Senior Architects (London & Europe)

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Posted on : 27-05-2009 | By : KarlMcC | In : Clients Currently Looking, General / Blogworthy

Architectural Select is currently looking for 3x Senior Architects for two clients with offices in London and across Europe.

Senior Architects will have full life cycle experience and we are looking for individuals with strong leadership, communication and management skills and who possess excellent technical knowledge.

To find out more about this, please contact us either using karl@architecturalselect.com or by telephoning myself on 07894 552 671

Need Help With Your CV ?

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Posted on : 23-05-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : General / Blogworthy

We work with a wide range of clients. Many with international offices, hundreds of employees, huge HR departments and nobody has 5 minutes time on their hands to read through the CV which you have spend hours and hours creating.

Some say that you only have a few seconds to make an impression. Others say it’s down to luck and catching the right person at the right time. We believe it’s a combination of the two.

Put yourself in the following picture:

Your architectural firm has just been given a huge project. You’re slightly understaffed and need someone with certain skills to help work on it. You have placed the relevant adverts and you now have 11 CVs to go through. From these 11, maybe only 1 will seem to be perfect for the job, 2 others could be potentials and the rest… deleted.

Let us assume that, from the rejected CVs, 1 of them was perfect. The experience matched, the qualifications are relevant and the candidate lives reasonably close. He’s available and also for the right money.

If your CV isn’t laid out correctly, modified, reworked, rewritten and it does not get the reader’s attention in a few seconds then it isn’t good enough and you won’t get the job. You won’t get the next job or the next one. You will get a job eventually but it probably will not be your ideal job.

This is what we do for a living. We look at CVs constantly. Hundreds every week. We know what we’re looking for. We can spot a good candidate even from a badly laid out CV. One which a client might not even read.

The majority of people spend more time planning their holiday or the purchase of their new car than they do on putting their CV together. In many cases the CV structure itself is wrong, tells a confusing story or may be misleading. If this is the case, a recruiter or potential employer will not spend any longer than a few seconds skimming it before it heads into the round filing cabinet.

By structuring and planning what is and what isn’t required on your CV you are making a conscious effort to be better than your competition and to stand out for the rest.

In simple terms, if you want to be considered for more jobs and invited for more interviews then you must have a CV which people will want to read. One which recruiters and employers will take the trouble of e-mailing to their colleagues or printing out and reading on the train on the way home from work.

If you spend hours researching that new car and trying to get the best deal on your summer holiday then you will have to invest time in preparing your CV to be the best that it can be.

We can write your CV for you but we will need your help to do so.

A professionally written CV will dramatically improve your chances of being interviewed and cut the length of time you spend looking for a job.

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RIBA Competition Projects Exhibition, Manchester

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Posted on : 23-04-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : General / Blogworthy

Exhibition of RIBA Competition Projects    
Venue:    CUBE Gallery, 113 – 115 Portland Street, Manchester
Dates:    2nd May to 17th May 2008

A new spring exhibition organised by the RIBA Competitions Office opens in May showing a selection of recent competition results and a built project, all of which originated through RIBA competition. 

This exciting and varied selection of projects has been chosen to show the range of solutions generated through architectural competitions and will include:

  • Egremont Castle Performance Structure, Cumbria
    • The winning design by Decosterd-Cotting Architects with Guscetti-Tournier Engineers from Geneva, Swizterland and the shortlisted schemes.
  • Brockholes Wetland and Woodland Nature Reserve, Preston
    • The winning design by Adam Khan Architects and the shortlisted schemes for the competition to design a new visitor facility for Brockholes.
  • Sheffield Parkway Footbridge
    • The winning design by Tim Norlund, a 23 year old architect from Denmark who had beaten over 100 entries to gain first prize in this competition.  Plus the shortlisted entries.
  • Avenham Park Pavillion, Preston
    • This project was won through an invited design competition in February 2005 by Ian McChesney Architects.  A series of boards will show the development of the design from the original competition entry through to completion. 

The exhibition celebrates some of the most successful projects so far in 2008 and demonstrates how the competitions process can laud emerging practices as well as established ones.

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RIBA Competition Results

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Posted on : 14-04-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : General / Blogworthy

14 April 2008

St Leger Homes
Bungalow Design Competition

Winner Announced

The Crawford Partnership has won the RIBA competition for the design of a suitable and innovative solution for the extension and adaptation of a number of one bedroom bungalows scattered throughout the Doncaster area.

The existing bungalows are managed by St Leger Homes which is the Arms Length Management Organisation (ALMO) that manages council housing for Doncaster Metropolitan Borough.  Currently these bungalows offer limited accommodation with the kitchens and bathrooms being particularly small and are increasingly failing to meet the aspirations of customers.  Consequently a competition was launched on behalf of St Leger Homes seeking innovative design proposals to alter and extend these bungalows.

Fourteen practices initially submitted expressions of interest to the competition and four were shortlisted and invited to present their initial design proposals to the jury panel.  The other shortlisted teams were: AIR Architects from London; Bauman Lyons from Leeds and Cottrell and Vermeulen from Hebden Bridge and London.

The Crawford Partnership was judged the winning entry because of the modest scale of the extension; alterations to both sides of the bungalow; a range of green features including the possibility of a sedum roof and an option for car parking if it was required.

Gill Robinson, RIBA Adviser commented: “This scheme provides a simple yet elegant solution to remodelling the one bedroom bungalow, which is flexible and economical to build. I particularly like the ingenious use of a small lightwell to link the extension to the bungalow. Overall a practical and imaginative design.”

Alan Crawford from The Crawford Partnership said: “We are looking forward to working with St Leger Homes.  The essence of our proposal centers on providing a simple, flexible and economic solution to extend each home and is based on a collective of cost effective, sustainable ideas that the practice is currently exploring and implementing on other projects.”

The design will be used in the future for a pilot project when funding becomes available for the work to take place.

Coming soon: superfast internet – Times Online

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Posted on : 08-04-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : General / Blogworthy

Coming soon: superfast internet – Times Online

Glastonbury Festival – Tickets 2008 – A Comedy of Errors

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Posted on : 06-04-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : Comments, General / Blogworthy

What a nightmare trying to get Glastonbury tickets.

Problems with their servers, problem with the website and problems with the order itself.

It seems as though for thousands that were lucky enough to get through to the site and enter in their details, confirmation numbers, postcodes and then their credit card details that the server crashed at the last hurdle so many many people are left standing there not knowing if their order went through or not.

When they tried again, it came back with errors that their numbers had, in fact, been used.

Nearly 4 hours later and the confirmation has just come through out of the blue… but it looks like they’ve just sent us the Sunday confirmation and not for the entire festival…

Flock to the rescue

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Posted on : 04-04-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : General / Blogworthy

For all of you still using Internet explorer to view webpages etc. who haven’t tried Firefox (which is, in my humble opinion better suited to my life and work style) you might want to have a look at Flock.

Only been using it for a few days and it is packed with features, bells and whistles which suit me perfectly.

Their strap line is “Get ready to meet your new favorite browser!” I definitely agree.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

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Friday afternoon ‘new’ blog set up

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Posted on : 04-04-2008 | By : KarlMcC | In : General / Blogworthy

Oh these things aren’t easy, are they ?

I’m using Modx for the http://www.architecturalselect.com site which is great. The software’s fantastic, easy to use and it’s a pretty nice environment to be in.

I would quite like to start a proper blog as there is a lot of industry happenings and things to say but the problem is, that in order to do so through Modx, I have to log in each time to create a new page.

The hassle is just too much so it looks like I’m forced to set up something new in Wordpress. So here we go… a brand new site and hopefully before long I’ll be able to bring it into the site nicely.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

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