- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Who here is an Architect?
Posted on 7/27/23 at 6:15 pm to CBandits82
Posted on 7/27/23 at 6:15 pm to CBandits82
I am an architect. LSU grad. Own a company in NC doing residential architecture. For the most part, it is great. I think it is because I am doing work in the mountains for clients who appreciate design, which is quite rewarding. The lead up to where I am was not as enjoyable. I worked in NOLA for several years, and the disadvantage business owner mafia and the Neanderthals that ran permitting offices in Louisiana were exhausting. Not to mention just about every job ended in some sort of litigation.
Also every teacher in every architecture school in america is a woke commie. Luckily, there are still loopholes to allow licensure without having to go to school, so if my kids want to take over, there is a path for them to do so without having to be subjected to the insanity of architecture school communist indoctrination.
Also every teacher in every architecture school in america is a woke commie. Luckily, there are still loopholes to allow licensure without having to go to school, so if my kids want to take over, there is a path for them to do so without having to be subjected to the insanity of architecture school communist indoctrination.
Posted on 7/27/23 at 6:38 pm to CBandits82
Im an architect. Its a real grind. Takes years to really feel
Like you have a firm grasp of most of it yet i still have unknowns every single day. Alot of wide-ranging skills needed (software, contracts, codes, management, design skill, etc). Alot of design is driven by overly tight budgets and rushed schedules which makes really captivating design often not completely realistic. Unless you are at a giant firm in a giant city,
But those jobs have their own drawbacks. It’s hypersensitive to economy too.
Having said all that, if you have the ability and skill set it is a wonderful career. The pay starts too low but as experience builds it gets better relatively quickly.
Once you get alot of experience (and license) alot of alternative career paths open up (ex: facility directors, etc).
All in all its good. I think most people out there have complaints about their chosen profession. Really nothing is perfect.
If maximizing your salary potential is hugely important to you over day to day nature of what you are doing, get an engineering degree over architecture.
Like you have a firm grasp of most of it yet i still have unknowns every single day. Alot of wide-ranging skills needed (software, contracts, codes, management, design skill, etc). Alot of design is driven by overly tight budgets and rushed schedules which makes really captivating design often not completely realistic. Unless you are at a giant firm in a giant city,
But those jobs have their own drawbacks. It’s hypersensitive to economy too.
Having said all that, if you have the ability and skill set it is a wonderful career. The pay starts too low but as experience builds it gets better relatively quickly.
Once you get alot of experience (and license) alot of alternative career paths open up (ex: facility directors, etc).
All in all its good. I think most people out there have complaints about their chosen profession. Really nothing is perfect.
If maximizing your salary potential is hugely important to you over day to day nature of what you are doing, get an engineering degree over architecture.
Posted on 7/27/23 at 7:44 pm to pbro62
quote:
The architects that I work with generally seem OK with their job, but people that are interested in becoming architects need to realize that the job is mostly meeting codes, coordinating with disciplines/owner, not going over project budget, meetings, etc. A lot of boring shite, and not a lot of artistic building design.
This is where a filmmaker like myself comes in an woos them to set design for film. Even junior set designers make $3000 a week starting out and they eventually move up to Sr set designer or Art Director. I haven't met one that has gone back to that grind.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 2:18 am to THRILLHO
I wonder how much the big boys at populas/hok make. I work with them all the time.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 3:00 am to Duckhammer_77
I’m an engineer and used to work with another engineer who pronounced the first syllable of architect as you would pronounce the first syllable of Archie.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 4:22 am to Duckhammer_77
quote:
I'm out hustling work & clients so the "poor guys" can stay employed
Keep it up. We poor estimators, PM's and supt's need to eat as well and we need to have you landing projects and sending out drawings and specs to do our take-offs and submit our bids!
Posted on 7/28/23 at 5:33 am to CBandits82
Landscape architect, LSU, 20+ years.
Finding a firm with a good culture is very important. It is a deadline driven industry, but not all of them are sweat shops.
Finding a firm with a good culture is very important. It is a deadline driven industry, but not all of them are sweat shops.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 6:08 am to CBandits82
A senior architecture major was the best roommate I ever had. Poor bastard was never home because he was always working in his studio until after midnight.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 6:36 am to BigPerm30
quote:
What the frick does this even mean?
It's provocative… it gets the people going!
Posted on 7/28/23 at 6:46 am to LigerFan
quote:
I did the new addition to the Guggenheim
Did you work for Gwathmey?
Posted on 7/28/23 at 7:20 am to gerkin
quote:
Alot of design is driven by overly tight budgets and rushed schedules which makes really captivating design often not completely realistic
I actually work with clients and sell materials. Nothing drives me crazier than seeing a nice design ruined by idiot owners trying to save a buck. 2 million dollar house, hey let’s put white vinyl windows. Lol. If I were to be an architect I would have to be more involved in the whole building process. I couldn’t let a client ruin my work.
I also see a lot of these cookie cutter “architects “ selling plans on the internet that really just need to turn volume and don’t care what happens to their plans.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 7:46 am to CBandits82
Had a room mate at LSU who was majoring in architecture. Saw him during August and September. Never hardly saw him during October and November. During the spring semester his parents came and took him away at the end of February. They told me he was mentally broken, I never saw him again. I majored in Civil engineering.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 8:51 am to XenScott
quote:
I am not an architect. I am a home designer and builder. Basically I draw the house and an engineer approves the specifications. I mean work is work but I do like
Got a throwaway email? I’d like to chat

Posted on 7/28/23 at 9:03 am to CBandits82
Architects are the GC’s of the building design world. A lot of management. Firm owners and partners make good money (if they design correctly), the underlings don’t.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 10:00 am to Wedge
quote:
Landscape architect, LSU, 20+ years.
How much do you enjoy it?
What are you typically doing on a day to day basis?
Posted on 7/28/23 at 10:10 am to CBandits82
They make half as much as you'd expect
Posted on 7/28/23 at 10:12 am to TheAlmightySmash
Tons of great responses in here overall



Posted on 7/28/23 at 10:12 am to CBandits82
I enjoy the hell out of it. It is immensely gratifying seeing something go from a piece of an idea to a 75 page volume of drawings and then rise from the ground to something tangible that is enjoyed by people.
Every day is different. Today I'm hammering out a new arrival sequence and drop-off for a hospital expansion. Then on to a QA/QC review and a couple of proposals. Yesterday I was on site doing formwork review and a final completion walk.
Every day is different. Today I'm hammering out a new arrival sequence and drop-off for a hospital expansion. Then on to a QA/QC review and a couple of proposals. Yesterday I was on site doing formwork review and a final completion walk.
Posted on 7/28/23 at 10:23 am to thermal9221
quote:
Firm owners and partners make good money (if they design correctly), the underlings don’t.
Our fresh-out-of-school new hires make $55K-$60K with really solid benefits. I started out at $24K, which is around $40K in today's money.
Like any profession, if you have drive and ability, advancement is possible and the ceiling can be high. If you don't, then the pay can stay stagnant. I have 50 year old's at my firm that have not cracked 6 figures yet they are content with it.
Popular
Back to top
