Duke said:
A lot of your points are valid, but I'm going to take exception to a number of them.
dean1484 said:
3. 99.9 percent send 3d cad drawings to me. Are the design schools that out of touch with the fact that 99.9 percent of design jobs never use any 3d at all? You may have a degree and you may be able to use 3d cad or Revit but that just makes you a glorified 3d line drawer. Can you generate a set of plans? And we won't even get in to project specifications. An AIA-based CSI spec. Never once mentioned in what is sent to me.
Speaking as an architect with about 30 years of very practical experience, we do 100% of our work in 3D and 3D with 2D detail drafting overlaid. We have for at least 10 years.
And I mean jobs like roof replacements, restroom renovations, everything, not just the fancy schmancy stuff. 100%. We pretty much insist our consulting engineers do too, except for the simplest of small jobs..It is so much easier when you can coordinate everything in 3D and when moving a wall in plan means it also moves in section. Whether you personally use it or not, 3D modeling is a critical skill for a young designer to demonstrate.
All the young Architects are out there crying that they don't have any work and no one will hire them. It is sad really. The schools are sucking these kids in with promises of granger and glory with mystical dreams of unlimited creativity with no constraints of time or budget. Then they get spit out into the real world and we that own Design firms look at them and there is no place for them in our businesses.
While I agree most design schools are failing students by not providing enough technical education, I disagree that the vision stuff is not important.
It's a 2-sided coin, or a double-edged sword. A fair amount of the technical knowledge A) comes with experience, and B) varies by not only the geographical location but the principal architect(s) of the firm. A firm needs to invest something in training their intern architects and bringing them up in the way they do things. To be worth that effort, the intern needs a balance of vision and practicality. I don't want technical school drafters who just know the rote details but can't see the bigger picture. I want to bring up someone who can conribute to design collaboration and understand what the end vision could be - if they're smart and have a grasp of the basics, I can teach them how to put a building - and a set of drawings together.
asd
Part of a letter I got from an applicant:
I cherish the synthetic role of the architect (working with means of expression and representation to overcome complexity).
Without forgetting the competitive aspect of our profession which I really appreciate. Dedicating oneself to an idea, imagining, strengthening, and enhancing it, until it becomes part of the built environment.
I understand that the current conjuncture is complicated.
What is this BS? If you are saying that the role of an architect is synthetic (fake) you have just insulted me and you have absolutely no clues as to what the job really involves.
Something else is his dream. The real role of an architect is to realize a client's dream. I have hated some of the things I have designed but it was exactly what my client wanted. My dreams as a designer don't matter. My client's dreams are what pay the bills. Realize your client's dreams and you will do very well.
His current conjecture is not complicated (again insulting the reader as if he is somehow superior) it is just crap
You're misunderstanding them here, because you're confusing some of the words used.
That being said, the words used are mostly pretentious twaddle, but you're not using the right meanings.
They're saying synthetic not as in "fake" but as in "synthesis"; i.e., taking different parts and fusing them into a greater whole.
Also, they're saying conjuncture, not "conjecture".
Conjuncture = a combination of events or a state of affairs. Now if it was me, I would have just used "situation" and moved on with the sentence. But they're not wrong.
I somewhat agree with your point about the client's dreams... but that could be the idea they are eager to dedicate themselves to.
You are completely correct.
Re the 3d stuff we use it but not for everything. A roof replacement just does not need it. An owner would look at me sideways if I suggested that I put a roof replacement design in 3d.
I don't know what to make of your assessment of what I quoted. You are better at the game than I am? I don't have time for all that. Tell me what you mean in simple terms. It works great with my clients and leads to far fewer misunderstandings.
I am much more from the blue color side of things so I tend to not be impressed by those kinds of things. Maybe in reality that applicant was way overqualified to work at my firm? I had not actually thought of that before but. . . .. Hummmm that is an interesting thing to ponder.