Tuesday 27 May 2014

Do you want to be an Architect?

Do you want to be an Architect?

People who had an interest in either becoming an architect or now that they had finished school … what happens next? The intent when I started this series was to create a depository of answers to questions that people tended to email me – thinking I could just refer people to the post on the subject rather than having to recreate the answer over and over again. These posts have been created over a two-year period and I discovered that some people who wanted this information still couldn’t find it and I still found myself back where I started. Hopefully now that I have created a single page that will contain all of the posts that fall into the category of “Do you want to be an Architect” I can accomplish my original goal of the blind leading the blind.
In the  meantime, I hope that this is a resource for those of you looking for some answers

Do you want to be an Architect?

It takes a lot of commitment and desire to become an ARCHITECT. Nobody becomes an architect because they think it sounds cool or they like to draw. There is a lot more to it and I think it needs to be a calling for you to even think you will experience any measurable success. Do you think you have what it takes to be an architect?

                                                                      The college years   

When I tell people who I knew I wanted to be an architect by the time I was 5 years old, they think how lucky that must have been! But am I really so lucky? There was a time when I thought I had made a terrible decision, and I found myself struggling with the classes and the time and effort required to just to keep pace with my peers. (but I think this story has a happy ending).

                 Design Studio: Top 10 Things you should know

Architecture school is all about the studio. Whether you are new to design studio or a seasoned pro, there are a few things that I thought I would share with all you that dispel some commonly accepted ideas of what architecture studio really requires from its attendees. I think you might be surprised to read a few things on this list but I promise that you will be better off for having read this list.




well decorated,ornamented Studio

 What makes you a designer?

As a practicing architect. not everything I do is big picture design. From the overall time I spend working in the office, very little is – but good architecture isn’t always about the big killer idea. I consider coordinating a project and the details of the construction of that project integral to a successful design.

Drawing like an Architect

I am living proof that you don’t have to draw well to be an architect. Having the ability to draw beautiful pictures doesn’t hurt but let’s pull the curtain back and be honest here for a minute … Architects communicate through their drawings – we aren’t making art. As architect Lou Kahn once famously said, “an artist can make a cart with square wheels, but an architect can’t.”

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How much money does an architect make?

Architects can make a great living but there is balance between money and happiness that must be found. This post contains a snapshot of some of the best places to work and what areas pay the highest salary for architects. Before anybody start whining and moaning about how architects are underpaid, let me tell you know that I don’t want to hear it. Teachers are underpaid.
The ‘Not so Sexy Side to Architecture’

There is a reality check coming for most graduating architecture students. Practicing architecture for 99.9% of The architects out there means something other than designing – at least what you might typically think design really means. The practice of architecture is more than sketching on trace paper, parti diagrams, deciding what pens to draw with, groupies, and last-minute trips to Vegas with the client. It means solving problems – sometimes incredibly mundane and uninspired – yet very important problems to the people who retain your services.
An Architect’s Tool Bag

To be an architect you must have specific tools to get the job done. Here is a look at the ones I use most often. Some (but not all) are clearly throw-backs tools that reflect the fact that I graduated from architecture school 20 years ago. Despite the fact that I am pretty good at AutoCAD, I didn’t put it on my list of tools. If I had made my list a little longer it probably would have showed up.

Monday 26 May 2014

Houses made from Houses

When designing, architects always use a pool of references - actively and passively. But what will be if architects not just use the image of a building but the real houses to create another object? Make houses from houses? Somehow like Colin Rowe and Fred Koetter in their book "Collage City" from 1978?

The publication "Konglomerate Häuser" presents a collection of design-variations created from 10 Munich houses. See the PDF preview of the book here.

KONGLOMERATE HÄUSER [aus zehn Münchner Bauten] Anekdotisches Entwerfen - dritter und letzter Teil: Aus den vorgegebenen Grundrissen von zehn Münchner Bauten galt es mit Hilfe von Militärprojektionen neue Häuser zu erdenken ...

Technische Universität München, Lehrstuhl für integriertes Bauen

Sunday 25 May 2014

Saturday 24 May 2014

Today's Freedom of Architects #001

Here are some photos of Het Eemhuis (2013) in Amersfoort, Netherlands, by Neutelings Riedijk Architects, photographed by Matthijs Borghgraef.
Eemhuis Amers foort by Neutuling Riedijk by Mattigs Borghgreaf, on Flicker


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Eemhuis Amers foort by Neutuling Riedijk by Mattigs Borghgreaf, on Flicker

Eemhuis Amers foort by Neutuling Riedijk by Mattigs Borghgreaf, on Flicker

Eemhuis Amers foort by Matthijs Borghgreaf, on Flicker