You learn to research and design how people use and experience indoor or outdoor spaces, with an emphasis on space, place and purpose and the poetry of connecting these three. As a spatial designer, you have everything you need to work for clients or to do research, where you are aware of the technical (im)possibilities of materials and your own artistic vision and signature. Observing, analysing and responding to the physical context is one of your main tasks.
Within spatial design, you move back and forth between different levels of scale: from large (urban environments, for example) to very small (a piece of furniture, for example) and everything in between. With your designs, you contribute to community building. You also think about the effect your design has on users and their environment, their interactions and their well-being.
The expressiveness of your design is important: construction, art, experience and functionality merge.
Ultimately, you work on your own position within the field, in which your personal fascinations and inspirations are the starting point. You visualize and materialize your ideas and position in a convincing and authentic way.