I am/was a "senior architect"- (whatever that means), 20 years experience. Been unemployed one year. Most of my career has been on the design side, and with Macs/Archicad, though I am adequate with Autocad.
I took a 3-day Revit training class like 6 months ago, and got the free copy of Revit for a year at home. I am wondering if its worth doing anything more than going through the tutorial, or if I should plunge in and do a small hypothetical project with it. I am trying to fill in the gaps on my resume, but there's a difference between on the job experience with a team and working on it at home, and as a senior architect, it can vary how much I will be doing.
In short, is it worth investing the time with a project, or better to do the tutorial and use that time for other things- competition , web design, bussing tables, learning luge.
jayacluny
Jan 20, 17 3:09 pm
Non Sequitur:
I'm probably younger than you are. You sound like a "pretender"!
Seeking sage advice.
I am/was a "senior architect"- (whatever that means), 20 years experience. Been unemployed one year. Most of my career has been on the design side, and with Macs/Archicad, though I am adequate with Autocad.
I took a 3-day Revit training class like 6 months ago, and got the free copy of Revit for a year at home. I am wondering if its worth doing anything more than going through the tutorial, or if I should plunge in and do a small hypothetical project with it. I am trying to fill in the gaps on my resume, but there's a difference between on the job experience with a team and working on it at home, and as a senior architect, it can vary how much I will be doing.
In short, is it worth investing the time with a project, or better to do the tutorial and use that time for other things- competition , web design, bussing tables, learning luge.
Non Sequitur:
I'm probably younger than you are. You sound like a "pretender"!
Younger?
Please, do enlighten us?
Also, no where near a pretender.
No such luck!