Man this is really impressive! I am going to show this to my teacher as soon as possible when i reach my final project. Now we need a full video showing your process of ideias, digital modeling and pos production. I am really intersting about the sofwares and how you organize your storytelling as well your planks. What a job!
thank you for your kind words mate 👏🏼 I am looking to make some workshops in regards to my drawing process and portfolio building so keep your eyes peeled for those!
wow this is so cool! im still a first year student so i had no clue what this was about when you first introduced the drawings. But your way of explaining is very easy to understand, and i learned alot. thank you!
Congratulations on the job! I'm an architect in Brazil and I follow some UK architecture students' RUclips channels 'cause I'm interested in doing a master's degree in London someday. A doubt that I always have: at the university, is there little discussion about building standards and laws? You always talk a lot about the creative process, design decisions, parti, concept... but rarely about the construction laws of the project site that will actually give guidelines of what can and cannot be done... as well as norms of accessibility, fire brigade, health surveillance, municipal building code, etc... Of course, project design is super important, but as I only see videos talking about it, it ends up looking like you don't study the practical part of the profession, which is actually knowing the means of how to make the theory (project) come to life and be built. at the end of the day it seems that the architecture course for you there in the uk is something more artistic, something more experimental. Is that right? here in Brazil, we can venture out and create things, but we always have to keep our feet on the ground, because the teacher will always want to know how we are going to build that and if it will be physically and legally possible...
You don't really do building regs etc at university. The tutors don't have a clue about it. If you do you will be marked down for being too realistic. Don;t waste your money at university unless you have to.
@@Foster_The_Wild well, here in Brazil we study a lot about building standards in civil construction. After all, what would be the point of me designing a 50-story building only to find out later that the master plan does not allow a building of that height in that area of the city, or that the fire department makes certain demands such as emergency exits, escape routes, cloistered stair case, which will disturb the volume of my building... construction standards must go hand in hand with the building design process... it's important to know what I can't do, to know what I can do and where I can go without having to go back on project decisions due to lack of information and planning
We have architectural technicians for this roll. Architects in UK are just designers and their salary reflects that. Unless you work in a small company like myself where you learn to be both, but university won't teach you. I agree with you, architects should know more, but UK just don't teach it. It's a failure.
@@Foster_The_Wild this is crazy.. especially considering how long it takes to get the RIBA part 3. Because of the university education I had here, I can't even think about design without thinking about standards and legislation. It's part of my creative process to know what the public bodies say I can or can't do... it's impossible to ignore that, it even makes it seem like it stops being architecture and goes to The Sims where imagination accepts everything haha
Firstly, thank you! A lot of the journey that I have documented on this channel has been my design project and all of the creative expression, design logic, experimentation etc as this is the side of studying that I find the most interesting and enjoy! however we do have a module called strategic report that aims to look at our projects in regards to procurement, stakeholders, laws, policies, fire regs, lifecycle, materials, building processes etc - this aims to tackle some of the topics that you mention above, however this is more of an afterthought and doesn’t necessarily drive the design of the project we also have a technical report that details up our projects and describes materiality, sourcing materials, transportation of materials, building processes, sustainability decisions etc so whilst architecture in the UK is very design driven and encourages a more creative approach of looking at a project, we also have modules that aims to cover some of the more important topics when coming to build a building 👈🏼
Fantastic video! 👏 Thank you for taking the time to explain your project and the design process behind it, I love how it all came together at the end. Congratulations and best of luck Tom!
I've been watching your posts on instagram and i was so confused about the first part which was abstract and about mechanical mouvements...etc now i get it ! thanx a lot for presenting your project to us, it was really inspiring, wish you the best of luck in your post graduation career.
Brilliant work!, just curious of how your undergraduate degree differed in terms of style to your masters degree? just finished an undergraduate degree trying to find a part and very curious of the level expected for Masters degree stage.
Man this is really impressive! I am going to show this to my teacher as soon as possible when i reach my final project. Now we need a full video showing your process of ideias, digital modeling and pos production. I am really intersting about the sofwares and how you organize your storytelling as well your planks. What a job!
thank you for your kind words mate 👏🏼 I am looking to make some workshops in regards to my drawing process and portfolio building so keep your eyes peeled for those!
wow this is so cool! im still a first year student so i had no clue what this was about when you first introduced the drawings. But your way of explaining is very easy to understand, and i learned alot. thank you!
Crazy how I watched you years ago and just randomly seen one of you old vids and see where you are now and congrats
It’s not often people breakdown their projects,it really helps!
i’m glad you found it useful 👏🏼
Congratulations on the job!
I'm an architect in Brazil and I follow some UK architecture students' RUclips channels 'cause I'm interested in doing a master's degree in London someday.
A doubt that I always have: at the university, is there little discussion about building standards and laws?
You always talk a lot about the creative process, design decisions, parti, concept... but rarely about the construction laws of the project site that will actually give guidelines of what can and cannot be done... as well as norms of accessibility, fire brigade, health surveillance, municipal building code, etc...
Of course, project design is super important, but as I only see videos talking about it, it ends up looking like you don't study the practical part of the profession, which is actually knowing the means of how to make the theory (project) come to life and be built.
at the end of the day it seems that the architecture course for you there in the uk is something more artistic, something more experimental. Is that right?
here in Brazil, we can venture out and create things, but we always have to keep our feet on the ground, because the teacher will always want to know how we are going to build that and if it will be physically and legally possible...
You don't really do building regs etc at university. The tutors don't have a clue about it. If you do you will be marked down for being too realistic. Don;t waste your money at university unless you have to.
@@Foster_The_Wild well, here in Brazil we study a lot about building standards in civil construction.
After all, what would be the point of me designing a 50-story building only to find out later that the master plan does not allow a building of that height in that area of the city, or that the fire department makes certain demands such as emergency exits, escape routes, cloistered stair case, which will disturb the volume of my building...
construction standards must go hand in hand with the building design process...
it's important to know what I can't do, to know what I can do and where I can go without having to go back on project decisions due to lack of information and planning
We have architectural technicians for this roll. Architects in UK are just designers and their salary reflects that. Unless you work in a small company like myself where you learn to be both, but university won't teach you. I agree with you, architects should know more, but UK just don't teach it. It's a failure.
@@Foster_The_Wild this is crazy.. especially considering how long it takes to get the RIBA part 3.
Because of the university education I had here, I can't even think about design without thinking about standards and legislation. It's part of my creative process to know what the public bodies say I can or can't do... it's impossible to ignore that, it even makes it seem like it stops being architecture and goes to The Sims where imagination accepts everything haha
Firstly, thank you! A lot of the journey that I have documented on this channel has been my design project and all of the creative expression, design logic, experimentation etc as this is the side of studying that I find the most interesting and enjoy!
however we do have a module called strategic report that aims to look at our projects in regards to procurement, stakeholders, laws, policies, fire regs, lifecycle, materials, building processes etc - this aims to tackle some of the topics that you mention above, however this is more of an afterthought and doesn’t necessarily drive the design of the project
we also have a technical report that details up our projects and describes materiality, sourcing materials, transportation of materials, building processes, sustainability decisions etc
so whilst architecture in the UK is very design driven and encourages a more creative approach of looking at a project, we also have modules that aims to cover some of the more important topics when coming to build a building 👈🏼
Your insane man, incredible job.
🙌🏼🙌🏼 thank you
Fantastic video! 👏
Thank you for taking the time to explain your project and the design process behind it, I love how it all came together at the end.
Congratulations and best of luck Tom!
thank you so much 🤝🏻 i appreciate your support
I've been watching your posts on instagram and i was so confused about the first part which was abstract and about mechanical mouvements...etc now i get it ! thanx a lot for presenting your project to us, it was really inspiring, wish you the best of luck in your post graduation career.
I’m glad it makes a bit more sense now! it’s quite a unique approach but all came together in the end 🤝🏻
This is incredible bro.
I LOVE YOU MAN 🖤
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Brilliant work!, just curious of how your undergraduate degree differed in terms of style to your masters degree? just finished an undergraduate degree trying to find a part and very curious of the level expected for Masters degree stage.
masterpiece
🤝🏻🤝🏻
Great
amazing project iam realy amazed by the concept i wanted to ask what software u used for modeling and presentation
thank you 🤝🏻 I use rhino, illustrator, photoshop and indesign - i have a course coming very soon which breaks down my drawing process
@@ThomasRowntree I will be waiting it on fire
What is your template size?