ArchiTalks #19: Dear Future Architects…
This
is the latest edition of the series where this group of architect bloggers post
on the same theme at the same time. All
the posts are linked below, please check them out.
My perspective
on this month’s theme is to speak to those who are thinking about architecture
as a career. Dispensing with the
obligatory “Don’t do it – run away!” comments many architects seem to make, I
hope to provide some lessons I learned over time. My very first experience as an architectural
student at Penn State lingers in my memory like a ubiquitous odor. In fact, the odor was part of it. The old buildings that were to be my home for
the next five years had an odor that really can't be described. It was something like a mix between paper
recycling plant and elementary school bathroom (I just described it, didn’t I?). What does this introductory paragraph have to
do with anything remotely related to the subject? Here is Lesson Number One: be patient.
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Penn State taught architecture in the ugliest, worst maintained buildings on campus. And we kind of liked it. |
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Penn State has a slightly newer building for building now. It does not smell like elementary school bathroom. |
Two
years ago I volunteered a day’s time to an architectural camp that Penn State
runs for students interested in architecture. What an idea: give someone a taste of their major before it consumes their life. It was great to see kids who may really excel in design. But it was also great to see the kids who now knew this wasn't to them at all! They now knew to refocus. When I was 18 I had no idea what it meant to be an architect. Prior to setting foot on campus, the only architect I knew was the dad on the Brady Bunch. And that is
Lesson Two: being an architect is
nothing like you see in TV or the movies.
The Fountainhead, Sleepless in Seattle, Indecent Proposal even (and
especially) How I Met Your Mother – don’t believe anything about how any of
these portray architects.
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The Penn State Architecture Camp, figuring it all out before they declare their majors. |
Architects
can get a bad rap for being egotistical and, well, jerks. The Fountainhead doesn’t help – the fiercely
egocentric Howard Roark, uncompromising and self-absorbed. George Costanza may have said, “Nothing is
higher than architect” when he pretended to be an architect on Seinfeld, but it
isn’t true. Lesson Three: get over
yourself. We have a plaque in our
office. It reads, “Work Hard and Be
Nice.” You will need to interact with
all sorts of people in the profession.
Code Officials, General Contractors, Engineers, Landscape Architect and
Site Superintendents. These people can
either be your advocate or your antagonist, depending on how you treat
them. And unless you’re independently
wealthy, you will be working for a client who is paying for the buildings you
will design. You will need to work
diligently for them to provide them with the best service you can. Your college experience will be difficult. Yes, your major might be harder than almost
any other undergraduate you will hang out with in school. Don’t let it go to your head. Because when you get out of school you will
feel like you know nothing. Mostly
because you don’t yet, and that is Lesson Number Four: Architects practice for a reason; it takes a
long time to acquire the skill sets necessary to be competent.
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Admittedly, the book would have fallen a little flat had Howard Roark just been a really nice guy. |
Zaha
Hadid passed away recently at the rather young age of 65. However all of the news articles reporting on
her life say she was just getting started.
And it is true. Twenty years ago
she was just emerging on the world scene – at the age of 45. Architects come into their own at about this
age. You learn by doing. You screw up.
You fix your screw ups. You have
to tell your client that you screwed up and how that costs money. This is all part of the curriculum of an
architectural practice. Frank Lloyd
Wright had some success as a younger man, but he designed Fallingwater in his
late 60’s and the Guggenheim Museum in his late 70’s up until his death at
91. Learning about architecture is about
experience, and it takes a lot of different skills to manage a good practice.
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Fallingwater - the world's most famous private residence, designed by a senior citizen. |
Lesson
Five: Architecture is not all about
sitting at “tilty desk (with) a big ruler.”
Drawing, whether it be on paper or on the computer, is certainly part of
it but it really accounts for a small percentage of what goes into producing
the documents required to build a building.
There are a lot of other technical tasks involved, like product
research, codes and engineering coordination.
But what surprised me most about the profession is the amount of
communication that goes into it. The
success of a building project really boils down to how well you ask questions
and answer questions. When first meeting
a client, you need to ask the right questions in order to come up with a successful
space program. You need to ask questions
of and answer questions from your engineers, product suppliers and consultants
to come up with a fully coordinated set of drawings. When permitting comes around, hopefully you
asked the Code Official the right questions before submitting and you can
answer all the questions you get back after permit submittal. And when issues arise on site, you will invariably
need to answer questions of intent to a contractor. When I started, email was not all that
widespread, especially in job trailers so we communicated on the phone much
more than today. Writing clearly and succinctly
(which seems to be the antithesis of a Common Core education) is key to
answering and asking questions today. I am
regularly surprised how bad some people are at this essential skill. Where did I attain this skill?
Back
at the beginning: in studio, during
design critiques. This is where architecture school can really
apply to the real world. Those who can
explain their ideas and designs clearly, ask the right questions of their
professors ahead of time and implement any actions necessary are more likely to
be successful in the architecture student’s final exam: the jury.
Knowing when to take criticism and when to argue your point of view in
the face of disagreement is a fine line.
Normally the better communicators will come out looking better. People we deal with in the profession are
often resistant to change. And change is
what architects do, essentially. We must
convince clients that the old way isn’t necessarily the right way; Code
Officials that our interpretation of the code is valid; contractors that what
we have drawn can be done. It’s like
defending your thesis all the time! We
need more good architects, those who can think on their feet after being sleep
deprived, under-nourished and slightly nauseated from that lingering odor in
the studio.
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Former student and current co-worker Dustin presenting his thesis in a jury. Photo Credit - Stephanie Swindle. |
Architecture
is a rewarding profession. It is a life
long journey of many different learning experiences, and school is only the beginning.
This post is part of the ArchiTalks series in which Bob Borson of Life of an Architect selects a theme and a group of us (architects who also blog) all post on the same day and promote each other’s blogs. This month’s theme is "Dear Future Architects…" A lot of other talented writers who also are architects are listed below and are worth checking out:
Enoch Sears - Business of Architecture (@businessofarch)
Dear Future Architects: A Confession
Bob Borson - Life of An Architect (@bobborson)
http://www.lifeofanarchitect.com/dear-future-architects-you-need-to-hear-this/
Marica McKeel - Studio MM (@ArchitectMM)
Dear Future Architects: 4 Perspectives
Lee Calisti, AIA - Think Architect (@LeeCalisti)
dear future architects
Evan Troxel - Archispeak Podcast / TRXL (@etroxel)
Dear Future Architects
Lora Teagarden - L² Design, LLC (@L2DesignLLC)
Dear Future Architects: 3 letters
Jeremiah Russell, AIA - ROGUE Architecture (@rogue_architect)
future architects: #architalks
Jes Stafford - MODwelling (@modarchitect)
Dear Future Architect, Listen Here
Eric T. Faulkner - Rock Talk (@wishingrockhome)
Dear Future Architect -- Remember Then
Michele Grace Hottel - Michele Grace Hottel, Architect (@mghottel)
"Dear Future Architects,"
Meghana Joshi - IRA Consultants, LLC (@MeghanaIRA)
Dear Future Architects..
Michael Riscica - Young Architect (@YoungArchitxPDX)
Dear Future Young Architects... Please Quit Screwing Around!?!!
Stephen Ramos - BUILDINGS ARE COOL (@sramos_BAC)
Dear Future Architects: Don't makes these 4 Mistakes
brady ernst - Soapbox Architect (@bradyernstAIA)
Dear Boy in the Plastic Bubble,
Michael LaValley - Evolving Architect (@archivalley)
Dear Future Architects, Be Authentic
Greg Croft - Sage Leaf Group (@croft_gregory)
Dear Future Architect,
Jared W. Smith - Architect OWL (@ArchitectOWL)
Dear Future Architects...
Keith Palma - Architect's Trace (@cogitatedesign)
Dear future architects, are you credible?
Adam Denais - Defragging Architecture (@DefragArch)
Dear Future Architect, a Letter to My Younger Self
Ken Saginario - Twelfth Street Studio ()
Dear Future Architects...
Brian Paletz - The Emerging Architect (@bpaletz)
Dear Future Architects
Emily Grandstaff-Rice - Emily Grandstaff-Rice FAIA (@egrfaia)
Dear Future Architects...
Anthony Richardson - That Architecture Student (@anth_rich)
Dear Future Anthony
Drew Paul Bell - Drew Paul Bell (@DrewPaulBell)
Dear Future Architects, Do Your Thing
Jeffrey A Pelletier - Board & Vellum (@boardandvellum)
Dear Future Architects, Don't Forget to Treat Your Clients with Respect
Kyu Young Kim - Palo Alto Design Studio (@sokokyu)
Dear Future Architects...
Rusty Long - Rusty Long, Architect (@rustylong)
Dear future architects, never lose your optimism