- Видео 730
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The Second Studio
США
Добавлен 29 апр 2017
The Second Studio is a podcast about design, architecture, and the everyday. The show features interviews with creative professionals; guides for designers and architects; design reviews of buildings, spaces, and other creative projects; and casual conversations about everyday life. Honesty and humor are used cover challenging subjects in long-format and unscripted discussions.
The show is hosted by the co-founders of FAME Architecture and Design, Architects David Bruce Lee and Marina Bouderonnet.
The Second Studio is available for free on iTunes, RUclips, Spotify, and all other Podcast directories.
www.secondstudiopod.com
The show is hosted by the co-founders of FAME Architecture and Design, Architects David Bruce Lee and Marina Bouderonnet.
The Second Studio is available for free on iTunes, RUclips, Spotify, and all other Podcast directories.
www.secondstudiopod.com
#427 - After Hours: Kid's Glue, Lunchables, Griffith Observatory, and the Peterson Automotive Museum
This week David and Marina have a casual chat about kid's glue, Lunchables, and visiting the Griffith Observatory and the Peterson Automotive Museum.
This episode is supported by Integrated Projects (hubs.ly/Q02sg70T0) • Enscape (enscape3d.com/?) • Autodesk Forma (www.autodesk.com/products/forma/overview?term=1-YEAR&tab=subscription&plc=SPCMKR&tab=subscription&plc=SPCMKR) & Autodesk Insight (www.autodesk.com/uk/products/insight/overview) • Programa (programa.design/secondstudio)
SUBSCRIBE • Apple Podcasts (podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-second-studio-design-and-architecture-show/id1223815551) • RUclips (ruclips.net/channel/UCUWyNdjf3Gu6_3gpwq9Yu2Q) • Spotify (open.spotify.com/show/3TVq5...
This episode is supported by Integrated Projects (hubs.ly/Q02sg70T0) • Enscape (enscape3d.com/?) • Autodesk Forma (www.autodesk.com/products/forma/overview?term=1-YEAR&tab=subscription&plc=SPCMKR&tab=subscription&plc=SPCMKR) & Autodesk Insight (www.autodesk.com/uk/products/insight/overview) • Programa (programa.design/secondstudio)
SUBSCRIBE • Apple Podcasts (podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-second-studio-design-and-architecture-show/id1223815551) • RUclips (ruclips.net/channel/UCUWyNdjf3Gu6_3gpwq9Yu2Q) • Spotify (open.spotify.com/show/3TVq5...
Просмотров: 101
Видео
#426 - Noah Walker, President & Owner of Walker Workshop
Просмотров 117День назад
This week David and Marina of FAME Architecture & Design (www.famearchitects.com/) are joined by Noah Walker, President & Owner of Walker Workshop (www.walkerworkshop.com/) . The three discussed Noah’s childhood and education; his early career; the Oak Pass project; Walker Workshop timeline; maintaining design integrity in design-build; benefits of design-build projects as an architecture-focus...
#426 - Noah Walker, President & Owner of Walker Workshop
Просмотров 196День назад
This week David and Marina of FAME Architecture & Design are joined by Noah Walker, President & Owner of Walker Workshop. The three discussed Noah’s childhood and education; his early career; the Oak Pass project; Walker Workshop timeline; maintaining design integrity in design-build; benefits of design-build projects as an architecture-focused firm; mixing architects with construction speciali...
#425 - What Makes a Building Beautiful?
Просмотров 18514 дней назад
#425 - What Makes a Building Beautiful?
#425 - What Makes A Building Beautiful?
Просмотров 51514 дней назад
#425 - What Makes A Building Beautiful?
#424 - Drew Lang, Founding Principal of Lang Studio and Founder of Brick & Wonder
Просмотров 10721 день назад
#424 - Drew Lang, Founding Principal of Lang Studio and Founder of Brick & Wonder
#424 - Drew Lang, Founding Principal of Lang Studio and Brick & Wonders
Просмотров 14221 день назад
#424 - Drew Lang, Founding Principal of Lang Studio and Brick & Wonders
#423 - Failures in Architecture & How to Avoid Them
Просмотров 683Месяц назад
#423 - Failures in Architecture & How to Avoid Them
#422 - Morgan Sykes Jaybush, Director of Hospitality Projects in Omgivning
Просмотров 94Месяц назад
#422 - Morgan Sykes Jaybush, Director of Hospitality Projects in Omgivning
#422 - Morgan Sykes Jaybush, Director of Hospitality Projects in Omgivning
Просмотров 178Месяц назад
#422 - Morgan Sykes Jaybush, Director of Hospitality Projects in Omgivning
#420 - Adam Brawer, Founder of Adam Brawer Estates
Просмотров 57Месяц назад
#420 - Adam Brawer, Founder of Adam Brawer Estates
#420 - Adam Brawer, Founder of Adam Brawer Estates
Просмотров 167Месяц назад
#420 - Adam Brawer, Founder of Adam Brawer Estates
#419 - Architecture Versus Art: Are They Different?
Просмотров 6772 месяца назад
#419 - Architecture Versus Art: Are They Different?
#417 - Executive Architect & Design Architect Roles Explained
Просмотров 6652 месяца назад
#417 - Executive Architect & Design Architect Roles Explained
#417 - Design Architect & Executive Architect Roles Explained
Просмотров 1512 месяца назад
#417 - Design Architect & Executive Architect Roles Explained
#416 - Jonathan Segal, FAIA Architect and Developer
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.2 месяца назад
#416 - Jonathan Segal, FAIA Architect and Developer
#416 - Jonathan Segal, FAIA Architect and Developer
Просмотров 1572 месяца назад
#416 - Jonathan Segal, FAIA Architect and Developer
#415 - After Hours: Events, Consumerism in Design, and Architecture by Non-Architects
Просмотров 2652 месяца назад
#415 - After Hours: Events, Consumerism in Design, and Architecture by Non-Architects
#414 - Kevin Hui, Founder & Director of Archimarathon
Просмотров 7253 месяца назад
#414 - Kevin Hui, Founder & Director of Archimarathon
#414 - Kevin Hui, Founder & Director of Archimarathon
Просмотров 1213 месяца назад
#414 - Kevin Hui, Founder & Director of Archimarathon
#413 - Client Advice: Working with An Architect
Просмотров 5013 месяца назад
#413 - Client Advice: Working with An Architect
#413 - Advice for Clients: Working with an Architect
Просмотров 2133 месяца назад
#413 - Advice for Clients: Working with an Architect
#412 - Muyiwa Oki, President of RIBA & Senior Architect at MACE
Просмотров 4673 месяца назад
#412 - Muyiwa Oki, President of RIBA & Senior Architect at MACE
#412 - Muyiwa Oki, President of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA)
Просмотров 1403 месяца назад
#412 - Muyiwa Oki, President of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA)
I laughed when you talked about how managing a model is a full time job. It can sometimes feel like you're the parent putting all the toys away at the end of a kid's party haha. Managing and creating components and managing the metadata in a file can be satisfying to us left-side brained people.
Surprised you didn’t discuss cost per SF. All of the architects I interviewed quoted me a cost per total SF of the design. I would not pay based on construction costs. That makes no sense to me. Then again, my architect will not be involved in the construction phase.
$/sf is a good one! We’ll have to talk about it in another recording. Although this is basically a version of fixed-fee, or a way to calc it. The amount can still be reverse calc'd to a % of construction number to compare one architect's fees to another. But, yes, the $/sf is common. FWIW I'd reconsider not having your architect do CA (of course, that's advice without me knowing what your project entails!)
@ My impression is my architect does not offer that service. I asked him if he would be involved in construction and he told me “no.” I did not press him. I actually met my builder before my architect. I just needed someone to design the house for me and provide the plans. We are about half way through the process. I reviewed my 3D video this week and will make some tweaks.
I'm actually doing my dissertation on this topic, impact of BIM on the art of architecture design. I'm a student in BA Arch now but worked in BIM for 8 years, and studied Arch Technology and Interior Design before. Anyway, I agree what you said especially about the unsuitability of BIM in the artistic sense of developing a concept design. I would say that BIM was centred around a data infused model but these days BIM is evolving to be about information collaboration and management, the model is becoming second place or at least equal. The other point is that although BIM is naturally associated with architecture design , I don't think it was specifically developed for the concept design stage, it was for the procurement stages of Schematic design and Detail Design. That said, existing creative tools like Sketchup and Rhino are what I would use at early stage, the BIM side would just be the efficient collaboration through the CDE (Common Data Environment) Anyway it's an interesting discussion😊
that's awesome. and well said. thx for sharing!
thank you for this important conversation!
thanks for all the great content. just starting on the journey of tearing down my childhood home and building a new one. i've listened to 6-7 of your podcasts so far and am learning so much.
wow! That's amazing. I'm sure it's a bittersweet process.I hope it all goes well
These recent podcast have really widened my perspective about what design-build really is. I also liked how Noah articulated his thoughts around his firms design process. I would like a bit more of an explanation about the conceptual approach to design Noah mentioned, this topic still seems a bit elusive to me, and I’d like to know how successful architects integrate it into their process. Great podcast.
45:29 - the design process
17:32 If they were talking about the building being beautiful (facade wise, massing wise, etc) , then honestly yes it is relative. Of course, it also depends on how they come across with it. If they demanded the use of these principles in every design killing the freedom of thinking outside of them then that’s where I would disagree with them. However, if they recommended the use of these principles with design suggestions that would provide visual pleasure for the facade, or massing, then that’s relative to Architecture. While I agree that there’s still no objective rule to follow that would automatically make something beautiful, it doesn’t mean that the consideration of these principles while designing something during certain situations has nothing to do with Architecture.
Interesting topics and discussion. It resonates with some of Thomas Heatherwick's manifesto "Humanize" so not sure if either of you have been influenced/inspired by his studio's practice. As for favorite building, that a tough one as I concur with architecture centering on emotion so it like picking you favorite song or book. But if I had to pick on at this moment I would choice another Piano masterpiece, the Jean-Marie Tjibaou Cultural Centre in New Caledonia.
Haven't read Humanize. I think heatherwick's work is only interesting because it's atypical. My personal (david) take is his work feels like that of a 2nd yr undergrad architecture student. it lacks finesse. That said, in the grand scheme of all buildings, it's impressive! The caledonia project is a great one. Haven't seen it in person tho... maybe some day.
I could not agree with you more Marina, Architecture is the projection and solicitation of emotion.
An interesting discussion! Our current practice of architecture requires a delicate balance of implementing the principles of design while also listening to client biases (which at times contradict our professional understanding of architectural aesthetics).
99.9% of residential plans givin out by an architect are incomplete. They are missing plumbing, electrical pages, and specifications. I have reviewed and bid on hundreds of plans. In the commercial sector, it is different. The median (not the lower half) of general contractors will hire or work with an architect and a designer as the budget permits. Most Architects will design a customer right out of the customers budget. Then the mistakes the architect make fall om the General contractors shoulders to correct. Yhe architect will miss important items such as hvac chases, variations in wall thicknesses for plumbing, lack of clearances around doors for proper door swing and for trim clearances. Should you hire any general contractor to handle design, NO but the median or above should be competent and a good General Contractor will far exceed 99.9% of residential Architect.
sounds like you've worked with some bad architects! to be fair to some of them, i know they often struggle to get the fee they need to do the work you're describing - not an excuse, but I've heard this many times. Great point that commercial very different. Residential is the wild west, full of shoddy professionals (both arch and contractor), making it tough for clients (and frankly, tough for the 'good' professionals). Disagree about hiring a GC for design tho. Most I know couldn't design more than a box cuz they aren't trained to.
This is an awesome platform would love to have you on our podcast sometime
Cool! Message us hello@secondstudiopod.com
Man life is tough, a student here with a stresk of over half a month of pulling all nighters this semester alone. They really killing us slowly, and my final jury submission is tomorrow, 1 day after another submission 2 days after another submission and 2 days agter snother and then 5 days left only for the finals, if i ever die before 50, the reason is these all nighters
those all nighters will for sure due some damage to the body. stay hydrated!!! :b Seriously tho. drink water.
I had no idea too. 😢
If I may play devils advocate? Isn’t intense dedication a contradiction to healthy work life balance? If architecture school is the introductory experience to professional practice, and schools claim to be concerned with mental / physical health and fair compensation, then should this process start in school? How can students develop a healthy relationship to their work if they are overburdened with information and assignments on a shortened time frame? As always, I REALLY value your podcast and your expertise in the field. And thanks for interviewing landscape architects as well as interior architects.
It's a super fine line. I think the line needs to be crossed to know where it is. I also think, there will inevitably be situations where you need to push yourself passed a healthy point, and knowing what that feels like so you can manage it, is useful.
You are really speaking the truth. All these needs to be adjusted immediately 😢
@@chiomaoweazim4286 Unfortunately, I don’t see this happening anytime soon, because the faculty at any architecture schools went through the same grueling process, therefore their students have to as well. It’s unhealthy reciprocity and it doesn’t REALLY make sense. I think this is why students are burning out after school and are choosing to take their skills into other creative professions.
17:05 I can completely relate. Somehow I thought my concept was the most important part of a project. Almost as if THAT is what I was supposed to be refining and presenting at the final critique. I would get very philosophical and diagrammatic in explaining what I thought were revolutionary ideas, and completely lack in supportive drawings to present the actual building. Unfortunately, in later years, I got really good at cramming all of the technical requirements in during the last week or two before final crit, and I formed a terrible habit of over emphasizing conceptual ideas and racing through the brief requirements with a handful of all-nighters. I'm still trying to correct this habit with time management and calendaring tasks like you've mentioned. I also feel that bit of rage against the professors who had no idea how to put a building together. I still hold the belief that academia needs to better prepare students for life after school through actual real-world practice problem solving.
Never Never pay an Architect a percentage of total cost to build. If any Architect even mentions it, Just get up and walk away. If on the phone just hang up the phone.
what makes you say that?
Model: DGC68001BRWS Has this ever happened to you? There is a buzzing sound and then "Miele" displays then black then "Miele" then a white streak then black repeat. What is the fix? This is the 3rd time this oven has failed and maybe I just need to get something different. I wrote directly to miele but never have much luck with their CS, even when under warranty. I would just like to know if it is worth it to have someone out.
Lol i watched this once when i was in school going thru it and again just now, having since graduated, and it's still relevant. It's hilarious and interesting and very honest that you guys mention the contradictions of architecture, then proceed to attempt to explain it (which I thought ended up being exactly what it needed to be; as thorough as it was complicated) by inevitably contradicting yourselves. Architecture is a VERY dualist profession at its core, which is what makes it both lustfully intriguing and absurdly difficult. It's a rollercoaster of ups and downs but imo that's what makes it a career worth doing, it can always put up a good fight if your brave enough to walk it down 😆👊 i enjoyed the dual perspectives you both gave, coming from an empathetic view and making your way to the tough love -- that David Goggins type of 'just shut up and work' very endearing charm lol
I hope rewatching didn't cause any PTSD :b Goggins is crazy. But he's a good reference for extreme dedication!
Woooooowwwwwwwwww! I'm amazed, impressed, surprised and struck at the same time.. That's a well put sentence.
Yup! I would rather focus on creating big design ideas than focusing on graphic design presentation. Client's focus on their space not your presentation
Design development is tedious work and a lot of thinking
I really enjoyed this interview.Leo Marmol,is fascinating!
Great podcast as always 👏
Thanks for the kind words!
Thank you for the excerpt, I am learning on the job as an architect now.
really apreciate this video, thank you very much
Thank you watching!
This was awesome, im not an architect but a landscape designer and this chat helps a lot
Awesome to hear that :)
Great pod! One thing that has always bothered me is realtor fees compared to architectural fees. I am an architect in SoCal and constantly see realtors making 6% on home sales and architects making 10% on construction costs. Most homes that I work on the construction cost is 3-4M, the sale price though is typically 5-6M. Essentially our fee is the same as a realtor but the work is vastly different.
I completely agree... Of course we probably sound biased because we are architects! But yes, the amount of work and value add is completely different.
AMF Voit at some point around the 1970's owned Harley Davidson
Enjoyed this
Glad to hear it :)
Industrial design and architecture are actually very similar. I have concepts on architecture that uses industrial design thinking. I can’t do them on sites because I would need an architect’s license to do it. Now I know why some architectural firms are looking for industrial designers. Didn’t know when I was talking to one architect.
It’d be interesting to see to see you guys talk to Paul Basile
I would simply represent Art and Architecture as two independent but intersecting circles both with common cord elements and both with unique elements. One does not fully encompass the others yet one can incorporate the other
Well said!
Let's be very clear. Architecture is not Fine Arts.... I learnt the hard way.... Many of the Architects are fine artists also, but that doesn't mean that the knowledge of Fine Arts can be put into such a real time practical field like Architecture.... Nope!!! It won't suit. Art is a tool, not a solution. It stays closeted....
I completely agree, i like the last line. Art is a tool not a solution, which leads us to the thought that architecture is far more complicated and affects our day to day life
this is an awesome take.
Religions could all be toned down, let's be honest...
ROFL
👍
Also - forma seems to miss a extremely important phase in environmental calculation - the disassembly of the building and of its materials when the building’s life has ended
That would be a cool addition. Still, Forma is a great starting point for many
@@secondstudiopodWe have this in Denmark with the program called LcaBYG. Also, great show as always!
I think its important to be skeptical of these ”AI companies”, if what he says is correct then it is fairly impressive yes. Though the generative facades.. what does that have to do with anything else that the program offers? Seems like bloated AI feature to me
I worked with architecture students. Wtf are they doing all day. They showed me like 10 projects they did. All simple shoe box designs. And for that you get bachelor's degree. Lost all respect after that for that profession. I respect and love old architecture but the modern designs mostly suck ass big time. In a lecture a professor even said that the architect profession will die out in the next 50 years.
yikes
😂 it's excruciating haha!
Sorry you may have covered it partly in the video, but let's say an executive architect discovers a functional flaw in the design architect's plan, and they notify them, but the design architect pushes back and insists that it stays true to their original plan; If its built and the flaw causes a failure in the building as time goes on, is the executive architect liable for the damaged caused? Think I saw Jonathan Segal mention a legal case between him and a developer where the liability issue was a similar scenario.
When you say functional flaw, it sounds like you mean a construction-related issue, if that's the case, then yes, the AOR would be responsible, not the design architect. If you were the AOR, I suppose you could have the design architect sign a pass-down agreement that states the design architect would be liable for any issues should they arise... but that would be very atypical and realistically might not work. Ultimately, the AOR signature and stamp on the drawings, so they are responsible. The contractor would also likely push back pretty hard if a detail was that bad.
@@secondstudiopod Thanks for the insight! Seeing examples of famous residential properties having to be updated & repaired every so often to keep them functioning, always wondered where the liability lies
Can you clarify what u mean? I don’t think he said the cost of building is the same as the sale price. I don’t if understand how building permit fees don’t add to the overall project cost…. I mean, of course they do.
This guy is a liar !......the price of building is NOT the price of sale ...so Building permit fees don't add to the price in real terms....the super hot market place is the reason for the season Don't stupid and listen to this nonsense !
Can you clarify what u mean? I don’t think he said the cost of building is the same as the sale price. I don’t if understand how building permit fees don’t add to the overall project cost…. I mean, of course they do
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I mean, sometimes residential clients don't really understand what they're meant to do. It's easy to forget they've often never done this before
Such a good point. We are constantly trying to remind ourselves of that. It's hard sometimes especially when you're lost in the work!
such bad influence... all his projects get criticized for being bad for architecture
He’s a huge proponent for empowering architects, what better of an influence do you need? His architecture sells so it just not be that bad. You don’t have to do the same style he does, but you have to respect his approach to entrepreneurship.
troll
criticized by who? do I care, no
Architecture is unique like that. Similarly in fields like law, the service provider will hold some accountability for keeping clients on track, on a regular basis. But this level of consultancy and management must come at a cost. We are starting to discover the true value architects provide in terms of design for homeowner/business owners/developer’s investments. The architect’s fee needs to reflect this level of input for the output.
Jonathan Segal is a gdamn beast, holy smokes.
Great episode. I had Kevin for a few design crits back about 10 years ago. Shocked to learn of the death of the studio at Australian universities, but sadly I've confirmed this with some of my colleagues in our office who graduated more recently.
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻