Taraabt to Milan... seriously
It makes no sense at all
Taraabt to Milan... seriously
Such confidence makes me want to put a real bet down
I was listening to a Bill Burr podcast recently and he said something like 'when I started school I wanted to be a lawyer and by my final year I thought maybe I'll get into roofing'
shyt reminded me of when I used to tell my dad I was gonna be a architect
What bothered you ? The maths or the arts ?fixed for me
when I was in high school you couldn't tell me nutttttttttttttttheeeng. I was gonna be an architect.
Got to college and got clued in on the art/maths ratio involved with being an architect and was like
i thought he was on his out?
Art is absolute piss to me so it was the maths breh. I mean I'm decent at maths but just fucc off having to spend 30-40 years of your life solving maths problems/logistics. I'd be about the grams life (don't ask me how) within 2 years.What bothered you ? The maths or the arts ?
Well you missed out then.Art is absolute piss to me so it was the maths breh. I mean I'm decent at maths but just fucc off having to spend 30-40 years of your life solving maths problems/logistics. I'd be about the grams life (don't ask me how) within 2 years.
trying to smear their names with old shyt but truly
Well you missed out then.
If I understand the "absolute piss" (did that mean that it's easy for you ?) correctly, maths is a minor problem in architecture once you graduate. Obviously you should know some physics and maths during architecture school but once you got the diploma, you mostly need to remember the principles because you are not solving actual maths problems in the architect life above all in big firms. Engineers do it for you whether it's about the structure, phonic or fluid problems, building cost etc. With time, you even acquire some solid background in those fields due to the repetition of certain solutions and thanks to talks with said engineers.
To sum it up, architects draw the plans, the envelope, the interiors, the details and even some structure elements, choose the concepts, the materials, the furniture, the implementation regarding the landscape, the whole architectural "parti-pris" etc. And engineers make it work.
Plus, with the Erasmus program you would have been able to validate 6 to 12 months abroad easily because most of foreign students validate their semesters without really trying (well a little though).
dont do itMurdoch is about to let the bats out.
There must be tonnes of footage of them taking the piss, sitting in the archives.
I knew and I didn't took it like this, I was just saying that architects do a whole bunch of things and it's up to engineers to make this whole bunch stick together. If you're interested in this engineer/architect "war", you could read about the Roissy Airport's 2E Terminal collapse designed by Andreu. It was due to technical wrongdoings and not really because of the architect but if you look at the design of 2E Terminal, it's not really far fetched to think that the design itself was the flaw.
I wasn't trying to sh1t on architects or anything like that[...]
Or maybe is it like this in the UKI just clearly wasn't about that life. I imagined there would be a curve and it would level out sooner or later, but I figured if I wasn't feeling just being told about the maths, it just wasn't meant to be.
I could've also been given outdated information back then, who knows.[...]
Universidad de Chile
Copa Lib is truly back
watch an exciting Uni de Chile game that could end 10-9 but always ends 1-0