On Episode 82 of The Edge of Innovation, we’re talking with Alexander Lowry about ethics in the financial world and how Gordon College’s new MBA finance program is placing a special emphasis on ethical decision making.
Tag: northshore
Creating the New MBA Finance Program at Gordon College
On Episode 81 of The Edge of Innovation, we’re talking with Alexander Lowry about creating and directing the new MBA finance program at Gordon College.
Masters of Science in Financial Analysis: Alexander Lowry
On Episode 80 of The Edge of Innovation, we’re talking with Alexander Lowry, Master of Science in Financial Analysis at Gordon College.
Architecture & Technology: Then & Now
Today on the Edge of Innovation, we are talking with Benjamin Nutter from Benjamin Nutter Architects, an architectural firm based in Topsfield, Massachusetts, about technology and how it’s changing the architectural field.
Show Notes
Benjamin Nutter Architects’ Website: benjaminnutter.com
Find Benjamin Nutter Architects on Twitter
Find Benjamin Nutter Architects on Facebook
Benjamin Nutter Architects Portfolio
A Definitive Guide to 3D Printing
What Is 3D Printing and How Does It Work? | Mashable Explains Video
Video of a 3D Architectural Model being made
Link to SaviorLabs’ Free Assessment
Sections
Running into Problems on the Job
Technology in the Architectural Field
The Drafting Process
The Next Big Thing in Technology – 3D Printing
Architecture & Technology: Then & Now
Running into Problems on the Job
Paul: It’s amazing to take a pile of lumber or construction materials and make it into a house is just an amazing thing. And you help with the plan. But I’m sure that they hit plan issues. How often does that happen where you drew the plans up, and they go out there, and something is not working because of who knows what? I mean, there’s lots of different things. So it’s a collaborative effort, I think.
Ben: Yes. Well that’s an interesting question in the sense that in the last, say, 12 to 18 months, for whatever reason, I just had an opportunity to kind of reflect back and think back on the volume of construction that we’ve accomplished just in my small firm. And I think over those 30+ years, it’s probably north of $125 million worth of construction. And that’s a reasonable number.
Paul: That’s 1/8 of a billion dollars.
Ben: Yeah. I never thought of it that way. But yes. So and then I also was able to recall when there have been the very few errors or omissions, if you will, that we’ve ever had — whether it was myself or someone else — have been the sum total of four windows, one foundation that we had to do some concrete cutting on. It’s about four to six examples of times when I said to a general contractor, “Okay, we screwed that up.” So three of those windows, I bought replacement windows for them, and those three windows ended up in my house, which is one way to learn a lesson. But it’s been very minor. I mean, it might have a total value of ten or fifteen thousand dollars.
Paul: Wow. That’s incredible.
Ben: So I’m obviously very happy about that. But I’ve always felt that one of the things that really drives us and is really important to us is that we’re not only very creative, but we’re also very thorough. And that’s probably not only a lesson learned from when I was a child working on my parents’ property and sort of understanding the accountability lesson, but also, for four years, I worked in a firm that was architecture and construction. So that combined both professions under one umbrella, and it kind of ramped up my appreciation for if you’re going to draw it, you need to be absolutely certain that it can be built. And I was involved in the process of all of the material ordering and window specs and so on. You know, it’s all well and good to be creative, but if you cannot put a thorough set of construction documents out to the general contractor and the trades, it’s not good information for them, and it could be, it could be a very expensive.
Paul: I was just going to say, based on the number of things you’ve had to fix, the low number six or seven times or five times, contractors must love to work with you because they know the plans are going to be executable. I mean, the last thing a contractor wants is to have to redo stuff.
Ben: Right. Yes. And that’s the last thing we want them to do either. And you’re right. And we have great working relationships with a core set of general contractors. And we have had, on occasion, we’ve had comments back from framing contractor or other people that, “This is the best set of drawings we’ve ever worked with.” And those are obviously…it doesn’t happen all the time, only because you don’t necessarily always get that feedback. But when you do, it’s very helpful because then we understand that we’re providing them with information that’s appropriate and is allowing them to do their job well.
Paul: It’s important to… Because if you weren’t, you’d like to know that. And you probably would.
Ben: Right. Yes, we would.
Paul: But it’s really nice to know that the processes and systems and work methodologies you’re doing are resulting in things that are useful. And as we’ve said before, those contractors, those people that do the building, they’re incredibly talented. So to get them to say something that this is good is high praise. That’s really neat to hear. And I’m sure it made you feel good, but, you know, it’s really nice to know that — whether they say it or not — you’re producing things that are ultimately useful, you know, hugely beneficial to their work.
Ben: Yes. That’s right. Yeah. It’s a very satisfying end result all around. And the more times we can repeat that, the happier we are.
Technology in the Architectural Field
Paul: So now, you started well before computers were contemporary at all. I mean, they just… So you worked with a pencil.
Ben: Yes. Yeah, in fact, it’s almost frightening to think so. But when I first entered college, they were still doing math on a slide rule. And by the time, you know, my second year, we actually had a calculator that probably cost an arm and a leg but at least would add, subtract, multiply, and divide.
Paul: So… Wow, that’s just… So you were doing math to calculate rise and run and all those different things on a slide rule. And then you moved to a calculator. I mean, even a calculator seems primitive.
Ben: It does.
Paul: So when you drew plans in the old world, you’d have to erase them and change them.
Ben: Yes.
Paul: I mean, there wasn’t any other way.
Ben: No, there wasn’t. Yes.
Paul: So, it must have been much more laborious.
Ben: It was so different. Yes. And actually, when I worked at Royal Barry Wills office, there was a gentleman there at the time who had been in the profession for decades as a draftsman. And he used to comment that he would get paid as much to erase as he did to draw. And it was so accurate because in that day and age, you couldn’t just… that’s one of the really great things about computer-aided design now, what we refer to as CAD, because you can do revisions so quickly, and it’s great in both the design process and as you’re doing a set of construction drawings.
Paul: So, now you brought up the point of the draftsman, were you drawing the plans or was the draftsman drawing the plans at Royal?
Ben: Way back… Right. So at Royal Barry Wills office, generally there would be a principal, so that would be one of the lead people in the office. So for example, Dick Wills, he would have a lot of interaction with the client and would do conceptual drawings, which were generally on trace paper, and that would be…that’s a flimsy kind of paper that you draw on, for both floor plans and doing exterior elevation drawings.
Paul: So let me stop you there. I don’t want to derail that. But why is it transparent, semitransparent?
Ben: Oh, it’s so that you could…. Great question. It’s so that you could put one piece of paper over another. So you’re making…as you’re doing sketches for a floorplan, for example, you might put a first pass of thoughts down, for organizing a first floor, for example, but then generally you would explore that and find out, well what if I… Maybe the house should be flipped. Maybe the garage should be on the other end. So you have the flexibility to take that transparent paper and flip it over or upside down or backwards or roll another piece on top of it and try a different arrangement between the garage and where the kitchen is. So it allowed you to do a progressive set of explorations of your design solution. And I have to say that for some of us in the office, even in 2017, it’s still a very productive way to do some of the design. It’s kind of a very fluid way to explore design. So that’s kind of the reason for that.
Paul: Well, I’ve always wondered that, you know. Why wouldn’t you just write it on white paper. But anyway. Okay. So we’re back to Dick Wills, and he would be the principal, and he’d make up the sketches and work with the client. And then what would happen?
Ben: And at the end of that process… So he’d do a concept design, meet with the client, probably do some revisions to that as a sort of more sophisticated solution that would be considered more of a final set of design drawings. And then those of us in the drafting room, if you will — at the time there were five or six of us—
Paul: So you were doing drafting at that time.
Ben: Yes. Right. So then we would take that design, floorplans, and building elevations and begin to convert that into a set of construction drawings — foundation plan, floor plans, exterior elevations. Building sections are when you basically take the giant chainsaw and cut the house in half so you can draw how it’s built — floor joists and rafters and so on. And all the details associated with that — roof trim and window trim, chimney details, whatever is required — that would be part of the responsibility of the draftsman. And then you would also begin to work quite a bit with the client at that point as well.
That process is different for us know, or at least in my office. Each one of the project architects becomes involved with the client right at the beginning of our project as well, whether it’s a renovation or new construction.
And there is a couple of reasons for that. One is that I feel like then everybody has ownership on that project from day one, which, to me, provides an opportunity for that individual who is the project architect, to be more excited about that process. And it also is two sets of eyes, ears, and experiences, and imagination applied to that client project. So it’s a little… The overall process is not dramatically different in its sort of intention, but what’s very different is in the application of going from design, through the design process, and to a set of construction drawings.
The Drafting Process
Paul: So you had a specific pool of drafts-people draftsmen at the time. But that sort of has collapsed, I would imagine because you all use CAD now?
Ben: Yes.
Paul: And you can make the changes and… In other words, I don’t have to hand it off to somebody else. I might, but just for scheduling purposes, but we’re all able to do that. And I mean, it would have been pretty weird to take a set of plans, to take somebody else’s set of plans and go in and erase and change it. Is that right?
Ben: Right. That would be very rare.
Paul: 30 years ago?
Ben: That’s right. That would be very rare, and it would only be a circumstance where maybe somebody was out on vacation, or they were sick for a few weeks, and you had to do something like that. Generally, you took responsibility for those, and we still do that now unless it’s a time crunch or something of that nature. But, yes. And it is. The way that we can provide various design and detailed solutions by way of computer in the 21st century is just remarkable to me compared to when I started doing this.
The Next Big Thing in Technology – 3D Printing
Paul: Well, what do you think is the next big thing in that? Because, you know, you were doing drawings on flat pieces of paper. And then we moved into CAD where we basically mimic that. Then we moved into 3D where we could extrude and do elevations and shading and coloring and all. What’s going to happen next, do you think?
Ben: Well, some of it, in a way, has already started to happen in that there is also more technology available create 3-dimensional actual models.
Paul: Oh, that’s interesting.
Ben: We do not have that capability in my firm. But there are firms where they probably have the equipment to take their drawings and virtually create a 3-dimensional model.
Paul: So like with a 3D printer they would print it?
Ben: Yes. A 3D printer. Right.
Paul: Wow. I wouldn’t have thought of that.
Ben: Right. That is going to… And it’s quite well used in industrial design for example and has been for a while. But that, I’m sure, will trickle down as the technology and the cost of the 3D printers becomes more affordable. More of us will have access to that. That’s a great tool.
The other thing that has changed and certainly is — again, we’re doing relatively small work as far as size of each project. But if you’re doing a 30-story high rise somewhere, the basic premise is the same, but the way you go about it is quite different. And in those firms, many of them are now using a product called Revit. And with Revit, you can have an end result that is both three-dimensional modeling, computer modeling, as well as the two-dimensional construction drawings. So one software program provides you with the opportunity to, to accomplish both of those. Whereas, in our case, we use one, an AutoCAD product to do 2D, and we use a 3-dimensional computer modeling software for our 3D.
Paul: So I find myself, with technology a lot of times, being surprised that that didn’t exist.
Ben: Mmm… I suppose.
Paul: So wait a minute. You’re telling me… Now, thinking about it, I know you use two different packages. But I’ve never really gotten into that detail. But there really aren’t a lot of packages that you do both of them in?
Ben: No. And I suppose that’s probably just the evolution of the capability of software.
Paul: I guess that’s the danger of assuming something. So you draw things in an AutoCAD product, the 2D stuff.
Ben: That’s correct.
Paul: And then you don’t have to redraw it in the 3D. Do you?
Ben: We do.
Paul: Really. Now see that just doesn’t seem right. It’s 2017.
Ben: I know.
Paul: I mean, come on.
Ben: I’m sure that that will evolve to make that even… That will become an affordable package for small firms. And the only reason we are not using a product like Revit is that it’s another investment, and it’s also some time for our people to sort of come up to speed with using that as opposed to what we currently do. So that’s where I would imagine the biggest difference will be over a decade or whatever timeframe it is.
Paul: Probably shorter than we know.
Ben: Probably. Yeah. I bet it will be the opportunity for us to work in a CAD or in a software package that would be similar to a very large firm, and then the opportunity to have an affordable 3D printer.
Paul: Yeah. Interesting. So, now you could probably 3D print some of your stuff, if you just sent it out. Right?
Ben: Yes.
Paul: So you have that capability now, it’s just a matter whether you have a printer.
Ben: Yeah. And we’ve done that, but we don’t do it very often.
Paul: Right. So what was the reaction of the people who saw the 3D print?
Ben: Well, one of them happened to be… Ironically, it was for my own house because I had a friend who was working in a firm that was on kind of the leading edge of creating, the 3D printers. And they wanted to kind of find out how can we work with architects of all shapes and sizes. And so we created the 3D model, computer model, I should say, just to be clear. So we created the 3D computer model and gave it to them. They had somebody then convert it to the software that ran their 3D printer and made the model of my house, which is fascinating for me to look at or people who come in the office.
Paul: Was this before you built your house or after?
Ben: No. It was after. It was after. Right.
Paul: It would have been interesting just the emotional… I mean, what in the world. Is that, is that right? I want to change that.
Ben: Well, you bet. You bet. And there’s no doubt that the ability to do 3D computer modeling has also allowed us to become even better at what we do because we can see things more easily 3-dimensionally and, again, it’s back to both the subjective and the objective. The subjective, do we think it looks better that way, but objective, is there any little sort of hidden, “Oh, that’s not a good roof shape in that location.” So it’s really fun to work in this profession in this time.
Paul: Do you still have that model?
Ben: I do.
Paul: We’d like to get a picture of that to show our audience. I think they would like to see that. That would be cool.
Ben: You bet.
Paul: Because, I mean, I’m very keen on 3D printers, and I’m just so glad I haven’t bought one, you know. It’s this funny thing. You know, the longer you wait, the better they’re going to get, and it’s amazing. One of my brothers is doing some really cool stuff. He lives in Ohio. And there, the public libraries have 3D printers that you can use for free, just pay for the material. That’s a really cool idea.
Ben: That’s a progressive thought. I like that.
Paul: Yeah. I said, “Wow!” So we gotta make that happen. But, so if you don’t know what a 3D printer is, we’ll put some links in the show notes about that and a link to what Ben has done. We will have all Ben’s contact information and links to his website in the show notes. And you can reach out to him for questions, etc. And, get a look at some of the incredible buildings that just fit so well. I think that’s one of the biggest comments I’d have about the architecture I’ve seen you do is it fits so well into its environment.
Ben: Thank you.
Paul: And that’s, I think that’s high praise. I mean, that is not just… I haven’t seen the inside as much, but they just fit so well. And, we live in New England and it’s a rural area, and it is one of the most beautiful places in the world. And we take it for granted a lot, I think. But I had a good friend who went overseas to school and came back, and he’s like, “Wow. New England is just spectacular.” And it really is. And if you haven’t had a chance to visit here, you know, get a chance to look around and see what it is. But, there’s some great examples on your website and other things. And I’d like people to take a look at that.
So we’ve been talking with Ben Nutter, Benjamin Nutter Architects in Topsfield. I hope you’ve enjoyed the time. Hope everybody has enjoyed listening.
Ben: Thank you very much, Paul. I’ve enjoyed doing this.
Paul: Thank you, Ben.
Dos and Don’ts of Designing
Today on the Edge of Innovation, we are talking with Benjamin Nutter from Benjamin Nutter Architects, an architectural firm based in Topsfield, Massachusetts. He’s sharing the dos and don’t of designing as well as some advice for aspiring architects.
Show Notes
Benjamin Nutter Architects’ Website: benjaminnutter.com
Find Benjamin Nutter Architects on Twitter
Find Benjamin Nutter Architects on Facebook
Benjamin Nutter Architects Portfolio
Link to SaviorLabs’ Free Assessment
Sections
Things that Impact Design
Buying House Plans Online
What Does it Take to be an Architect?
Communicating With Clients – Understanding their Vision
The Company’s History – How Ben Became an Architect
Advice for Someone Who Wants to become an Architect
Dos and Don’ts of Designing
Paul: So I guess I haven’t, when thinking about talking to an architect and thinking about an architect, I really narrowed it down to, “Oh, they designed the plans.” Oh, and they listen to what I say, and they say, “No, that would be a bad thing to make that work that way. Here’s why, and maybe we should change it this…” So you negotiate with me to take my design ethic and help it achieve reality. But I sort of stopped there, and I really didn’t take into account all of the other things. And that’s what I want us to pull out now, is, What are those other things? If I’m saying I’m stubborn. I want to go download my own plans. Let’s give our listeners sort of a checklist. What would they have to do to sort of be successful? And if one of them is zoning and getting the approvals. But can we go through that?
Because I think for most people, it’s always great to give some information to people so that they can be informed. And they say, “Yeah. I’m not up to that. Let me hire an architect to do it.” So what are some of those things that are hidden that I’m saying, “Well, I know a good carpenter. I know a good general contractor. They appear to be good to me.” We’ve heard horror stories all over the place. Of course, those are the ones that stick in your mind. They start with the house, and they never finish it and that kind of thing. But there’s enough people that that’s happened to that they stay in our minds. So it happens.
So what would you give? You know, two or three or five hints that say, okay, you’re thinking about building a house. You’re going to go download your plans. What are you going to do next?
Ben: Okay. So there’s a host of things that come to my mind. Part of it is just the whole notion of what it’s like to live in the 21 century. The somewhat more objective issues to deal with that are not necessarily always the most pleasant because they’re sort of the municipal process is just the nature of whether it’s an existing house or a new house is finding a site, if it’s a new house, making sure that all of the regulations are met. And that would apply to either circumstance. And those regulations are typically zoning, septic systems, if there is a municipal sewer system, site survey — depending on how much information is appropriate to really set up as a site plan. So you have the grades and the change of rolling terrain, whatever, on a site.
So there’s the kind of fundamental information that is the base of your project, really the land, the site. And what implications are there about that particular piece of property? Are you near a wetland so that you need to be aware of, can you build within 100 feet of the wetland or is it near the ocean where there may be a floodplain that applies. So there is a whole layer of things that you need to be aware of in a permitting and municipal way, and sometimes people are at least knowledgeable about that, but it’s rare that people have an appreciation for how much of a challenge that process can be in the 21st century.
So you have that kind of site related issue, which also then certainly trickles down and informs the design of a new house because you’d need to make sure that the new house works on that site. And again, you get into kind of the objective criteria. For example, where’s the street? And that means the driveway is going to come in from a certain location. That’s a fairly objective piece of information. Whereas, something more subjective might be, Where do you want on that site to develop a private outdoor area, and do you have options or not?
And people today are, thankfully, tending to think about important other aspects. For example, where is south, and do we want…if we can, do we want to able to put foldable panels for solar electricity on the house. So, is that a criteria that’s important to us or not? Where are your views? If your views are of a nice rolling farm area or water, if you’re on the ocean, obviously, that informs things about the house as well. You don’t usually put the garage on the side of the house their the view is, for example. And again, those might seem really simple.
Paul: They’re simple once you say them.
Things that Impact Design
Ben: Yeah. Okay. All things that impact the design in, again, a subjective and an objective way. Zoning has limitations on how many stories, how many floors can the house be. What is the maximum roof height? And in some cases, that’s more lenient. In some cases it’s very absolute. And then you kind of need to work down from there.
So to your point about buying plans online, which is, of course, typically only for new construction, all of those elements really have to come into play at some point, whether you manage those yourself or you hire. You might be able to hire a civil engineer who would just work with the issues of wetland and zoning, height of the building. They could advice you about that as well. If you had a set of house plans that you felt really comfortable, would also be easily able to be built on your property.
The other part of the building process that one has to be aware of is the building codes too. Those have changed rather dramatically. I mean, even since we did your small barn, the building code has changed. And for the most part, fortunately, because of energy codes and an attempt by Massachusetts, especially, to make our residences highly more energy efficient than they were even a decade ago. So sometimes, when you buy a set of building plans, that information doesn’t meet your local code.
Now a good general contractor would be aware of that and could certainly adjust a set of drawings, meaning, how the insulation is done to very likely make it fit with current energy code. But that’s another whole part of it is kind of making sure that your house complies with current building codes and energy codes.
Paul: So it sounds like you’re biting off a lot when you’re saying, “I’m going to build my own house by myself,” or whatever, not hire an architect.
Ben: You are.
Paul: Or an engineer or something. There’s a lot of details that just aren’t clearly obvious.
Ben: And that’s probably why a lot of new homes tend to be built in a subdivision kind of environment where you have one or several plans that people can choose from and a developer/general contractor who is building those on a kind of repeat basis so that they will very likely have a whole list of options, in a way, sort of like when you go to buy an automobile, and you can get a low, medium, or high trim package or other features. So that that could be one very regulated and informed way to go about buying a new house and having one built for you that would have information pertinent and appropriate to that process.
Buying House Plans Online
Paul: So would it be… I’m just thinking here out loud. Would it be viable? Or how viable would it be for me to say, “Oh, gee. I really like this house online,” and give you the plans to modify them. Is that even a thing worth taking about?
Ben: It actually is. And we haven’t done that frequently, but we’ve done that several times. I can think of an example in Topsfield that I did decades ago, where we modified a set of plans that a client had purchased. And what that did for that particular client was it sort of moved the ball down the field some because we weren’t starting from scratch, and fortunately, that particular individual was, or is, an engineer and was involved in general contracting, so was more informed than your typical client. But he knew well enough that on their particular site, it was a nice site. It was a flat site, fairly easy to build on. So he could buy a set of plans. In that case, it wasn’t online, but they were able to get a set of plans, and were able to easily modify them. So the big benefit to them in that case is because we weren’t starting from scratch, our fee was substantially less than it would have been if we started, literally with no idea of the eventual outcome.
Paul: Right. So how often do you start with just a completely blank sheet of paper?
Ben: Actually, more of the time we start that way, which is part of what makes it exciting. Now when we’re doing renovation/addition work, the sheet of paper isn’t entire blank because you already have a building there and the way the building sits on the site and where north and south is and where the driveway is, where septic system might be, pieces of information that inform how you work on the building. So that doesn’t necessarily make the design process more or less complicated. It just makes it a little bit different.
What Does it Take to be an Architect?
Paul: Okay. Well now, I was raised in a family of engineers. Both of my brothers are electrical engineers so I’ve always had a very big appreciation for engineers. They run trains. No, but do you guys do the engineering as well? And before we even go there, the process of being an architect or architecting something is not just drawing a pretty picture of how it might look or maybe building a little model of how it might look. There’s a lot to that. Can you sort of peel that onion for us? I mean, I can doodle. You know, my daughter’s a great artist. She can doodle. Why isn’t she an architect? What’s the difference there?
Ben: Well, I think of architects as being people who are — I suppose it’s not a brilliant moment or statement but — visual and have a certain skillset that allows them to convert their imagination into visual examples and visuals solutions for their clients.
Paul: Okay. That sounds like the universal understanding of architects.
Ben: Probably, yes. But then behind that, there also has to be a good deal of that combination of, as you brought up the point about engineers. You should have some appreciation for structural engineering, certainly. We no longer do our own structural engineering. We have two people we work with because they’re better suited. We do the basic concept for how the structure will work in a building. But they really run the calculations and confirm beam sizes and point loads and things that are very technical.
Paul: So do you suggest the beam?
Ben: We would suggest the location, and we would have an idea of the size and what we’d work with Joe or Jeff on is, specifically what type. Is it a wood or steel beam, what size? So we have that sort of back and forth information flow so we can figure that out for each particular project.
Paul: Right. So you’re sort of folding all of the technology, the technical aspects that they feed back to you into the design so that it looks the same.
Ben: Yes. That’s right. But getting back to your sort of bigger point about how do we go about a design process, what we always ask our clients to do is to provide us some type of narrative about their goals. And again, those can be the subjective ones that relate to style or paint color, or, you know, the more soft and fuzzy —
Paul: What they think is important.
Ben: Right — kinds of things. And then the very objective type — a room list, how many bedrooms, a garage, size of garage. What are their other desires as far as are they interested in having a kitchen, sitting, dining space that’s open, or independent rooms? And that could be as simple as one sheet of paper with a list of rooms. Or it could be more complex, and it doesn’t happen often but on occasion, you might have a client who would give you a notebook with information for each room.
So we encourage them to provide as much information as they would like, and we always review that with the client. Generally speaking, most of our clients arrive with some sense of a design style or architectural style that they’re interested in doing. So it’s not common that somebody comes in thinking they’ll do a colonial house and all of a sudden, it becomes a contemporary house. That would be unusual. It’s more likely that they come in with a rather specific request for a particular style of architecture, and then we work with them in that style and take that, again, sort of subjective piece and apply their objective criteria and work toward a solution.
Communicating With Clients – Understanding their Vision
Paul: Okay. Very cool. So now we have these desires or opinions by the client. They want this. Do you start out with elevation drawings? I mean, how do you communicate to me, to start introducing me to the realization of this?
Ben: Sure. Well, and actually, I also wanted to mention that along with the subjective and objective design information that they bring to us, and we ask questions of them to try to fill any unknowns in before we start the design process. The other big, very important thing is to know what’s their budget because we really can’t start a design process without understanding what their budget expectation is as well. Once we have that information collected, the design process for us generally begins with both what we refer to as two-dimensional and three-dimensional drawings. And the difference between those two is that we both happen to have a pad of paper in front of us. We could sketch out a floor plan of a building on that pad of paper, and it would be a series of lines with probably rectangles on it that would have different room functions.
What we do is also provide for them at the same time — and this is where the technology of the computer is fabulous in our profession, is we can provide for them and three-dimensional computer model that will provide an image that they can see from both inside and outside, which is complete. Well, back in, really not that long ago for most firms. 20 years ago, very few people were doing that. More people are doing that now.
Paul: Yeah. It was not possible.
Ben: Right and there are specific softwares for our profession that allow you to work in both two-dimensional and three-dimensional. And it’s very much changed the way an architect can offer their service to their clients. We just felt, oh, 15 years ago, let’s say, that the opportunity to use three-dimensional computer modeling was such an incredibly valuable tool that we employ that on every design, and it’s usually part of the preliminary design process as well.
Paul: Yeah. I mean, we’ve all seen that on TV and just in examples and renderings of things. It is profound. So let’s get into that a little bit.
The Company’s History – How Ben Became an Architect
Paul: How long have you been doing this?
Ben: It first started working in Boston in the 1970s.
Paul: Okay. And then when did you start your own firm?
Ben: In 1984.
Paul: Okay. So 31 years this year.
Ben: Yes. Actually, 33 years this year. Isn’t it? Whatever.
Paul: Sorry. My math isn’t my first language. It’s embarrassing. But anyway, so 33 years. I was just testing you to see if you could do the math.
Ben: Exactly. See if I can do any math. Right.
Paul: So what got you into architecture? What made you make that decision? Was it in high school, junior high, or did you go to college and say, “I’ll figure it out then,” or what?
Ben: No, I was rather fortunate that even as a young person, meaning, before I even got into junior high school as they called it in those days, I knew that I wanted to be in the architectural profession.
Paul: Why? What happened that sparked that interest?
Ben: Right. Well, part of it is probably the genetic of my father was a mechanical engineer and my mother was a landscape architect. So there was a kind of a blend of those two professions and those two interests. And they’re both fairly accomplished in that. So it was sort of natural in that regard. But I always, even as a young person, I always had a very strong interest in the architecture in New England, a variety of styles. Ironically, I can remember sitting in class as an elementary school student and being able to draw, do a little quick perspective of a house and be able to draw the chimney so it looked correct. And if there was a skill that I managed to get, that must have been it because a classmate would look at that and go, “How do you know how to do that?”
And my answer would be pretty much, “I don’t know.” So I have that visual skillset and the ability to see it in my head and then convert it into a drawing, which is fun, really.
Paul: Well, that’s true. So you’ve identified something that was fun. So you had this notion about architecture in junior high, and did you do anything? Did you engage in it, or just was it something, “Oh, eventually, I’ll become an architect.” Was it that blunt or…?
Ben: Well, actually, it was probably a series of things. But, we live, still live on a property in Topsfield that is 30 acres and my parents moved there and had a little kind of a weekend farm. And we did all sorts of projects on the weekends. So we renovated the house. We added on to the house. We picked up a so-called carriage shed and moved it out of the way and built a foundation and moved it back on and renovated that. And so there were always projects, hands-on projects, throughout my youth. And it could have been as simple as painting the exterior or installing flooring inside or learning enough to be dangerous about plumbing and electrical, which is why I don’t do those myself.
So that was part of our growing up experience on the farm and using farm equipment, driving tractors, a backhoe, things like that. So it was always a combination of hands-on experience and then sort of the cerebral part. And that just kind of inspired me to be involved in a profession where you could both create and enjoy the hands on and see it. Not only the creation on paper, if you will, but the creation come to life on a piece of property, which, you know, isn’t really that different than a mechanical engineer or a structural engineer.
You know, to your earlier point, all sorts of engineers and architects and I think in the case of architecture sometimes, it’s that sort of visual style that is more part of the design process, maybe not unlike industrial design, for example. You know, how do automobiles end up being designed the way… We’re attracted to them probably more by how they look than whether it’s an all-wheel drive for example.
So all that experience for me as I was a young person and right into junior and senior high, and I took every sort of drafting class I could and architectural drawing, and I took a lot of art. That was always very important for me. And I just knew that I wanted to go away and do college for architecture.
Paul: Wow. So you wanted to go to become an architect. There must be certain colleges that are better than others at that. Where did you choose to go?
Ben: Well, my challenge was a little more, for me at any rate, a little more unique. Growing up in New England at that time, there were not a lot of schools in the New England area that offered a five-year architecture degree.
Paul: Well why is it five year? Aren’t most degrees four?
Ben: No. Actually, architecture has traditionally always been five years, in part, because of just the process of learning how to combine that sort of visual and engineering and other aspects of what an architect does. There’s always been a lot of drawing, if you will. That’s a little bit different now because people do so much on a computer, almost all of it on computer. But developing that skillset, to be able to take design criteria and develop it into an actual design is just time consuming. So it’s a school process that is as time demanding as being in a medical school, for example.
But within New England and my sort of unique adventure is that I was very strong on the visual, and I’m okay with the practical aspect of structure, but I never really enjoyed, and I never did really well in math and science.
Paul: Oh, really. Interesting.
Ben: Yeah. The Cornells of the world would not likely be an opportunity for me because they would look at my math and science grades and think, “Well, how could this person be an architect?”
So I actually took a little different path. I went to a two-year school in Vermont and got an associate’s degree in architecture and building technology. And from there, eventually I transferred on and finished my degree at the University of Oregon. So it’s a northeast, northwest kind of path, not your common path. Probably it would be very difficult to do today. But at the time, it worked out really well.
Advice for Someone Who Wants to become an Architect
Paul: Right. Well I do think it’s important… You know, there’s a lot of people listening. And they may know somebody who’s young and wants to be, has a notion of being in architecture. And even that path, I mean, you could go get a two-year degree in that, and I don’t think a college is going to look poorly at you to say, “You can’t come in here for an architectural degree.” They might. But, I think there’s hope. What would you suggest for a youth of today, if they wanted to be in architecture? Certainly take art classes?
Ben: Yes. Art, graphics, also would recommend that if somebody is interested in that when they’re in high school, it would be great to find, not just perhaps an architectural firm that they might intern in, but I very much encourage that they find opportunities to get out in the field and work. It could be a local small carpenter contractor, or it could be a larger commercial contractor. Find out what it’s like to be at both ends of the process and how important it is for those two professions to really collaborate well together and understand what they each do. I would certainly encourage anyone who is in junior and senior high to then, look for opportunities to get out and find out what it’s like in the profession.
Paul: So just down the street from us they’re taking some trees out and going to be building a couple of houses, and my wife, you know, knows everybody and stops by and is talking to the guy who’s doing it. And he said, “Oh, if you know anybody who wants to work, send them over to me.” And, of course, we offered that to some people we know, and they weren’t very intrigued or motivated to do that. But, I would imagine, because they’re grading the land and all that, it would be helping out with manual labor.
Ben: Yes.
Paul: So would you suggest they do that, or is it, “No, I’ve got to look for, you know, higher up level job.” Take what you can get or…?
Ben: I really encourage… I think it’s great to get your hands dirty and get outside and find out what it’s like to be out there on a day like today when it’s hazy, hot, and humid, and it might actually inspire you to do well in your classes and realize that on these days, it’s a little more comfortable to be inside, just as it is on a day in January. That’s when I think my own appreciation for people that are in the trades, because they’re working outdoors in all kinds of weather and it’s really important that they’re an equal partner in this, in the entire design and construction process. And the more that the two different professions appreciate and respect that, the better results you have.
Paul: So to bring a point to that, if you’re a teenager or know a teenager, and they can get a job moving bricks at a construction area, that’s better, that’s infinitely better than not working at the construction area.
Ben: In my opinion, absolutely. Sure. Go. Go find out what it’s like.
Paul: Right. I don’t want them to say, “No, I have to be the foreman’s helper or something.” No. You gotta do the hard ones. So it’s not an excuse.
Ben: I think so. That’s right. It’s all good character building experience. Right?
Paul: Well, but I think even more than that, if you were to hire a new architect coming out of college and had of their resume that they worked for a summer with a local contractor moving bricks, that’s going to move them to one pile that’s probably higher than the other pile.
Ben: It would for me. Absolutely. And I would say that would be true for the people that are in my small firm as well, is that every one of us has an interest in doing those projects. And we generally have some self-inflicted project that we’re doing at our own homes, which takes, of course, forever. But, but it’s a great way for us to appreciate — which I certainly learned to appreciate very much when we were first building our home. You know, I can wear a tool belt and be proficient, but the people who are in that every day for decades, their knowledge and their skillset is phenomenal.
Paul: It is amazing. I mean, it is. It is. You should, if you don’t have an appreciation for what they do, it’s fascinating.
Ben: It, it truly is.
Also published on Medium.