Calif
Structural
- Jul 4, 2003
- 115
Hello everyone
Been looking for a job for a little over 3 years although I am currently employed. I saw a job posting thru a headhunter site for a structural engineer with building design experience in masonry, steel and concrete structures in addition experience in fabric structures. Now, this is a speciality in structural engineering to design fabric structures which is to say, most people who become structural engineer will not have the oppurtunity to do such work. I do not have any experience in fabric structures but always thought it would be interesting to do. I spoke to the headhunter about this job and he made it clear that the employer is in no rush to get someone for this position and is wiling to wait for a year for the right person for the job. There is this urge in me to purchase books on this subject in structural engineering and learn all about it on my own yet, this is a speciality and most employers do not look for people within this speciality nor take on projects of such nature. How would you approach the situation where you would like a job within a speciality, willing to put the hard work in, yet most employers do not get involve in project like this, and it is hard to get into.
Calif
The resisant virtues of the structure that we seek depend on their form; it is through their form that they are stable, not because of an awkward accumulation of material. There is nothing more noble and elegant from an intellectual viewpoint than this: to resist through form. Eladio Dieste
Been looking for a job for a little over 3 years although I am currently employed. I saw a job posting thru a headhunter site for a structural engineer with building design experience in masonry, steel and concrete structures in addition experience in fabric structures. Now, this is a speciality in structural engineering to design fabric structures which is to say, most people who become structural engineer will not have the oppurtunity to do such work. I do not have any experience in fabric structures but always thought it would be interesting to do. I spoke to the headhunter about this job and he made it clear that the employer is in no rush to get someone for this position and is wiling to wait for a year for the right person for the job. There is this urge in me to purchase books on this subject in structural engineering and learn all about it on my own yet, this is a speciality and most employers do not look for people within this speciality nor take on projects of such nature. How would you approach the situation where you would like a job within a speciality, willing to put the hard work in, yet most employers do not get involve in project like this, and it is hard to get into.
Calif
The resisant virtues of the structure that we seek depend on their form; it is through their form that they are stable, not because of an awkward accumulation of material. There is nothing more noble and elegant from an intellectual viewpoint than this: to resist through form. Eladio Dieste