 15.010, or 15.011
Units: 4-0-8
Remove from schedule Lecture: TR9.30-11 (9-354) Recitation: W EVE (5-6.30 PM) (9-354)
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Develops an understanding of the fundamental economic factors that shape the market for real property, as well as the influence of capital markets in asset pricing. Analyzes of housing as well as commercial real estate. Covers demographic analysis, regional growth, construction cycles, urban land markets, and location theory as well as recent technology impacts. Exercises and modeling techniques for measuring and predicting property demand, supply, vacancy, rents, and prices.
A. Saiz
No textbook information available

11.S939 Special Subject: Urban Studies and Planning
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Graduate (Fall, Spring) Can be repeated for credit
Prereq: None
Units arranged
Remove from schedule Lecture: MW10-11.30 (9-217)
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For graduate students wishing to pursue further study in advanced areas of urban studies and city and regional planning not covered in regular subjects of instruction.
Fall: C. Cong
Spring: Holly Harriel, Katrin Kaeufer
No textbook information available

11.485 Southern Urbanisms
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Not offered academic year 2025-2026Graduate (Fall)
Prereq: None
Units: 2-0-10
Remove from schedule Lecture: F10-12 (9-217)
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Guides students in examining implicit and explicit values of diversity offered in "Southern" knowledge bases, theories, and practices of urban production. With a focus on Sub-Saharan Africa, considers why the South-centered location of the estimated global urban population boom obligates us to examine how cities work as they do, and why Western-informed urban theory and planning scholarship may be ill-suited to provide guidance on urban development there. Examines the "rise of the rest" and its implications for the making and remaking of expertise and norms in planning practice. Students engage with seminal texts from leading authors of Southern urbanism and critical themes, including the rise of Southern theory, African urbanism, Chinese international cooperation, Brazilian urban diplomacy, and the globally-driven commodification of urban real estate.
G. Carolini 
No textbook information available

11.960 Independent Study: Real Estate
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Graduate (Fall, IAP, Spring, Summer) Can be repeated for credit
Prereq: None
Units arranged [P/D/F]
Remove from schedule TBA.
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Opportunity for independent study under regular supervision by a faculty member.
J. Kennedy
No textbook information available

Total units: 24+

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A note on the schedule: Lecture options are shown, not labs or recitations.

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TIMEMon TueWed ThuFri KEY

 11.433

 11.S939

 11.485

 11.960

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9 pm