Killion Display Case
Want a Job? Go to College, and Don’t Major in Architecture…. I wish somebody would have told me earlier, when I could have done something about it.
That was the encouraging title of an article in the New York Times this January. A recent study had shown that architecture graduates experienced the highest unemployment rates of recent graduates. As an architecture graduate, I was among the unemployed. I finished the B.Arch program at the Illinois Institute of Technology in December 2010, among the top of my class. I understood that my job prospects were bleak, but I thought that having graduated from one of the better architecture programs in the country, combined with my various skills and experience, would give me an advantage over other recent graduates. That’s not exactly what happened.
I enjoyed the holidays after my final semester, and launched into a full-time job search soon after New Year’s 2011. Over the next two months, I sent out over 50 portfolios per week. Each cover letter was written individually, and I had different versions of my CV depending on the job requirements. I tracked each application date, scheduled days to follow up by phone, and continued this search city by city until I had covered every urban area in the world that remotely interested me. After several weeks of searching, and over 400 portfolios later (mostly digital, mind you), I still found myself unemployed, without as much as an interview.
My full-time search would soon have to become a part-time gig, and I began taking odd jobs to pay the bills. I continued to send out a few portfolios per week, but my discouragement continued to grow, and soon my job search all but ended. I worked a few weeks as a bicycle mechanic, shop manager with a custom stainless steel shop, and was brought in again as a consultant with the CTBUH. I started to focus my energy into designing and building custom furniture, which became a full-time business by December.
I was happy designing and building furniture, and I enjoyed the mental challenge it provided, but I wasn’t very satisfied with where my professional life was going. I decided to join the ranks of other recent architecture graduates, and moved back home to Idaho in order to focus on my job search full-time once again. I went back to sending out portfolios by the dozen, each one personalized and written specifically for each firm. I also went as far as visiting various cities, cold-calling firms to introduce myself in person. This new burst of energy yielded a few interviews, and things were starting to look up. I followed up on the interviews, only to be told that work was still slow, and they would be in touch when things started to pick up.
My job search began to slow down once again, and fresh discouragement crept in, continuing to build. I had nearly resigned myself to working on the family farm for the summer, and applying to graduate school in the fall. I closely watched the AIA job boards for Portland, Seattle and San Francisco, and basically forgot about anywhere else.
Fast forward a couple of months, and I had been asked to interview by Skype with a small firm in Berkeley, California. They enjoyed my portfolio, and thought that my experience might be a match for their entry level position that would soon be vacant. The Skype interview went well, and I was asked to come out for a second interview two weeks later. I came, interviewed, and was offered the job the next morning.
Anne Phillips Architecture is my professional home for the near future, and I couldn’t be more thrilled. After 16 months of an off-and-on job search, I’m finally able to begin my true career. If I can offer any advice to fellow recent graduates of architecture or design programs, all I can say is this:
Don’t stop.
Don’t settle.
As part of my work for the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, I recently completed this study on the world’s future tallest 20 buildings.
Earlier this year I was able to build a custom display case for Dana Killion, a clothing designer here in Chicago. She recently opened a new boutique and asked that I build two more pieces for her new shop!
I thought I would offer an update on what I’ve been up to lately! Earlier this year, I became involved in a design studio start-up called Design Cloud Chicago (d:cl). We’re now fitting out the new space in the West Loop of Chicago, and I’m finishing up some custom furniture for our enjoyment! Pics to follow:
I used to work for The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, and recently they’ve hired me as a consultant to provide technical elevation drawings of tall buildings, both past, current and future. I thought I would share these drawings with you as a single image. See if you can guess the buildings… enjoy!
During my studies at IIT, I took a course on creative writing. I thought it would improve my writing for my blog, portfolio and online design shop. I entered one of my short stories into the university writing contest and was awarded second place in fiction for my short story called In Stitches. Read it here!
If you know me very well, you probably are aware of my love for well-crafted or unique shoes. I designed and built this custom shelving unit specifically to organize my (excessively large) shoe collection. The shelf spacing increases by one inch per shelf, allowing for a variety of shoes to be shown neatly.
Having recently graduated from architecture school, I’ve decided to pass the time while looking for a job by designing and building custom furniture. This is a display case I designed and built for a small clothing boutique in the south loop of Chicago. She wanted something that was mid-century modern, and my inspiration was taken from the Chest of Drawers by George Nelson. Details include rounded corners and flush-mounted safety glass, with a pull-out drawer for access.
I have been fortunate enough to have studied architecture in the great city of Chicago. There are few places which could provide a better environment to study the subject. I’ve lived here for over five years, and I still walk around like a tourist, gawking at the buildings and urban snapshots you don’t experience anywhere else.
I’ve been getting worried lately about something I notice more and more. I first noticed it as a student leaving the classroom. The second everybody steps out of the room, at least 80% go straight to their phones or ipods, and only take a quick glance away to cross the street. Then I began noticing it while walking around downtown Chicago: everybody walking around on their cell phones, staring at the tiny screen at their fingertips.
Don’t get me wrong, I love technology and have been known to drool over the latest and greatest technology, but I think we have a serious problem. We use our technology improperly (I’ll allow zenhabits.com to take care of explaining that). What concerns me is the fact that I have spent thousands of hours of my life trying to improve the pedestrian experience. I lay awake at nights thinking about how to design something better, or keep refining a building elevation until the sun comes up.
What worries me is that I am starting to wonder if it’s pointless. Why bother spending millions of dollars and thousands of hours designing and building something when tourists are the only ones who notice? What is the point if people don’t even bother to look up once in a while and take in their environment? Architects often talk about the ‘experience’ and the ‘feeling’ of a place or room or street, but I’m not sure anybody is in on the conversation. Maybe us architects are being too secretive about it, but I don’t think that’s the issue here.
Look up from your phone once and a while! Enjoy a sunny day, and the tulips that Chicago flies in from Holland just to put in the avenue planters. Notice that new shop on the corner and take a walk around the block for no reason at all other than to enjoy the area. Look out the window on the train and try to spot something interesting. Please take notice of your environment. It benefits everybody, and it might just brighten your day.
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