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Job Market in Boston vs NYC

tk2356

This summer my wife and I are moving to either NYC or Boston, depending on which masters programs I'm accepted to. She's a French architect with three years of residential experience abroad, speaks English fluently and will have a green card. Given that her education and schooling was overseas, she's worried about finding a job, particularly if we move to Boston. Would the job market there be considerably harder for her when compared to NYC, or is that just a misconception? 

Thanks in advance for any advice. 

 
Feb 17, 18 6:42 pm
archinine
Boston is a much smaller city so yes it wouldn’t be as busy as nyc. That said the market is booming right now across the country. Boston in particular has an inordinately high number of architectural firms due its proximity to the schools. These firms are usually smaller though, not the outposts or headquarters of international firms. A connection through one of those schools could prove promising for a job. There are certainly more jobs passed around via the Cambridge schools than through online posts when it comes to Boston specifically.

All that said she may have to wait and network aggressively to find something in Boston. Vs nyc which is typically the busiest city in the country for architects where one can easily find work - especially in this current market - without having a formal connection.
Feb 17, 18 8:49 pm  · 
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Mr_Washini

NYC obviously would have more firms and more international work, so she wouldn't necessarily have to switch to the Imperial System and learn the local codes. 

She would probably find work in either city, but in NYC she has a better shot of working on international projects if that's what she's looking for.

Feb 18, 18 12:02 pm  · 
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tk2356

Thank you both for the responses! We will definitely try to work a connection through the university if we do end up in Boston, and it's good to hear the market is booming stateside. Thanks again. 

Feb 18, 18 5:26 pm  · 
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3tk

Well, it's good for now - rumor mill has some firms skittish.  For what it's worth, the Boston firms seem to have their act together (lower turnover, better distribution of experience), the NYC firms are all over the board.  High-end residential is prevalent in both, though the money in NYC means there's a bigger client pool. 

Feb 21, 18 1:52 pm  · 
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