I just finished constructing a 3- by 5-foot tiled shower in place of the cramped, one-piece shower stall where I’ve been banging my elbows every morning for 15 years.
And it only took 3 months.
Once again, I discovered that hands-on construction experience improves design decisions. The things I learned from summers building decks and painting houses, or half a lifetime honing furniture-making skills – and, oh, from all my mistakes – have made me a better architect. No wonder the Yale School of Architecture requires students to design and build a structure as part of their graduate education.
With my shower project, I used some existing skills, such as selective demolition (which actually entails a lot of planning and finesse), framing, plumbing, wiring, sheet-rocking, and painting. But doing the tile work was new to me. Despite designing plenty of tile installations and being quite familiar with the methods detailed in the venerable Tile Council of North America Handbook, it soon became clear that I had much to learn. Read More


When Hollywood requires a character who is intelligent but self-absorbed, attractive but socially awkward, dedicated to work but unhealthily consumed by it, it often casts an architect for the part.





