Welcome to week 7 of my architectural unemployment. I have since applied to 15 jobs that matched my exact qualifications and have gotten no response. I think my resume and portfolio are pretty great. I scour the internet trying to find other people in my position with similar skills and portfolios to compare myself to. There aren't a ton, especially in LA, of female 6+ years experience types. I'd love to meet one.
Everyone always wants to know what I do in my spare time so here goes:
1. I started reading books and only books that have been made into movies.
2. Painting (but not enough).
3. Tennis (waiting for rackets from amazon in the mail)
4. Thinking about travelling but have not taken the plunge into booking anything
5. Meeting friends as much as possible
6. Applying to jobs, obsessing about my resume and portfolio, revising over and over again
7. Going to the park with the dogs
8. Expanding my Revit skills with tutorials
I think that's good for now.
Architectural Decline
Monday, February 18, 2013
Monday, January 21, 2013
Cookie cutter McMansion
http://www.eplans.com/house-
Check out this link. They have tons of pre-planned designs for your new dream home. Why would you want to live in someone's USED home when you can build a new dream home of your own? This is obviously contributing to the decline of architecture. This is inevitable. A computer can design a nice plan with just a few chosen parameters. Who needs architects?
My short answer would be clients that care about personality, individuality, and a belief that they are not cookie cutter mold human beings. Architecture is not for everyone.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Architectural Decline
Welcome to Architectural Decline - where I write about my third stint in unemployment as a now architect.
I had an employer ask me "why do I have 3 different jobs in 6 years on my resume". My answer "the economy and bankrupt developers". If I had it my way I would be at the same desk I was in right out of school. I'd be in a project manager position or something well paying. But I'm stuck in this top of the bottom job level. And it's not my fault.
So being that this is the third time I do consider myself an expert. So I would like to share some advice on what helps along the way. You see I was able to regain employment twice now.
2009. The year of the great recession. This was only the beginning. I worked for a large firm focusing on educational building and master planning. Boom. Lost funding for projects. Projects in progress were stopped. My job was stopped. They pulled me into the conference room. I thought it was the worst day of my life. Little did I know it was not the last worst day of my life.
I applied to every office in LA, every wanted ad I came across and talked to every colleague I could contact. I gave up for a while and figured I would just ride out the recession, thinking it wouldn't last forever. For me it lasted 9 months. I took a job in a one woman office (I was the only employee). It was close quarters and she didn't like to listen to 'bangy' music (which pretty much included all music at an audible volume) or open the windows for air, or use the a/c. That was just the beginning. I took the job after being desperate for 9 months and I was proud and happy to be working again, aside from all the negative aspects. It lasted a good 2 years. I decided that my sanity needed some relief, so I opened the window and flew like a bird, with nothing to fall back on.
My second unemployment lasted 4 months. I used this time to complete my ARE exams. I also remodeled my boyfriend's loft. I designed, got permits, and sat in my home while dust and saws and ranchero music played downstairs where the work was going on.
I only looked for 2 days and found a great job. A smallish firm in mid-city with a great design portfolio. This lasted a year. The developer who funded all our projects (of course) folded. That was it. Again.
And so I find myself, again, looking for a new job. Upon hearing the news of my unemployment I immediately scheduled my final exam. I am now an architect. Some good that does. I have also re-versed myself in all things Revit and will do anything I need to do to make myself more sellable.
So advice to fellow unemployed architects or architects-to-be:
1. Finish all those tests. Get licensed. Why not?
2. Learn any software you never had the time for. Make a fake project. Use it as much as possible.
3. Call everyone you know and figure out who they are connected to and who might be able to help you. (Try linkedin)
More advice to come in post 2 - until I get a job. And then I should hope that I have even better advice, because I will have overcome this lull in my career, again.
I had an employer ask me "why do I have 3 different jobs in 6 years on my resume". My answer "the economy and bankrupt developers". If I had it my way I would be at the same desk I was in right out of school. I'd be in a project manager position or something well paying. But I'm stuck in this top of the bottom job level. And it's not my fault.
So being that this is the third time I do consider myself an expert. So I would like to share some advice on what helps along the way. You see I was able to regain employment twice now.
2009. The year of the great recession. This was only the beginning. I worked for a large firm focusing on educational building and master planning. Boom. Lost funding for projects. Projects in progress were stopped. My job was stopped. They pulled me into the conference room. I thought it was the worst day of my life. Little did I know it was not the last worst day of my life.
I applied to every office in LA, every wanted ad I came across and talked to every colleague I could contact. I gave up for a while and figured I would just ride out the recession, thinking it wouldn't last forever. For me it lasted 9 months. I took a job in a one woman office (I was the only employee). It was close quarters and she didn't like to listen to 'bangy' music (which pretty much included all music at an audible volume) or open the windows for air, or use the a/c. That was just the beginning. I took the job after being desperate for 9 months and I was proud and happy to be working again, aside from all the negative aspects. It lasted a good 2 years. I decided that my sanity needed some relief, so I opened the window and flew like a bird, with nothing to fall back on.
My second unemployment lasted 4 months. I used this time to complete my ARE exams. I also remodeled my boyfriend's loft. I designed, got permits, and sat in my home while dust and saws and ranchero music played downstairs where the work was going on.
I only looked for 2 days and found a great job. A smallish firm in mid-city with a great design portfolio. This lasted a year. The developer who funded all our projects (of course) folded. That was it. Again.
And so I find myself, again, looking for a new job. Upon hearing the news of my unemployment I immediately scheduled my final exam. I am now an architect. Some good that does. I have also re-versed myself in all things Revit and will do anything I need to do to make myself more sellable.
So advice to fellow unemployed architects or architects-to-be:
1. Finish all those tests. Get licensed. Why not?
2. Learn any software you never had the time for. Make a fake project. Use it as much as possible.
3. Call everyone you know and figure out who they are connected to and who might be able to help you. (Try linkedin)
More advice to come in post 2 - until I get a job. And then I should hope that I have even better advice, because I will have overcome this lull in my career, again.
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