Listen on the go, available on Apple Podcasts - apple.co/3MCK7hq, Spotify - spoti.fi/45eT5ci, RUclips Music - bit.ly/uhstudiopodcast or wherever else you may listen to podcasts. Search for UH Studio Architecture
nice insight, it could be my reflection on my career. I am in my 8 month of freelance after resigning. yes as an entrepreneur we need to reach out to the project. and hear what society needs as a solution and innovation, architecture is one of the parts of it. when you say Philadelphia criteria of the project, it's like my home here in Lamongan. people tend to trust design-build practices (even a handyman), and as local architects, we need to adapt if we want to swim in it. but for a global opportunity, we need to have unique value to emerge like you do. hope I can learn a lot from you
I truly agree. A.I. is looming on the horizon in the architecture world. Not that it will replace an architect as far as I can tell, but it will certainly carve into the services provided. Architects should embrace A.I. and find ways to have it complement their jobs and the service they provide. Presentations is a big part of architeccture and A.I. could certainly help here.
Quite harsh - with this many varied skills you need to make it through to the diploma, it turns out that you're just at the level of any no-degree-required employee
I am not sure what you are referring to. Generally, people pay for experience and vision. Universities help with both. Work helps with experience. As for vision, well some people have it, some prefer other aspects of the profession. Potential clients seek out competency gained from experiences and sometimes a vision, but not a particular single experience or degree qualification.
@@UHStudio All true! Just that, at least from my experience, it is really hard to make any degree of 'vision' or even certain niche skills like computational design matter at all when you are straight from school. By default most of us start work as a disposable CAD monkey, earning often less than a beginner shared services cog (been there...). To me, getting that self-development and branding strategy right, to keep developing those skills and to ultimately make them work for me, has always been the biggest challenge that takes a skillset I was never thinking of as a student. Awesome though that at least you can have a shot with some free software 😍 Thanks a lot for your wholesome content!! Never fails to inspire :)
Listen on the go, available on Apple Podcasts - apple.co/3MCK7hq, Spotify - spoti.fi/45eT5ci, RUclips Music - bit.ly/uhstudiopodcast or wherever else you may listen to podcasts. Search for UH Studio Architecture
nice insight, it could be my reflection on my career. I am in my 8 month of freelance after resigning. yes as an entrepreneur we need to reach out to the project. and hear what society needs as a solution and innovation, architecture is one of the parts of it.
when you say Philadelphia criteria of the project, it's like my home here in Lamongan. people tend to trust design-build practices (even a handyman), and as local architects, we need to adapt if we want to swim in it. but for a global opportunity, we need to have unique value to emerge like you do. hope I can learn a lot from you
I truly agree. A.I. is looming on the horizon in the architecture world. Not that it will replace an architect as far as I can tell, but it will certainly carve into the services provided. Architects should embrace A.I. and find ways to have it complement their jobs and the service they provide. Presentations is a big part of architeccture and A.I. could certainly help here.
...and that neverending subject has started my weekend ))
My architecture class started with 144 students and about 54 graduated from the 6 year program including an MArch degree
Yes it's a tough cut
👌Was elaborate
thank you
Quite harsh - with this many varied skills you need to make it through to the diploma, it turns out that you're just at the level of any no-degree-required employee
I am not sure what you are referring to. Generally, people pay for experience and vision. Universities help with both. Work helps with experience. As for vision, well some people have it, some prefer other aspects of the profession. Potential clients seek out competency gained from experiences and sometimes a vision, but not a particular single experience or degree qualification.
@@UHStudio All true! Just that, at least from my experience, it is really hard to make any degree of 'vision' or even certain niche skills like computational design matter at all when you are straight from school. By default most of us start work as a disposable CAD monkey, earning often less than a beginner shared services cog (been there...). To me, getting that self-development and branding strategy right, to keep developing those skills and to ultimately make them work for me, has always been the biggest challenge that takes a skillset I was never thinking of as a student.
Awesome though that at least you can have a shot with some free software 😍
Thanks a lot for your wholesome content!! Never fails to inspire :)