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Excuse me, I am new to this Wikipedia thing and my special interest is Naval Architecture, does that branch properly belong here under Architect? -- Bruce Hallman
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"The Architect" from the Matrix movies oughtta be referenced here ... You know, the one that said, "Ergo" and "vis-a-vie" alot? I'm not really that good at writing encyclopedias ...
no no no - I was searching for "Architect Matrix Character" and this page came up. I'm thinking of a bit of a redirect thingy thatz all. Under "See also". i'm new at Wikipedia. I'm from h2g2.
User:69.3.117.220 wrote: One aspect of this profession, however, is that architects do not evaluate a building's success or the work of their peers by those qualities which require professional credentials--such as a building's safety or the public's well being. Instead, prestigous awards are based on a building's visual, artistic or cultural qualities. Unlike publications for professionals such as doctors, lawyers and engineers, the official publication of the American Institute of Architects can be easily understood by a bright lay person, as most of the content is simply fashionable imagery.
I have to vehemently disagree with this statement. Are you only reviewing cutesy, pretty periodicals that come off of the newsstand? Or are you a professional with some sort of justification?
I have to think that you are the former, because all of the architects I have worked for have been architectural engineers, bound by their clients to produce a safe structure. Structures' benefits to the well-being of the public is a highly subjective point to try to summarily evaluate, and everyone will have a different feeling about it.
Our society's letigious nature seems to preclude too many grave errors going so unnoticed so as to justify a statement such as yours. If you have a serious problem with the well-being of those affected by structures in your area, then be present at the pulic meetings in which these builders must answer questions like this and others before granting permission for them to erect said structures.
- CobaltBlueTony July 7, 2005 17:02 (UTC)
Thank you CobaltBlueTony for your comments. Unfortunately, you assumed incorrectly.
First, it is my understanding that wikipedia is a collaborative effort. If you are some sort of self-appointed judge, jury and editor-in-chief, please notify those in charge of the wikipedia project so that others don't waste their time and so that the public won't be misled into believing the effort to represent some sort of concensus opinion or broad group effort.
Second, many professions have legitimate controversies within them, and I find your procilivity to edit other people's work because you think you are "right" to be highly offensive and grossly disrespectful. It is typical of the sort of snotty, upper crust, stuffed shirt, blowhard mentality of which this profession needs to divest itself, no?
Third, I am a professional architect, licensed in the litigious USA and have been working in and around the profession for many years, but agree that there may, in fact, be some regional variations in practices, viewpoints and conventions around the world. Since this encyclopedia is intended for public consumption, however, I think it is worth including some perspective that is slightly broader than the way a narrow segment of the profession in one part of the world chooses to narrowly portray, (mis)understand and (mis)represent itself.
Fourth, the "cutesy, pretty periodicals" that I am referring to are available only to industry professionals and are delivered to my mailbox. Architectural Record is the "Official Publication" of the American Institute of Architects, and I, frankly, am embarrassed and disgusted by the gross idiocy and blatant promotional aspect of its content. Nevertheless, I think it accurately reflects the mindset of its professional readers.
Fifth, if you would like to engage in some discussion about appropriate content for this entry, or the way certain thoughts have been organized or presented, I would welcome your input so that we can arrive at content that is mutually agreeable. On the other hand, I could easily challenge some of the basic premises here and find grounds for deletion of your sincere efforts. At this point, I will show some respect, excercise restraint and refrain from so doing.
For example: Architecture isn't really "science", is it? Science uses an investigative methodology to establish facts (or generally accepted principles of nature), usually by research. Name one Pritzker-Prize winning architect that has had a single research paper published in a scientific journal. Have you or any of your employers ever published a research paper in a scientific journal? Name a Law of Architecture, such as "Corbusier's Law" that is actually true and that serves as a foundation for further research, investigation or discussion. Books of architecture ARE cutesy and pretty and are usually sold in the same stores as are books of art, not books of science or engineering.
Sixth, as you point out, all of the "architects" you have worked for are actually engineers, and engineering is a decidedly different profession and has a different emphasis. Personally, I have never worked for an architect that did not shield their practice from litigation by hiring qualified engineers to perform often difficult and complex structural analyses required for seismic safety. Suing an architect in the USA is actually a complicated issue--no matter how bad their work product is--because it can give rise to much more (economically) damaging suits from the construction contractor as a result. As in, "See? The design and the drawings were so bad the client even sued his own consultant--that's why the roof leaked!" So clients tend not to go there, and architects tend to hire "specialists" for absolutely everything that lets them get away with gross breaches of professional ethics. But I digress.
Mr. Tony, I would be most appreciative if you would kindly restore the material that you edited and engage in some constructive dialog as to how the concepts I expressed can be reasonably included in the brief space available, because I believe they factually supportable. If you don't believe they are factually supportable, please provide some parameters or threshold so that other participants may be able to evaluate whether or not my arguments persuasively address your objections and concerns. I would be interested in comments from others as well.
Thank you very much.
Seldomly
afka User:69.3.117.220
Why is the Scott Sutherland School of Architecture mentioned in the list of Schools of Architecture (I am assuming this is the Scott Sutherland School in Aberdeen, Scotland)? Which notable Architects has it produced? -- Cactus.man 20:33, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
This section needs to be edited to remove the city links, and replace them with links to the schools located in them, as per what I think was the intent. Berlin's Technical University of Berlin could be done right now, but the other schools do not appear to have articles, at lest in English. Moreover, where are notable schools from other countries? I like the intent of theis section, but it needs real attention. - CobaltBlueTony 04:03, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps it'd be good to develop some sort of dialogue for what constitutes "notable" to prevent budding architecture students everywhere from just listing their own schools. May be someone with way more motivation than I have right now can rewrite the section in terms of the development of architecture as a profession and an academic fields, noting the "hotspots" along the way. (That is, as a text instead of a list.) For example, a discussion on the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in the 1800s (formation of the professional arch. school), MIT in the late 1800s/early 1900s (role, as the first professional school in the U.S., in legitimizing architectural practice as a profession), Harvard & IIT in the 1930s-50s (introduction of Gropius & Mies and Modernism in the academic context to the U.S.), Berkeley & the AA in the 1960s (creation of the 4+2 BA/M.Arch system and Archigram, respectively), Princeton & Cooper Union in the late 1970s-1980s (pedagogical innovation, Education of an Architect), Columbia and Sci-Arc in the 1990s (rise of formalism, implementation and influence of new computer tools, conceptual refocusing), etc., would be much more valuable than a list of every vaguely recognizable arch school in the world. - Gku 20:14, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
An edit has been made to the Australian section which suggests that Australian architects belong to RIBA, not a local body. I haven't reverted this because it could for all I know be right, but it certainly sounds unlikely - can someone with certain knowledge comment and change if necessary? Barnabypage 15:13, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
Australian architects generally belong to the AIA Australian Institute of Architects, but there are other architect bodies in Australia & none of them are British — Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.229.29.132 ( talk) 08:04, 27 July 2012 (UTC)
What archiotects say? Do we all klisten to accountants? Why are Architects the wiosdom and all philospohy of the world. Surely the Real Esatate developers whose money and resources these arhcitects use to foist their views are more important that the architetcs themselves? Chivista 14:46, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
Wow, no need to comment here! JoeConsumer 11/30/06
Since Vitruvius covers instruments of war in his Ten Books on Architecture, naval architecture arguably bears intrinsic value in the art of designing and the science of building.
De facto, to suggest that architectural awards are given based on cultural qualities is to at once give credence to the idea that safety and the public's well-being are intrinsically rooted in their being given. The reigning professional body in the profession, the AIA, states it is the architect's prime responsibility to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the general public. In affixation of construction documents with the architect's seal, he or she is swearing oath that the building will inherently serve these functions. As such, any award given to an architect in recognition of a building for which he or she "stamped drawings" is at once an award given on the merit of the building's safety and concern for the public's well being. Thereby, an award honoring a "safe" building would in effect undermine that which is inherently expected of the architect from the outset.
While I believe the nature of mainstream contemporary architectural periodicals (or any mainstream periodical for that matter) lends itself almost entirely to senseless promotion through advertisement and bias (perhaps even moreso than other professional periodicals) there is some recompense in the fact that these periodicals do for the architectural profession what medical and legal periodicals presumably do for their respective professions: discuss those issues related to the field that will strengthen circulation, that is to say, prevailing mainstream issues of the day. If one's issue is with the material between the covers of such magazines as Architectural Record (which is open to any and all willing to pay the subscription price, not solely those in the profession) perhaps it isn't the magazine that should be indicted but the architect's acceptance of what has been deemed "good" architecture, in other words, the reason contemporary mainstream architecture has achieved such noble status. Furthermore, what sets other professional periodicals apart from those concerning themselves with design is the mere fact that they discuss topics (current events, health or leagal issues, politics, social themes, etc.) that are more imminent. That is to say, health, law, news, and politics shape the ethereal world in which we live in a deeper, more intrinsic, and arguably more important way than the buildings in which we live. In architecture there is no human necessity which extends beyond a roof and four walls. The situation isn't as simple when discussing these other issues.
As a second-year professional and a graduate from a classical architecture school, it seems pretty clear to me how one ought to diagnose and treat the embattled profession.
Blackwell 582 04:46, 17 January 2007 (UTC)
This might just be me, but I feel that the article is better served by defining what an architect is, rather than what an architect is not. I removed the paragraph as it seems to belong on an article describing the profession of engineering. beekman 03:13, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
why isn't Taliesin (Frank Lloyd Wright's own school) not on the list of "Notable Architecture schools"? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 64.6.143.157 ( talk) 14:30, 16 March 2007 (UTC).
why isn't Taliesin (Frank Lloyd Wright's own school) not on the list of "Notable Architecture schools"? 64.6.143.157 14:32, 16 March 2007 (UTC) phil@rawfoods.com
overall, how many years of college/interning/etc. would it take to become an architect?
3 years to a degree ( RIBA Part I) followed by 12 months in practice (earning, not a freebie), then 2 years diploma (RIBA Part II) followed by a further year in practice and a practice examination (RIBA Part III). (There are variations on this - but 7 years total.) If you train in any other EU or EEA country, you only need the eqivalalent of RIBA Part II to qualify. (Work that one out!) Salisian 20:42, 6 July 2007 (UTC)
there are just a coouple of points i would like to contribute, 1. to my knowlege the system in the uk does not require any degrees, it is dependant on passing the criteria the RIBA set but the ARB check. Now most courses are riba acreditied so when you get your degree or MA or Dip you automatically gain part 1 or 2. 2. it is not a requirement to gain 1 years experience between part 1 and part 2 or to even work for an architects.You can work for up to 6 months in the construction industry or at a journal etc. it is only a requirement of part 3 that you have 24 months logged experience, not part 2 or 1, the reasons for people assuming that you do have to have a years experience in practice are because; you used too but the rules changed, most universities state it as requirement to get into their part 2 course and it is the quickest way to qualify. sorry i am very dylexic and not really sure my consice writing skills are up to it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.199.163.35 ( talk) 21:10, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
Since the IP resolves to Texas, I'll add (even though it's been a while):
Four years to an undergraduate degree plus two years for M.Arch., or five years of undergraduate to a B.Arch., plus three years (two in some states) internship with a registered architect, then a licensing exam. Acroterion (talk) 03:58, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
Why have there been more than 500 edits to the article this year? I am wondering about all those edits. Why were they necessary? StatesmanVelocicaptor 21:49, 12 October 2007 (UTC) Please answer my question.
There is good information on qualification requirements in the US, Canada, Singapore, the UK and Australia - can anyone provide qualification information from other nations? Acroterion (talk) 17:10, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
What about "design babes"? This article makes no mention of the usually hot chicks that work in the profession.
Please try to keep this talk page coherent and readable by a) using ==Topic== as your question topic, remembering to sign your comments with four tildes and indent with : your answers. If everyone adds a bunch of horizontal rules, <big>-tags and bold formatting here and there this page turns incomprehensible and messy to read. By using the topic wikisyntax your question will be listed in the table of contents automatically. Learn from other people's wikisyntax and try to keep it clear and simple. -- piksi ( talk) 18:17, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
In terms of the comparisons listed in this article, I don't think it's realistic to say the median salary of a university professor in the US is 50K. For beginning assistant professors, salaries are closer to 60K in humanities fields---higher in the sciences, law, business, etc. I know this since I was on the job market this year and did extensive research into the subject. Minarees25 ( talk) 17:17, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
For every building projects, architects need a civil engineer to do the structural design. Some exemples of structural design : http://structural-design-for-architecture.blogspot.com/ —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.73.7.97 ( talk) 22:02, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
The Picture of an Arcitect, Arcetects have been on mostly computers for 15 years —Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.48.154.88 ( talk) 19:05, 14 March 2009 (UTC)
An architect is trained and licensed in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building.
Change to An architect is trained and licensed in the planning and designing of buildings with unproven designs, and participates in supervising the construction of a building.
This as building designs which are proven to work and which have already been used in other buildings don't need to be verified yet again by an architect. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.182.191.64 ( talk) 10:08, 26 August 2009 (UTC)
An architect (or sometimes an engineer or surveyor may suffice) is required for any construction anywhere in the EU, probably moreso than in North America. An architect seals the submissiom and then an architect provides construction oversight (not always the same architect). I don't know where this misunderstanding about Belgium came from. It doesn't matter if it's a repeated design.
Add this info to the article. KVDP ( talk) 15:55, 13 February 2010 (UTC)
The concept "architect" is widely used as a metaphor just like any other word (architects of war, Devil's advocate etc). Similarily the concept "architecture" is used as metaphor. It should be clear that when used as metaphor there is a plethora of uses for any word.
Anyhow, the use as a metaphor should not be mixed with the actual use and the explanations in disambiguation should also not mix the actual use. If the metaphorical use and the actual use of words is mixed any human communication will be difficult to comprehend.
Theaslak ( talk) 14:25, 18 January 2010 (UTC), Finland
I've checked several dictionaries and none of them include this criteria in their definitions, here for instance, the article already discusses that most jurisdictions require architects to be licenced to use the title professionally so I don't think it's necessary or 100% accurate to use this in the opening sentence as an inherrent defining property. What about historically for instance, were the architects of the great pyramids registered and licensed, the Taj Mahal, the palaces of europe? Also, the 'most' suggests 'but not all'. 121.72.156.31 ( talk) 20:13, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
A dictionary definition and jurisdiction's legal title are not necessary the same thing. To be an architect, one must be licenced as such in the vast majority of places. The title and the practice are protected- to varying degrees- much like a notary cannot call him/herself a lawyer or "practice law". In some places, one doesn't need to be an architect to "practice architecture"- but that is really the exception. I'm reverting the lead. Homo architectus ( talk) 00:19, 24 March 2011 (UTC)
It needs to be noted in this article taht use of the term "architect" in the IT profession is not only illegal in most state but in many counties around the world. The following statement is incorrect and missleading.
The terms architect and architecture are also used in the disciplines of landscape architecture, naval architecture and often information technology (for example a software architect). In most of the world's jurisdictions, the professional and commercial uses of the term "architect", outside of the etymological variants noted, is legally protected.
Ive attempted to make this change but it seems the common use of the word in the IT industry has clouded peoples view and they insist on ignoring the actual truth and legality of it. I propose any reference to IT or the computer industry in this article be removed. Unless anyone objects here, I am removing it again next week at this time. Here is one of many articles article about it and if you doubt what I am saying please look up your states law on it. http://blog.aia.org/aiarchitect/2007/03/whats_in_a_name.html It is my position that Wikipedia should be about the truth and not just about comon perception Thanks Jerry20112011 ( talk) 11:51, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
So Ive offered real fact from stated law websites, Ive offered multiple articles from Microsoft website and the official AIA website (though its mentioned in a blog that sites law!!!!) Yet We will promote the missuse of a term because its common? Frank et al please name a source you will not dispute as it seems actual law means nothing to you....
Jerry20112011 (
talk)
13:35, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
Although I side with Acroterion on this, I believe Jerry is correct in the most rigid sense. At least in most of N. America and Europe (not sure about elsewhere, but I would guess this is the case in most developed places) the exemptions to the title's protection do not include "software architect". In Canada, for example, the Architect's Act lays out the rules, and an excerpt from the Act in British Columbia clearly notes that the title is protected except in the case of Naval Architects and Landscape Architects [1]. It makes no mention of "software architect" or anything else for that matter. Nonetheless, we all agree the term "software architect" is very common in the IT world, and the stance of the regulating bodies is to tolerate the term so long as there can be no confusion in the eyes of the public. I can probably source this this, but in due course (no time soon!). By the way, in Canada there is a network of mortgage brokers called the "Mortgage Architects" [2]. Again, although illegal under the Act- this is tolerated by the regulating bodies because there can be no confusion as to the services they offer. Homo architectus ( talk) 22:22, 5 April 2011 (UTC)
There seems to be a paucity of citations for such a large article. Methinks a 'Refimprove' box is required. Anyone else agree? Sionk ( talk) 23:52, 7 October 2011 (UTC)
Apart from the dire lack of sources, there are a number of key aspects to the article that are still missing, in my view. The article currently dwells in great detail on the role of modern (C20th/C21st?) architects in developed countries.
I've begun to expand the section on 'Origins', but it is a drop-in-the-ocean so far. The rise of the profession of architecture, hand-in-hand and later separately from the master masons and craftsmen, seems a fairly key aspect to improve.
Secondly, the rise of architectural education could be covered in more depth ...well, at least covered. For example the Grand Tours that architects used to educate themselves in classical fashions of the day (C18th?). Followed by the rise of education and qualification at university (C19th).
It's a struggle to find good sources, but they must be out there somewhere! Sionk ( talk) 02:12, 17 January 2013 (UTC)
The actual origins of architects came about because of the reformation. Before that, Freemasons designed and built almost every large cathedral, civic building, etc. of the time. During the reformation, the Freemasons quit building cathedrals over disagreements with the church, so after this, schools started training architects that could design large buildings, and direct laborers. Freemasonry, as a guild, and or traveling Masons, almost faded away, before it was made into a Gentlemans fraternity in 1717. There is a ton of research on this, that is easily found online and in historical books. It would be nice to see a mention of it.-- Craxd ( talk) 17:37, 20 April 2015 (UTC)
I propose that Earnings for architects be merged into Architect. I think any encyclopaedic content here can easily be placed in the main article. This is the first article of this nature I've encountered, and unless I'm wrong, I don't see something similar for pilots, doctors, accountants etc. This article is very much Glassdoor territory and does not seem suitable for wikipedia. I started discussing for this at Talk:Earnings for architects. Share your views Rayman60 ( talk) 23:13, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
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This page has been vandalized regularly by IP editors since at least Sept 2016, and they've recently taken to blanking the whole page. I've requested temporary protection. -- Lockley ( talk) 18:47, 14 January 2017 (UTC)
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Excuse me, I am new to this Wikipedia thing and my special interest is Naval Architecture, does that branch properly belong here under Architect? -- Bruce Hallman
There is a new project proposal that some of you here may be interested in: Wikibuilder - a knowledge base covering the design and construction of the built environment, in its entirety, in all languages. See meta:Proposals for new projects#Wikibuilder and meta:Wikibuilder for more information, and feel free to add your comments to meta:Talk:Wikibuilder — Christiaan - ☎ 09:40, 18 Jan 2005
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"The Architect" from the Matrix movies oughtta be referenced here ... You know, the one that said, "Ergo" and "vis-a-vie" alot? I'm not really that good at writing encyclopedias ...
no no no - I was searching for "Architect Matrix Character" and this page came up. I'm thinking of a bit of a redirect thingy thatz all. Under "See also". i'm new at Wikipedia. I'm from h2g2.
User:69.3.117.220 wrote: One aspect of this profession, however, is that architects do not evaluate a building's success or the work of their peers by those qualities which require professional credentials--such as a building's safety or the public's well being. Instead, prestigous awards are based on a building's visual, artistic or cultural qualities. Unlike publications for professionals such as doctors, lawyers and engineers, the official publication of the American Institute of Architects can be easily understood by a bright lay person, as most of the content is simply fashionable imagery.
I have to vehemently disagree with this statement. Are you only reviewing cutesy, pretty periodicals that come off of the newsstand? Or are you a professional with some sort of justification?
I have to think that you are the former, because all of the architects I have worked for have been architectural engineers, bound by their clients to produce a safe structure. Structures' benefits to the well-being of the public is a highly subjective point to try to summarily evaluate, and everyone will have a different feeling about it.
Our society's letigious nature seems to preclude too many grave errors going so unnoticed so as to justify a statement such as yours. If you have a serious problem with the well-being of those affected by structures in your area, then be present at the pulic meetings in which these builders must answer questions like this and others before granting permission for them to erect said structures.
- CobaltBlueTony July 7, 2005 17:02 (UTC)
Thank you CobaltBlueTony for your comments. Unfortunately, you assumed incorrectly.
First, it is my understanding that wikipedia is a collaborative effort. If you are some sort of self-appointed judge, jury and editor-in-chief, please notify those in charge of the wikipedia project so that others don't waste their time and so that the public won't be misled into believing the effort to represent some sort of concensus opinion or broad group effort.
Second, many professions have legitimate controversies within them, and I find your procilivity to edit other people's work because you think you are "right" to be highly offensive and grossly disrespectful. It is typical of the sort of snotty, upper crust, stuffed shirt, blowhard mentality of which this profession needs to divest itself, no?
Third, I am a professional architect, licensed in the litigious USA and have been working in and around the profession for many years, but agree that there may, in fact, be some regional variations in practices, viewpoints and conventions around the world. Since this encyclopedia is intended for public consumption, however, I think it is worth including some perspective that is slightly broader than the way a narrow segment of the profession in one part of the world chooses to narrowly portray, (mis)understand and (mis)represent itself.
Fourth, the "cutesy, pretty periodicals" that I am referring to are available only to industry professionals and are delivered to my mailbox. Architectural Record is the "Official Publication" of the American Institute of Architects, and I, frankly, am embarrassed and disgusted by the gross idiocy and blatant promotional aspect of its content. Nevertheless, I think it accurately reflects the mindset of its professional readers.
Fifth, if you would like to engage in some discussion about appropriate content for this entry, or the way certain thoughts have been organized or presented, I would welcome your input so that we can arrive at content that is mutually agreeable. On the other hand, I could easily challenge some of the basic premises here and find grounds for deletion of your sincere efforts. At this point, I will show some respect, excercise restraint and refrain from so doing.
For example: Architecture isn't really "science", is it? Science uses an investigative methodology to establish facts (or generally accepted principles of nature), usually by research. Name one Pritzker-Prize winning architect that has had a single research paper published in a scientific journal. Have you or any of your employers ever published a research paper in a scientific journal? Name a Law of Architecture, such as "Corbusier's Law" that is actually true and that serves as a foundation for further research, investigation or discussion. Books of architecture ARE cutesy and pretty and are usually sold in the same stores as are books of art, not books of science or engineering.
Sixth, as you point out, all of the "architects" you have worked for are actually engineers, and engineering is a decidedly different profession and has a different emphasis. Personally, I have never worked for an architect that did not shield their practice from litigation by hiring qualified engineers to perform often difficult and complex structural analyses required for seismic safety. Suing an architect in the USA is actually a complicated issue--no matter how bad their work product is--because it can give rise to much more (economically) damaging suits from the construction contractor as a result. As in, "See? The design and the drawings were so bad the client even sued his own consultant--that's why the roof leaked!" So clients tend not to go there, and architects tend to hire "specialists" for absolutely everything that lets them get away with gross breaches of professional ethics. But I digress.
Mr. Tony, I would be most appreciative if you would kindly restore the material that you edited and engage in some constructive dialog as to how the concepts I expressed can be reasonably included in the brief space available, because I believe they factually supportable. If you don't believe they are factually supportable, please provide some parameters or threshold so that other participants may be able to evaluate whether or not my arguments persuasively address your objections and concerns. I would be interested in comments from others as well.
Thank you very much.
Seldomly
afka User:69.3.117.220
Why is the Scott Sutherland School of Architecture mentioned in the list of Schools of Architecture (I am assuming this is the Scott Sutherland School in Aberdeen, Scotland)? Which notable Architects has it produced? -- Cactus.man 20:33, 31 July 2005 (UTC)
This section needs to be edited to remove the city links, and replace them with links to the schools located in them, as per what I think was the intent. Berlin's Technical University of Berlin could be done right now, but the other schools do not appear to have articles, at lest in English. Moreover, where are notable schools from other countries? I like the intent of theis section, but it needs real attention. - CobaltBlueTony 04:03, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps it'd be good to develop some sort of dialogue for what constitutes "notable" to prevent budding architecture students everywhere from just listing their own schools. May be someone with way more motivation than I have right now can rewrite the section in terms of the development of architecture as a profession and an academic fields, noting the "hotspots" along the way. (That is, as a text instead of a list.) For example, a discussion on the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in the 1800s (formation of the professional arch. school), MIT in the late 1800s/early 1900s (role, as the first professional school in the U.S., in legitimizing architectural practice as a profession), Harvard & IIT in the 1930s-50s (introduction of Gropius & Mies and Modernism in the academic context to the U.S.), Berkeley & the AA in the 1960s (creation of the 4+2 BA/M.Arch system and Archigram, respectively), Princeton & Cooper Union in the late 1970s-1980s (pedagogical innovation, Education of an Architect), Columbia and Sci-Arc in the 1990s (rise of formalism, implementation and influence of new computer tools, conceptual refocusing), etc., would be much more valuable than a list of every vaguely recognizable arch school in the world. - Gku 20:14, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
An edit has been made to the Australian section which suggests that Australian architects belong to RIBA, not a local body. I haven't reverted this because it could for all I know be right, but it certainly sounds unlikely - can someone with certain knowledge comment and change if necessary? Barnabypage 15:13, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
Australian architects generally belong to the AIA Australian Institute of Architects, but there are other architect bodies in Australia & none of them are British — Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.229.29.132 ( talk) 08:04, 27 July 2012 (UTC)
What archiotects say? Do we all klisten to accountants? Why are Architects the wiosdom and all philospohy of the world. Surely the Real Esatate developers whose money and resources these arhcitects use to foist their views are more important that the architetcs themselves? Chivista 14:46, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
Wow, no need to comment here! JoeConsumer 11/30/06
Since Vitruvius covers instruments of war in his Ten Books on Architecture, naval architecture arguably bears intrinsic value in the art of designing and the science of building.
De facto, to suggest that architectural awards are given based on cultural qualities is to at once give credence to the idea that safety and the public's well-being are intrinsically rooted in their being given. The reigning professional body in the profession, the AIA, states it is the architect's prime responsibility to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the general public. In affixation of construction documents with the architect's seal, he or she is swearing oath that the building will inherently serve these functions. As such, any award given to an architect in recognition of a building for which he or she "stamped drawings" is at once an award given on the merit of the building's safety and concern for the public's well being. Thereby, an award honoring a "safe" building would in effect undermine that which is inherently expected of the architect from the outset.
While I believe the nature of mainstream contemporary architectural periodicals (or any mainstream periodical for that matter) lends itself almost entirely to senseless promotion through advertisement and bias (perhaps even moreso than other professional periodicals) there is some recompense in the fact that these periodicals do for the architectural profession what medical and legal periodicals presumably do for their respective professions: discuss those issues related to the field that will strengthen circulation, that is to say, prevailing mainstream issues of the day. If one's issue is with the material between the covers of such magazines as Architectural Record (which is open to any and all willing to pay the subscription price, not solely those in the profession) perhaps it isn't the magazine that should be indicted but the architect's acceptance of what has been deemed "good" architecture, in other words, the reason contemporary mainstream architecture has achieved such noble status. Furthermore, what sets other professional periodicals apart from those concerning themselves with design is the mere fact that they discuss topics (current events, health or leagal issues, politics, social themes, etc.) that are more imminent. That is to say, health, law, news, and politics shape the ethereal world in which we live in a deeper, more intrinsic, and arguably more important way than the buildings in which we live. In architecture there is no human necessity which extends beyond a roof and four walls. The situation isn't as simple when discussing these other issues.
As a second-year professional and a graduate from a classical architecture school, it seems pretty clear to me how one ought to diagnose and treat the embattled profession.
Blackwell 582 04:46, 17 January 2007 (UTC)
This might just be me, but I feel that the article is better served by defining what an architect is, rather than what an architect is not. I removed the paragraph as it seems to belong on an article describing the profession of engineering. beekman 03:13, 5 March 2007 (UTC)
why isn't Taliesin (Frank Lloyd Wright's own school) not on the list of "Notable Architecture schools"? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 64.6.143.157 ( talk) 14:30, 16 March 2007 (UTC).
why isn't Taliesin (Frank Lloyd Wright's own school) not on the list of "Notable Architecture schools"? 64.6.143.157 14:32, 16 March 2007 (UTC) phil@rawfoods.com
overall, how many years of college/interning/etc. would it take to become an architect?
3 years to a degree ( RIBA Part I) followed by 12 months in practice (earning, not a freebie), then 2 years diploma (RIBA Part II) followed by a further year in practice and a practice examination (RIBA Part III). (There are variations on this - but 7 years total.) If you train in any other EU or EEA country, you only need the eqivalalent of RIBA Part II to qualify. (Work that one out!) Salisian 20:42, 6 July 2007 (UTC)
there are just a coouple of points i would like to contribute, 1. to my knowlege the system in the uk does not require any degrees, it is dependant on passing the criteria the RIBA set but the ARB check. Now most courses are riba acreditied so when you get your degree or MA or Dip you automatically gain part 1 or 2. 2. it is not a requirement to gain 1 years experience between part 1 and part 2 or to even work for an architects.You can work for up to 6 months in the construction industry or at a journal etc. it is only a requirement of part 3 that you have 24 months logged experience, not part 2 or 1, the reasons for people assuming that you do have to have a years experience in practice are because; you used too but the rules changed, most universities state it as requirement to get into their part 2 course and it is the quickest way to qualify. sorry i am very dylexic and not really sure my consice writing skills are up to it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.199.163.35 ( talk) 21:10, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
Since the IP resolves to Texas, I'll add (even though it's been a while):
Four years to an undergraduate degree plus two years for M.Arch., or five years of undergraduate to a B.Arch., plus three years (two in some states) internship with a registered architect, then a licensing exam. Acroterion (talk) 03:58, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
Why have there been more than 500 edits to the article this year? I am wondering about all those edits. Why were they necessary? StatesmanVelocicaptor 21:49, 12 October 2007 (UTC) Please answer my question.
There is good information on qualification requirements in the US, Canada, Singapore, the UK and Australia - can anyone provide qualification information from other nations? Acroterion (talk) 17:10, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
What about "design babes"? This article makes no mention of the usually hot chicks that work in the profession.
Please try to keep this talk page coherent and readable by a) using ==Topic== as your question topic, remembering to sign your comments with four tildes and indent with : your answers. If everyone adds a bunch of horizontal rules, <big>-tags and bold formatting here and there this page turns incomprehensible and messy to read. By using the topic wikisyntax your question will be listed in the table of contents automatically. Learn from other people's wikisyntax and try to keep it clear and simple. -- piksi ( talk) 18:17, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
In terms of the comparisons listed in this article, I don't think it's realistic to say the median salary of a university professor in the US is 50K. For beginning assistant professors, salaries are closer to 60K in humanities fields---higher in the sciences, law, business, etc. I know this since I was on the job market this year and did extensive research into the subject. Minarees25 ( talk) 17:17, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
For every building projects, architects need a civil engineer to do the structural design. Some exemples of structural design : http://structural-design-for-architecture.blogspot.com/ —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.73.7.97 ( talk) 22:02, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
The Picture of an Arcitect, Arcetects have been on mostly computers for 15 years —Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.48.154.88 ( talk) 19:05, 14 March 2009 (UTC)
An architect is trained and licensed in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building.
Change to An architect is trained and licensed in the planning and designing of buildings with unproven designs, and participates in supervising the construction of a building.
This as building designs which are proven to work and which have already been used in other buildings don't need to be verified yet again by an architect. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.182.191.64 ( talk) 10:08, 26 August 2009 (UTC)
An architect (or sometimes an engineer or surveyor may suffice) is required for any construction anywhere in the EU, probably moreso than in North America. An architect seals the submissiom and then an architect provides construction oversight (not always the same architect). I don't know where this misunderstanding about Belgium came from. It doesn't matter if it's a repeated design.
Add this info to the article. KVDP ( talk) 15:55, 13 February 2010 (UTC)
The concept "architect" is widely used as a metaphor just like any other word (architects of war, Devil's advocate etc). Similarily the concept "architecture" is used as metaphor. It should be clear that when used as metaphor there is a plethora of uses for any word.
Anyhow, the use as a metaphor should not be mixed with the actual use and the explanations in disambiguation should also not mix the actual use. If the metaphorical use and the actual use of words is mixed any human communication will be difficult to comprehend.
Theaslak ( talk) 14:25, 18 January 2010 (UTC), Finland
I've checked several dictionaries and none of them include this criteria in their definitions, here for instance, the article already discusses that most jurisdictions require architects to be licenced to use the title professionally so I don't think it's necessary or 100% accurate to use this in the opening sentence as an inherrent defining property. What about historically for instance, were the architects of the great pyramids registered and licensed, the Taj Mahal, the palaces of europe? Also, the 'most' suggests 'but not all'. 121.72.156.31 ( talk) 20:13, 15 February 2011 (UTC)
A dictionary definition and jurisdiction's legal title are not necessary the same thing. To be an architect, one must be licenced as such in the vast majority of places. The title and the practice are protected- to varying degrees- much like a notary cannot call him/herself a lawyer or "practice law". In some places, one doesn't need to be an architect to "practice architecture"- but that is really the exception. I'm reverting the lead. Homo architectus ( talk) 00:19, 24 March 2011 (UTC)
It needs to be noted in this article taht use of the term "architect" in the IT profession is not only illegal in most state but in many counties around the world. The following statement is incorrect and missleading.
The terms architect and architecture are also used in the disciplines of landscape architecture, naval architecture and often information technology (for example a software architect). In most of the world's jurisdictions, the professional and commercial uses of the term "architect", outside of the etymological variants noted, is legally protected.
Ive attempted to make this change but it seems the common use of the word in the IT industry has clouded peoples view and they insist on ignoring the actual truth and legality of it. I propose any reference to IT or the computer industry in this article be removed. Unless anyone objects here, I am removing it again next week at this time. Here is one of many articles article about it and if you doubt what I am saying please look up your states law on it. http://blog.aia.org/aiarchitect/2007/03/whats_in_a_name.html It is my position that Wikipedia should be about the truth and not just about comon perception Thanks Jerry20112011 ( talk) 11:51, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
So Ive offered real fact from stated law websites, Ive offered multiple articles from Microsoft website and the official AIA website (though its mentioned in a blog that sites law!!!!) Yet We will promote the missuse of a term because its common? Frank et al please name a source you will not dispute as it seems actual law means nothing to you....
Jerry20112011 (
talk)
13:35, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
Although I side with Acroterion on this, I believe Jerry is correct in the most rigid sense. At least in most of N. America and Europe (not sure about elsewhere, but I would guess this is the case in most developed places) the exemptions to the title's protection do not include "software architect". In Canada, for example, the Architect's Act lays out the rules, and an excerpt from the Act in British Columbia clearly notes that the title is protected except in the case of Naval Architects and Landscape Architects [1]. It makes no mention of "software architect" or anything else for that matter. Nonetheless, we all agree the term "software architect" is very common in the IT world, and the stance of the regulating bodies is to tolerate the term so long as there can be no confusion in the eyes of the public. I can probably source this this, but in due course (no time soon!). By the way, in Canada there is a network of mortgage brokers called the "Mortgage Architects" [2]. Again, although illegal under the Act- this is tolerated by the regulating bodies because there can be no confusion as to the services they offer. Homo architectus ( talk) 22:22, 5 April 2011 (UTC)
There seems to be a paucity of citations for such a large article. Methinks a 'Refimprove' box is required. Anyone else agree? Sionk ( talk) 23:52, 7 October 2011 (UTC)
Apart from the dire lack of sources, there are a number of key aspects to the article that are still missing, in my view. The article currently dwells in great detail on the role of modern (C20th/C21st?) architects in developed countries.
I've begun to expand the section on 'Origins', but it is a drop-in-the-ocean so far. The rise of the profession of architecture, hand-in-hand and later separately from the master masons and craftsmen, seems a fairly key aspect to improve.
Secondly, the rise of architectural education could be covered in more depth ...well, at least covered. For example the Grand Tours that architects used to educate themselves in classical fashions of the day (C18th?). Followed by the rise of education and qualification at university (C19th).
It's a struggle to find good sources, but they must be out there somewhere! Sionk ( talk) 02:12, 17 January 2013 (UTC)
The actual origins of architects came about because of the reformation. Before that, Freemasons designed and built almost every large cathedral, civic building, etc. of the time. During the reformation, the Freemasons quit building cathedrals over disagreements with the church, so after this, schools started training architects that could design large buildings, and direct laborers. Freemasonry, as a guild, and or traveling Masons, almost faded away, before it was made into a Gentlemans fraternity in 1717. There is a ton of research on this, that is easily found online and in historical books. It would be nice to see a mention of it.-- Craxd ( talk) 17:37, 20 April 2015 (UTC)
I propose that Earnings for architects be merged into Architect. I think any encyclopaedic content here can easily be placed in the main article. This is the first article of this nature I've encountered, and unless I'm wrong, I don't see something similar for pilots, doctors, accountants etc. This article is very much Glassdoor territory and does not seem suitable for wikipedia. I started discussing for this at Talk:Earnings for architects. Share your views Rayman60 ( talk) 23:13, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
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