Is a bachelor of architecture good for anything? Could you be hired as an interior designer with it? Also, if you have a bsc in interior design, would it take 2 years for the masters of architecture or would it take longer compared to if you had a bsc in architecture and are moving into masters.
Non Sequitur
Feb 24, 20 12:49 am
Architecture > Int Des by a cubic light year
A bachelor in arch is worth something, I guess... at least it will get you some decent material for a M.arch application folio but you really should aim for an accredited B.Arch (if available) so you can skip the grad school requirement. Besides that, you can do int-des with an arch background, no problem, if that is your jam but an int-des cannot do architecture. It's not really the same scope and the skillset developed in most (if not all) int-des programs do not translate well into architecture.
Where are you looking for to go to school and eventually work will affect your options.
Non Sequitur
Feb 24, 20 12:52 am
Pretty sure we've already covered all this in your other 6 identical threads. Adulting is hard, I'm told, but if you're having such a hard time picking a direction, maybe you should ask real people instead of throwing questions to an anonymous group on online wankers.
Is a bachelor of architecture good for anything? Could you be hired as an interior designer with it? Also, if you have a bsc in interior design, would it take 2 years for the masters of architecture or would it take longer compared to if you had a bsc in architecture and are moving into masters.
Architecture > Int Des by a cubic light year
A bachelor in arch is worth something, I guess... at least it will get you some decent material for a M.arch application folio but you really should aim for an accredited B.Arch (if available) so you can skip the grad school requirement. Besides that, you can do int-des with an arch background, no problem, if that is your jam but an int-des cannot do architecture. It's not really the same scope and the skillset developed in most (if not all) int-des programs do not translate well into architecture.
Where are you looking for to go to school and eventually work will affect your options.
Pretty sure we've already covered all this in your other 6 identical threads. Adulting is hard, I'm told, but if you're having such a hard time picking a direction, maybe you should ask real people instead of throwing questions to an anonymous group on online wankers.