an architects day of work depends on what type of Architecture and what he or she is making there is many tpes of architite buildings sculptures and other things not to metion it depends on youre time to finish the project =)
The one limitation I can think of is that, you can decompose work activities only to a certain level.
Health safety risks at work vary by the type of work and environment. The risks of one job will be different than that of another job in a different field.
Team work is very important because no one can do every work so we have make team to do different works., many people can do many works instead of one man.
People moved to large industrial centers to work in factories.
Whether they can do each others work is one thing....It is by no means allowed..No one does a steamfitters work..Not even so much as moving a piece of their pipe..I'm sure other trades feel the same way! Hope I helped ! Fitter638!!! I Agree but to expand alil. Simply - No. Can an carpenter do an electricians work? Again simply no. Each tradesmen is trained in their particular line of work. There are some work that requires or at least used to have multiple trade, but for the most part that has died out when in the earlier years each trade struggled to claim work, most work that really belonged to one tradesmen and not a mix of two or three. Examples: When glue on tile came into play, because the use of a trowel, you had a masonry put the glue on the back of the tile and a carpenter install the tile. Truly it belonged to the carpenter which it does now. For ceilings Lathers install the black iron but used to also install the main runners of a ceiling system then the carpenters would come behind to install tile. The installation of the bars went to the carpenters. With out this type of separation of tradesmen it would have the effect to have the economy plunder as we know it today.
Depends on where they work. An architect may work for a company, they may work for themselves, or for a government agency. No one answer.
I think one of them is that you enjoy this job, and you get paid a ton of money a year and per day!
quite a long time in one day i think
A colonial architect is some one who is colonial and is a architect!
They can work as long as they want; usually artists would work on any day they feel like it. Unless the painting is being sold to some one and has to be delivered at a certain time.
It is not possible to get a job at IASA with no paper qualifications. They only hire architects and to be an architect you must have a degree. They are also unlikely to hire an architect with no work experience.
I dont know about a building architect, but a landscape architect will typically have some paper work to fill out, just as in any other job followed by an introduction to a number of projects ongoing. It depends of course on the size and type of firm. I've started right in on day one with cad redlines (editing construction documents) in AutCAD to training for partucular software, or rendering plans, sections, and perspectives by hand or in photoshop. The list is essentially endless. You can see more of my work and landscape architectural examples of a recent grad at http://www.nickaceto.com Good Luck!
They likely only had one meager meal a day, and it would have been at the end of the long work day, before they went to sleep.
There are no hard numbers as to how long per day one spends chatting at work. This is because it would be a difficult statistic to measure accurately, as well as varying largely from person to person and job to job.
You might, but you might not be a very good one and you may have to work harder at it.
Biggest Loser contestant usually work out three to four times a day. They workout from 3-8 hours a day, not at one time.
it is porportional to how much fat you have, your metabolism, what you ate that day, if you ate that day, how much water you drink, what kind of work out you are doing, and how long you do it.