1
Drink tea not coffee. Coffee is great for a sudden burst of
energy propping you up during late nights on CAD but beware! The
caffeine in coffee gets into your blood quickly giving you an initial
rush that, if sustained, will cause your body to burn out. A strong mug
of tea has a similar amount of caffeine but it’s released more gradually
keeping you focused but calm for longer. Tea is also an antioxidant,
relieves tension and is less of a faff to make.
2
Draw
lots and draw by hand. Drawing isn’t just a way of communicating with
others it’s a way of thinking. From Le Corbusier’s messy sketches to
Zaha Hadid’s vast paintings, drawing is essential to the practice,
culture and progress of architecture.
3
When
making models use a sharp scalpel. Scalpel blades are not cheap when
bought from craft shops and blunt quickly but don’t be tempted to cut
your costs by using dull blades. If you slip and cut yourself a blunt
blade will give you a messy and painful wound that takes ages to heal.
However, if you cut yourself with a fresh blade the wound will be
cleaner, will heal faster and if serious will be easier for a medic to
dress. You can save money buying scalpel blades online in bulk.
4
Pin-up
straight. Sounds like a no brainer but it is amazing how many first
year pin-ups lead to hastily taping drawings to walls wonkily. Even a
rough sketch on torn butter paper deserves better than that. Invest in a
huge box of pins and line up your drawings with each other as well as
the wall.
5
Your
tutors are an invaluable source of wisdom and ideas – use them lots.
Don’t just wait for your weekly tutorial to roll around; actively seek
out the advice, opinions and critique of your school’s faculty. Knock on
their doors, email them, chase them through hallways, lie in wait near
their office. Do whatever it takes.
6
Your
tutors’ knowledge only goes so far. Intelligence, experience and
damning criticisms they may have, a monopoly on the truth they do not.
Sometimes the best tutor is the one who tells you to design the blue
house so you become even more determined to design the red one. Listen
carefully and understand their point of view but take what your tutors
say with a pinch of salt.
7
Power nap with caution.
By the end of your time at architecture school your friends will have
experimented with every sleeping cycle under the sun. Some will swear
that 20 minutes sleep is more refreshing than 40. Others will switch to
sleeping in four-hour bursts alone. You’ll see students making beds
beneath their desks in studio or going 80 hours without sleep. There may
well be times when you have to work late but the truth is that you’re
never going to produce great work when knackered – far better to stay
focused and productive during normal working hours than to let your
course steal your sleep and productivity. Keep a regular daily
timetable. Give yourself firm finishing times in the evening and stick
to them.
8
Subscribe
to a journal. Regularly reading an architecture magazine is an
invaluable source of inspiration. A good journal should challenge you to
think deeply about architecture and its relationship to the wider world
but should also be a thoroughly good read and beautifully designed.
From a tutor’s point of view the difference between students who are
regularly reading articles or short essays in architectural journals and
those who are not is dramatic. Luckily many architecture journals have
great student deals on at the moment if you can find them. The Architectural Review is just £1 a week for students.
9
University
grading systems are odd and architecture marking is brutal. Students
who’ve been at the top of their class all their lives arrive at
architecture school and find themselves struggling to get
middle-of-the-road marks. Take heart. Your final grade is far less
important than the skills and portfolio you’ll build on your way to it.
The line up of internationally acclaimed architects is littered with
designers who did badly at architecture school, dropped out or didn’t
study architecture at all.
10
Eat
delicious food. With so many deadlines it can be tempting to buy ready
meals and takeaways rather than waste time cooking. This is a false
economy. A good diet gives you more energy through the day, keeps you
healthy and prepares you for a life of wearing slinky black turtlenecks.
If you’re not the next Bompas and Parr already learn to cook some
simple meals in large quantities that will keep for a few days – soups,
stews, pastas and pastries.
11
Explore.
Travel often with an open mind. Understand cultures and traditions
different to your own. That doesn’t necessarily mean jet setting around
the world or hitchhiking to Morocco. Wherever you are based there will
be a myriad of unfamiliar communities and landscapes within easy reach.
Get to know the country you are studying in better – even if you grew up
there.
0 comments:
Post a Comment