Is It Time For Architects to Unionize?
This article was originally published on Common Edge.
Unions are a trend among college-educated young people, the New York Times reports. They seek solidarity—collective leverage—to bring about desired changes that are being resisted. While Amazon and Starbucks get the headlines, younger architects are also organizing. Doing so is urged on by The Architecture Lobby, a group that leans Democratic Socialist. The Manhattan-based firm SHoP was a recent, ultimately unsuccessful target of a group of its employees and a sponsoring trade union.
Can Architects Finally have a Seat at the Table? Labor Rights and Work Conditions in Architecture
The early stages of practicing architecture are often met with what many explain as "the slippery slope of being an architect", where expectations do not at all meet reality of the profession and gets worse as the experience progresses. With constant burnouts as a result of working overtime and on weekends on the account of “gaining experience”, extraordinary expectations, low wages, and physical and mental strains, the prestige of being an architect has evidently vanished with modern-day work conditions. So how can architects fight for their labor rights after years of exploitation and what is currently being done to ensure them?
Alphonse Apartment Renovation / Match, bureau d'architecture
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Architects: Match, bureau d'architecture
- Area: 42 m²
- Year: 2019
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Manufacturers: AutoDesk, Investwood, Leroy Merlín, Macocco, McNeel, +2