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10 THINGS ARCHITECTS COULD LEARN FROM IMPROV

archimess

1. Teamwork. One can not do it all alone. Sorry divas and Starchitects! Improv teams play well together. Each member of a scene has a purpose and asks themselves, “How can I contribute to the larger picture?” In improv, the better you make your partners look the better you look.  Truth is: in improv, everyone is a supporting actor.  Hmmm…

2. Play to be creative. Improv actors are trained to play… like when we were kids. If you watch kids play, they are not self conscious. They are uninhibited. They accept, extend, and advance each others play cues. They are open, curious, and laughing. To be creative, in a group setting, particularly in charrettes… if we learn to “accept” one’s ideas, then “extend” it by building on it, and lastly “advance” the idea by basing another idea off of it, we could see more fruitful results.

3. Storytelling. Good improv teams are great storytellers. Architects can learn to communicate the design problem and tell the storied solution from improv actors. After all, how does one take audience suggestions like, “reality TV,” “U2 concert,” and “Leonardo DiVinci” and make it work in a scene!?

4.Performance. Improv can help take stage fright and nerves and use them to your advantage. It will make you fearless. During presentations, own the nerves and don’t forget that every time there is a presentation there is still a need for some performance aspect. One thing I learned from doing improv is that the audience is always rooting for you to succeed. Know that… and check your zipper before hand.  If the meeting goes awry, then be confident in having no idea what’s going on.

5. Be agreeable. There is a golden rule in improv called, “Yes, and…” That is, in improv, instead of being able to negate a new idea or direction your partner comes up with, you are required to agree with your partner; and then add information. Doing this takes one from being a listener to a contributor. It advances ideas and dialogue. This can be useful in design charrettes and collaborative settings.

6. Be open-minded. Improv actors can not go into a scene with a preconceived idea and wait to play it. If they do, they will miss some cues and ideas a partner may have thrown out there. And then the scene gets weird. Same goes for design.

7. Justification. In improv there are all sorts of absurdities, mistakes, and contradictions. In a good scene, the actors tie everything together and justify everything. Architects can do the same thing. There are always last minute program requirements that impact massing. We can learn to improvise the design and make sense of changes.

8. Ask questions better. Questions should give more than they take. In fact, don’t ask questions if you can avoid it. Make a statement. There is ownership in a statement. Take a position and see it through.

9. Pay attention to detail. Improv actors listen and observe everything in a scene well. Details lead to the objective. Details will lead architects in developing creative solutions as well. If we are not mindful of details, we will end up just spinning our wheels and making decisions on false pretenses.

10. No agenda for creativity. Set a time a place to be creative. In improv, it’s during a show and the stage is dark and empty. The same could be for architects. Set up a brief time and place. The time shouldn’t be more than 1-1/2 to 2 hours. After that, we lose focus. Shorter, intense meetings are better than longer disheveled meetings. Have a unique place where the creativity can happen. It should be quiet and secluded and permit creativity to occur.

via John Gresko, Project Architect | Chicago, IL, USA

Source: blink.hdrinc.com

    • #architecture
    • #architects
    • #architecture students
    • #architecture school
    • #design
    • #10 things
    • #improv
  • 1 week ago
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Old and new #architecture #concrete vs #glass #modern vs #postmodern #design #structure #building #complex #macedonia #skopje #gmy #picoftheday #instamood #photooftheday  (Taken with Instagram at T-Mobile Macedonia HQ)
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Old and new #architecture #concrete vs #glass #modern vs #postmodern #design #structure #building #complex #macedonia #skopje #gmy #picoftheday #instamood #photooftheday (Taken with Instagram at T-Mobile Macedonia HQ)

    • #building
    • #glass
    • #modern
    • #gmy
    • #macedonia
    • #picoftheday
    • #concrete
    • #skopje
    • #complex
    • #design
    • #architecture
    • #instamood
    • #postmodern
    • #structure
    • #photooftheday
  • 1 month ago
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Transition of the uncertain
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Transition of the uncertain

    • #architecture
    • #facade
    • #instagram
    • #3d
    • #render
    • #project
  • 1 month ago
  • 8
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'\x3ciframe src=\x22http://player.vimeo.com/video/24715531\x22 width=\x22500\x22 height=\x22281\x22 frameborder=\x220\x22\x3e\x3c/iframe\x3e'

So, I’ve been away from my blog for quite some time. 
I needed a break + I focused myself on architecture and some other stuff.

But I missed you all, so I’m back. “Thanks” to all my new followers and “Hello” to my old ones.

And this is a great speech from Ira Glass on Storytelling for my comeback, or his message to all the beginners who are into creative work. Amazing speech, comforting. 

So, all you people, struggling with your work … don’t worry. Creatives are like old wine - the older the better :) 

Cheers 

    • #architecture
    • #architecture students
    • #architecture school
    • #architecture studio
    • #design
    • #architects
    • #students
    • #Ira Glass
    • #speech
    • #video
    • #creative
    • #work
    • #message
  • 1 month ago
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(R)EVOLUTION
- What is your choice?
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(R)EVOLUTION

- What is your choice?

    • #architecture
    • #architecture students
    • #bim
    • #software
    • #evolution
  • 2 months ago
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Best Jobs 2012: Architect

Sorry everybody, for not being around in some time, but I have good news for the future of our profession. Looks like things are looking up. Here is what US News/Money are saying:

As one of the Best Jobs of 2012 is Architect, this profession should see significant growth over the next decade.

sketch

The Rundown:

Think of all the places you go in a single day: coffee shops, train stations, office buildings, restaurants, grocery stores, city parks, and so on. What may not dawn on you in the rush of the day is that all these places are the creation of architects. To ensure their creations are practical, safe, and aesthetically pleasing, architects are involved in each stage of the construction process, from the initial planning session to the ribbon-cutting ceremony. This level of involvement requires a diverse skill set, which includes designing, engineering, managing, supervising, and interacting with clients and builders. Communication skills are especially important.Architects must effectively convey their unique vision for a project and interact with professionals from many fields.

The Outlook:

With steady migration to Sun Belt states and many baby boomers retiring in the next few years, there should be an uptick in demand for new homes, healthcare facilities, and office buildings. This means the job market for architects should remain solid. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects architect employment growth of 23.1 percent between 2010 and 2020, adding 31,300 more professionals to the 135,400 already-existing jobs in this field.

Money:

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the median annual wage for architects was $72,550 in 2010. The best-paid 10 percent in the profession made approximately $119,500, while the bottom 10 percent made approximately $42,860. The highest-paid in the profession work in the metropolitan areas of Sarasota, Fla., Allentown, Penn, and Sacramento.

Architect Salary Range:

75th Percentile Wage: $93,020

Median Wage: $72,550

25th Percentile Wage: $54,650

Education and Preparation:

Most states require architects to possess a professional degree in architecture from one of the nearly 120 schools of architecture accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board. However, state architectural registration boards specify their own standards, so a degree from non-accredited program may suffice in select states. Therefore, check the requirements for any state where you wish to work. There are a few routes to obtaining a degree in architecture. Most architects choose the five-year degree intended for students with no previous training. Others opt to enroll in a graduate program, which can take one to five years to complete, after obtaining an undergraduate degree in a field outside of architecture. Graduates must complete a training period, typically of three years or more, before they may sit for the licensing exam. Requirements for this training period vary by state.

On Landing an Architect Job:

Architects interact with a wide-ranging group of people on each project, so working well with others is a must. “You need to show that you work well in teams—especially with people different than you are,” Richard L. Hayes, director of knowledge resources for The American Institute of Architects, wrote in an email. According to Hayes, demonstrating that you “can think about the best path through a complex problem” is another important element to getting a job in the field. Healthcare architecture, such as designing healthy communities and buildings, is a growing area of specialization that Hayes recommends for aspiring architects.

What is an Architect Job Like?

Architects spend most of their time drafting plans or corresponding with clients from comfortable office spaces, but they also frequently visit construction sites to check on the progress of projects. Successful architects are able to juggle a number of professional relationships for each project while still completing other job responsibilities. Most architects work less than 50 hours per week, but as deadlines approach, many are forced to work long nights or weekends to finish in time.

A-Team

I find it fascinating that the other 9 out of 10 best jobs in 2012 are in the field of Medicine or Computers and the most interesting thing is that “they” are suggesting the architects to take studies in design for healthcare facilities … simply fascinating. Makes you wonder,a?!

    • #architecture
    • #architect
    • #job
    • #office
    • #constuction
    • #best job
    • #2012
  • 3 months ago
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5 Tips for architecture freelancers

A few mounts back I was working as a freelancer (or External collaborator the legal term around here) for a architecture firm. In few words - I didn’t get paid for the work I’ve done. And it’s my mistake, as much as the firm’s. 
I made every deadline, I’ve done better work than many of the other architects in the firm, I was the one that the investors were calling non-stop, I was getting Skype calls in 6am in the morning (because one of the investors was living in the UK, just to ask some stupid question, about the square footage of his kitchen), I was even IT support in the firm … in the end, I was the one that got screwed over.

screw

The main big project failed, even though I’ve finished the work, I didn’t got paid for the time I’ve spend on the project. The other project got build, but all I’ve got, were just 100 euros. This job pretty much, took away my whole summer, not counting all the other bullshit I had to go through with.

The thing was, even though I knew all this before, the firm I was working, the summer before this last one, had payed me really nicely and because of that, I didn’t react before I accepted these jobs. I got stupid. I took their word.

Never make my mistakes, even if you are working for your own father.

Here are a few tips for architecture freelancers:  

1. Make a pre-agreement 

For a freelancer and an architecture student, if you can, this is the best way to go. I’d say it’s best to agree on a monthly fee on one project, till it’s finished. This is handy because, until they need you, you will get paid, no matter how much work you do. There will be months with a lot work to be done and there will be months with very little work to be done.

2. Never give out a digital file

Always present your work on a hard print. I’d go all the way, with a black and white print. Until you get paid, you don’t pass on any digital copy.

If you must give out a digital file, mark it with a digital signature on a read-only file, that cannot be removed and it will always be printed out when they try to print the plans and they can’t copy-pastе the content on another file. (Autocad, Revit, Adobe … can do this)

digital signature

3. Present your work online

If you have a deal on a legal paper, always present your work online. If it comes to a cold-blooded thievery for your idea and you like to take legal actions, that will be valuable evidence in a copyright court case. 
And yes, this has happened!! This is a lawyer’s advise to me.

4. Get a legal payment deal on paper

Try to do this, even if you have to pay the notary fee, if there are a lot of money in question, it will pay out for you, if the firm try’s to play you. 

5. The firm is your client, not the investor

Never make the mistake and get angry with the investor, or even be that crazy and ask him for the money. If you can, don’t even be his main contact. It will drive you crazy. 
If the project fails, you should still get paid, for the time you spend on that project. It’s never your fault, it’s the firm’s bad business and bad client relationship.

payment

Source: archimess

    • #architecture
    • #architecture students
    • #freelance
    • #external collaborators
    • #payment
    • #client
    • #project
    • #get paid
    • #payment
    • #digital file
    • #print
  • 4 months ago > archimess
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The reason it takes five years to become an architect is, that it takes that long to become that arrogant.
Brenda Vale, on how architects convince their clients that their buildings are sustainable by essentially saying, “trust me, I’m an architect.”

Source: archistudent

    • #architecture school
    • #architecture
    • #brenda vale
    • #robert vale
    • #sustainability
  • 4 months ago > archistudent
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Why Architecture’s Identity Problem Should Matter to the Rest of Us

One of the best posts I’ve ever read about architecture profession.

blueprint

Perhaps it was the Legos, or watching Mike Brady belly up to his drafting board on TV. In recent months and years, the likes of President Obama, Brad Pitt, Lenny Kravitz, and numerous other public figures have divulged a love of architecture, going so far as to say they once—or still—wanted to be architects. They, like so many of us, have a romantic view of the architecture world.

It makes sense when you stop to think about it: there are few more creative, more transformative, more direct ways to literally make the world a better place. Almost nothing influences the quality of our lives more than the design of our homes, our schools, our workplaces, and our public spaces.

Architecture can enliven and inspire. Three decades ago this year, at the tender age of 21, Maya Lin, then a Yale student, captivated the nation with her minimalist design for the Vietnam Memorial. Her subsequent work has won acclaim the world over.

We need more architects like Maya Lin to lift us up. But there’s a problem: Lin is not considered an architect by the architecture profession itself. You’d think those within her chosen field would at least embrace Lin as an architect—if not as a luminary, an innovator, or even a genius. Instead, the architecture establishment does something astounding, demeaning, and perplexing: they relegate her to the title of “intern” because she focused on making architecture, rather rites of passage.

Earning a diploma from architecture school isn’t enough to be awarded the title of “architect.” Graduates must also complete a multi-year internship and pass a costly seven-part exam, steps Lin skipped because she was spending her time designing. It’s a long, arduous road that many in the field are either unable or simply unwilling to travel. Shaun Donovan, the U.S. Secretary of Housing & Urban Development, who earned his architecture degree from the Harvard Graduate School of Design, isn’t an architect, nor TED Prize winner and showman Cameron Sinclair of Architecture for Humanity. Architecture school deans, firm owners, and countless others aren’t “real” architects either. These people are doing amazing, world-changing work, exactly what we want and need more architects to be doing.

In fact, more than half of architecture school graduates don’t enter the profession. Fewer still get licensed, which means that the majority of the best and brightest are held in professional limbo or exit the profession entirely. This has been the status quo for decades, and it’s time for a change. We, the public, need architecture and dignifying spaces now more than ever.

Lest you think this title stuff is just semantics, think again. The profession and the public are measurably worse off because of this issue. While diversity in architecture schools is comparable to law and other fields, architecture remains one of the most elite and homogenous professions, clinging to institutional barriers that have thwarted gender parity and diversity efforts. Massive resources are spent on bureaucracy instead of nurturing a more representative profession to serve our diverse society, and supporting architects to create better, more vibrant public spaces.

Rather than spending their energy protecting their territory and titles, what if architects and their associations focused on resolving our nation’s housing crisis, improving our schools, or generally creating more inspiring environments for people to live their best lives? With buildings now accounting for almost half of greenhouse gas emissions, we need an army of architects to go back to drawing board and create more environmentally-friendly buildings, rather than an aging few tending to the drawbridge.

I’m not arguing against professional standards, especially not for a profession charged with making sure buildings don’t fall down. Clearly, there must be ways to demonstrate one’s qualifications in architecture or any other field, and an exam is widely regarded as the most reliable way to do so.

The difference is that medical school graduates are universally recognized among their peers and by the public as doctors even before their residencies and subsequent board exams. Graduates of law schools are considered lawyers even before passing the bar. But graduates of architecture school, who have at least five to seven years of schooling, are recognized with the lowly title of “intern.” They are forced into under-compensated internships as well as warned, policed, and even fined by architect-led state licensing boards for infringing on the word “architect” in any way. Is there any wonder why architecture graduates are defecting in droves?

These inequities, when combined with the economic downturn, are pushing greater numbers of graduates out of architecture, and the profession is weaker for it. More importantly, the public is also losing out, as the creative skills of architecture graduates are channeled into an overly bureaucratic process, rather than into solving very real societal challenges.

For years, even the leaders of the high and mighty American Institute of Architects have recommended reforming and broadening the rules of becoming an architect—starting with what we call graduates. Yet year in and year out, nothing changes due to institutional resistance, protectionism, and self-preservation.

It is high time that architecture focus less on enforcement of titles and fortifying its barriers to entry, and more on creating an inclusive profession truly dedicated to the health, the safety, and the welfare of the public.

by John Cary, source GOOD

    • #architecture
    • #architecture school
    • #architecture students
    • #degree
    • #title
    • #design
    • #exams
  • 4 months ago
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Dieter Rams Ten Principles of “Good Design”

Even though it’s written in the sense of industrial design, read this post with a mind on architecture and keep in mind that all design should be started with these 10 principles

radio

Good Design Is Innovative : The possibilities for innovation are not, by any means, exhausted. Technological development is always offering new opportunities for innovative design. But innovative design always develops in tandem with innovative technology, and can never be an end in itself.

Good Design Makes a Product Useful : A product is bought to be used. It has to satisfy certain criteria, not only functional but also psychological and aesthetic. Good design emphasizes the usefulness of a product while disregarding anything that could possibly detract from it.

Good Design Is Aesthetic : The aesthetic quality of a product is integral to its usefulness because products are used every day and have an effect on people and their well-being. Only well-executed objects can be beautiful.

Good Design Makes A Product Understandable : It clarifies the product’s structure. Better still, it can make the product clearly express its function by making use of the user’s intuition. At best, it is self-explanatory.

Good Design Is Unobtrusive : Products fulfilling a purpose are like tools. They are neither decorative objects nor works of art. Their design should therefore be both neutral and restrained, to leave room for the user’s self-expression.

Good Design Is Honest : It does not make a product more innovative, powerful or valuable than it really is. It does not attempt to manipulate the consumer with promises that cannot be kept

Good Design Is Long-lasting : It avoids being fashionable and therefore never appears antiquated. Unlike fashionable design, it lasts many years – even in today’s throwaway society.

Good Design Is Thorough Down to the Last Detail : Nothing must be arbitrary or left to chance. Care and accuracy in the design process show respect towards the consumer.

Good Design Is Environmentally Friendly : Design makes an important contribution to the preservation of the environment. It conserves resources and minimises physical and visual pollution throughout the lifecycle of the product.

Good Design Is as Little Design as Possible : Less, but better – because it concentrates on the essential aspects, and the products are not burdened with non-essentials. Back to purity, back to simplicity.

coffee maker

Dieter RamsGerman industrial designer Dieter Rams and his ten principles of “good design”. The straightforward list lays down key points, clearly stating what makes a good design. This information is a timeless source of inspiration that most any designer can appreciate.

Source: archdaily.com

    • #architecture
    • #design
    • #principles
    • #good
    • #architecture studio
    • #architecture school
    • #dieter rams
    • #industrial design
  • 4 months ago
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'\x3ciframe width=\x22500\x22 height=\x22281\x22 src=\x22http://www.youtube.com/embed/15ekdV6pczk?wmode=transparent\x26autohide=1\x26egm=0\x26hd=1\x26iv_load_policy=3\x26modestbranding=1\x26rel=0\x26showinfo=0\x26showsearch=0\x22 frameborder=\x220\x22 allowfullscreen\x3e\x3c/iframe\x3e'

Autodesk 2011 Design Visualisation Show Reel

Check out some of the best work from around the world in the design industries created with autodesk Media and Entertainment products like 3ds Max, 3ds Max Design and Maya.

    • #architecture
    • #visualisation
    • #design
    • #autodesk
    • #3ds max
    • #maya
    • #best
    • #reel
  • 4 months ago
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theallnighter:

Want a Job? Don’t Major in Architecture…sometimes the truth hurts

This can easily be a demotivation poster for architecture students
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theallnighter:

Want a Job? Don’t Major in Architecture…sometimes the truth hurts

This can easily be a demotivation poster for architecture students

Source: theallnighter

    • #architecture
    • #unemployment
    • #rates
    • #architecture students
    • #architecture school
    • #college
  • 4 months ago > theallnighter
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Keep calm and CAD
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Keep calm and CAD

    • #architecture
    • #architecture studio
    • #architecture school
    • #architect
    • #keep calm
  • 4 months ago
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