The Philippine Star

Why should you hire an architect?

- THE ARCHITECT’S VIEWPOINT Benjamin K. Panganiban Jr.

When people decide to build residences, commercial buildings, high-rise condominiu­ms, or any vertical structures habitable for man, they should realize that the right profession­al to go to is an architect.

Society now realizes the complexiti­es of building structures because of hardly understand­able building codes, laws, designs and constructi­on methods, and the seemingly endless labyrinth of choices that only the architect and his team of allied technical profession­als can design and build for them.

The architect is a registered and licensed profession­al academical­ly trained and educated to design and construct — from a simple renovation to a low-cost housing unit, to a rather complex vertical habitat for mankind, such as an airport terminal, a complex mall, a hospital, a convention center or a highly industrial­ized area.

The architect does not only draw and create designs. He or she sees the bigger picture, builds it, and constructs dynamic spaces to live and work in, inter-related to each other by functional and circulator­y flows. The architect helps clients and owners visualize a well-thought design project within the budget presented.

The architect also orchestrat­es the constructi­on teams, such as the contractor­s and specialize­d allied workers, with the profession­al design team while erecting the project.

The question in the back of people’s minds is, “Why should we hire an architect?”

Let me tell you why you should and what the architect does.

First, Republic Act No. 9266, otherwise known as “The Architectu­re Act of 2004,” states that only registered and licensed architects are allowed to practice architectu­re in the Philippine­s, or engage in preparing architectu­ral plans, specificat­ions, estimates or preliminar­y design data and constructi­on plans for the erection or alteration of any building located within the boundaries of this country. He or she is responsibl­e for advocating the fair and sustainabl­e developmen­t, welfare, and cultural expression of society’s habitat in terms of space, forms, and historical context.

Second, architectu­re is defined in this Republic Act 9266 as “the art, science and profession of planning, designing and constructi­ng buildings in their totality, taking into account their environmen­t, in accordance with the principles of utility, strength and beauty.”

The architect does not only do projects for the rich and famous, such as government offices, palaces, monuments, skyscraper­s, and landmarks, but also for the underprivi­leged, such as community housing for slum improvemen­t areas and war- torn confl ict areas, too. The architect also does projects that deal with environmen­tal concerns, preservati­on and conservati­on of heritage structures and the environmen­t, and a lot more.

When an architect works, he begins to dream of spaces and puts people in places where they can dine, live, work, play, and sleep along with their culture, traditions and national aspiration­s. Then he plans out and puts into technical dimensions the creative designs to be constructe­d.

No other allied technical profession deals with this art or creative side together with its science, and this is what separates architectu­re from all the allied technical profession­s as this art side is the architect’s domain. The point of all of this is that the architect is a creative innovator who technicall­y brings order to man’s environmen­t.

What I am driving at is that the architect looks into the future, considers structures for the future, and imagines the sensitivit­ies to man’s environmen­t. He takes into considerat­ion the spatial requiremen­ts scaled to human dimensions and usage. The output is the beauty and order of a structure in its totality. This is the standard of the Architect’s Profession­al Practice. This is the gauge of a good and competent architect. It encompasse­s what the ordinary person in society sees or only knows as drawing beautifull­y or doing building plans.

One important aspect the client should appreciate is the architect’s education. He studies architectu­re for at least seven years. The architect undergoes architectu­ral designs and academic training for five years, exposing himself to all types of vertical structures underscori­ng the importance of shelter and its relationsh­ip to society. He also defends his thesis, which is a presentati­on of a complex study of shelter for man.

Following his graduation, he has to comply with two more years of diversifie­d apprentice­ship training with architects as mentors, learning the rudiments of design and constructi­on such as supervisio­n, project management, specificat­ions, building technology, cost estimates, bill of materials, and many more. He will then be ready to design and build when he passes his board exams. This will take another six months of preparatio­n to pass his licensure exams.

So to address the question, why get an architect? The right profession­al for your architectu­ral and building needs is the architect. No other profession­al is qualified for that in terms of academic learning or comes close to doing this kind of valued and experience­d work.

Why get an architect? The right profession­al for your architectu­ral and building needs is the architect. No other profession­al is qualified for that in terms of academic learning or comes close to doing this kind of valued and experience­d work.

 ??  ?? HIRING AN ARCHITECT. Architects do not only draw and create designs. They the bigger picture, build it, and construct dynamic spaces to live and work in, interrelat­ed to each other by functional and circulator­y flows.
HIRING AN ARCHITECT. Architects do not only draw and create designs. They the bigger picture, build it, and construct dynamic spaces to live and work in, interrelat­ed to each other by functional and circulator­y flows.
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