Masters of Architecture student at University of Cincinnati
Brother, son, aspiring American architect and entrepreneur with a passion for history, design and self-development.
Vincent Cusumano Architect, Orange, NJ, US, Project Development Manager
- Managed accounts payable and receivable.
- Participate in AIA Continuing Education examinations for company Principal's license renewal in 27 states.
- Vital part of the expansion VCA's small business by redesigning website.
- Interacted with possible clients through newly established presence on social media.
- Ran advertising campaign utilizing self-created banners for several project premises.
- Reviewed resumes and vetted potential employees.
- Established remote accessibility and wireless connectivity for visual aids during staff meetings.
- Managed company communication systems.
- Preliminary architectural section design work in AutoCad software.
- Managed communication and drawing development to rendering companies for numerous projects.
University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, US, MArch, Architecture
Currently enrolled in MArch 1 Program. (Graduates without previous Architectural Experience)
1st Semester Design Project: Cincinnati Poetry Foundation
2nd Semester Design Project: Cincinnati Fire House Design - Ladder 49
3rd Semester Design Project: Young Architects Competitions - Interventions in the Town Roccascalegna Italy
Co-op Jump Start Program workshops at firms within the Cincinnati Area
- John Senhauser Architects
- FRCH Design Worldwide
- Emersion Design
- BHDP Architecture
- RWA Architects
Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA, US, Bachelors, History
Attended 4 year liberal-arts program as undergraduate with a focus in History.
I was a student athlete, playing D3 football three out of four years of attendance. (Out for one year due to injury.)
Major Thesis: The American Revolutionary Civil War: The Story of William Franklin and the Mid-Atlantic Loyalist.
My thesis encompassed the hard decisions that many American colonists went through during the American Revolution. A comparative study of the typical Mid-Atlantic Colonist and the relationship between William Franklin and his famous father Benjamin.