BAR Architects recently formed a discussion and support group amongst women architects and emerging professionals with the goal of empowering each other towards advancement and leadership opportunities within the profession. We share tools and methods with each other for how to get there, bring up relevant personal experiences, discuss articles and books, make internal presentations to the rest of the group for our passion areas, and overall strive to prepare a more fertile ground for women’s advancement both within our office and outside of it in the larger community. This collective knowledge about barriers, histories, opportunities, strengths and weaknesses are helping us cultivate the change we want to see.
We recently invited Rosa Sheng to our office for one of these discussions. Rosa and I met about a year ago before The Missing 32% Project was launched and quickly became friends. She is a Senior Associate at Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, a Board of Director at AIA San Francisco and the chairperson for The Missing 32% Project Committee. She has an unmatched passion and drive for this cause.
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There has been much discussion raised about "Why are women leaving Architecture? and more broadly, Why is the profession losing key talent?" Both women and men practitioners are disillusioned by the myth of work/life balance: Women are grappling with "have it all" expectations of juggling family time with the demands of full-time work. Men are struggling to support their families solely on an architect's salary and fall back on asking spouses to maintain their jobs. The lack of affordable childcare and high cost of living only magnifies the challenges. How did we end up in this modern family dilemma? What can we do to improve the situation?
A Tale of Four Women: Divergent Paths in Architecture
In early March, a few days before International Women’s’ Day, AIA San Francisco and its Communications Committee hosted “The divergent practice: Finding your path in architecture”. Four women – self-described urbanista Stephanie Goodson, set designer Claire Pritchett-Hanlon, exhibit designer Monica Ramirez-Montagut and environmental designer Kate Waddick - shared their stories of professional struggles and successes in a conversation moderated by Sydnie Kohara.
Read More"Being Engaged" is the new "Being Balanced".
An audience of over 50 people convened at the AIA Center for Architecture on the the evening of Wednesday, November 6th, to listen in on a panel discussion titled, "Careers in the Balance". This conversation is the first in a series of events and discussions focusing on life/work balance put on by the AIA's ForWARD Committee, a Forum for Women Architects and Related Disciplines. The panelists included architects in large firms, husband/wife partnerships, those in sole proprietorships and the president of an engineering firm. The influence of Sheryl Sandberg, author of the ubiquitous "Lean In", was evident from the start as the evening's moderator began with a thought provoking quote about nobody having it all, or at least no one admitting to having successfully figured it all out. Indicating perhaps, that even this word "life/work balance" is an unrealistic ambition, which I believe was unwittingly revealed through the evening's discourse; but this being a very subjective topic, I will let you decide…..
Read MoreNotes from Nola: Design Forward Conference 2013
The Design Forward Conference held in New Orleans on October 18, 2013 was a huge success for bringing into light so many of the common themes that The Missing 32% project also seeks to explore.
There was an interesting (and I thought appropriate) balance of students and professionals. The conference was held at the Tulane School of Architecture, giving terrific access to the current student body. There was also a balance of men and women from the industry, who participated, both as attendees and as panelists. This was intentional and varies from tendency for women dominant participation at similar events including the past Missing 32% Symposiums and the recent AIA Women's Leadership Summit in Phoenix.
Read MoreWhat I learned from the AIA WLS Phoenix 2013
I went to Phoenix this past weekend with an open mind, my brain a ready sponge to absorb all the intelligence, wisdom and collective experiences of AIA Women in leadership roles from across the country. What I came back with was something more profound and transforming than words can adequately describe. In the course of 48 hours, the lines between speakers and attendees, strangers and old friends, seasoned leaders and emerging architects became blurred by indigenously warm, open dialogue about matters close to our hearts.
The sold out event of 200 participants was the third in a series of summits started by the Boston Women Principals Group in Chicago 2009 and followed by Kansas City in 2011; the 2013 AIA WLS Summit in Phoenix
was envisioned as a gathering of various Architects in leadership
roles, including: Principals, Educators, Owners, Designers,
Environmentalists and Innovators.
There was so much to learn, so much to be inspired by, so many connections to make, and yet the time was too short; not enough time in the "Maxed Out" lives we mutually lead to allow more discussion on the issues that matter the most. What amazed me the most is that with all the challenges that women in architecture continue to face, the majority of the summit conversations was not of complaints or opportunities lost, but exemplary presentations of resilience, perseverance, and sheer brilliance in design leadership. Topics ranged from "How to Win Work" to "Why losing can be transformative"; from the idea that "All-Nighters" fail to improve a project's outcome" to discussions of how Paid Family Leave and Flexible hours could help in talent retention. The most poignant dialogue of the event focused on answering the question: "How do we continue to produce good work while negotiating fair fees that go beyond surviving?
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