Dear Mr. Architect!

Please design and build me a house. I am not quite sure of what I need, so you should use your discretion. My house should have between two and forty-five bedrooms. Just make sure the plans are such that the bedrooms can be easily added or deleted. When you bring the blueprints to me, I will make the final decision of what I want. Also, bring me the cost breakdown for each configuration so that I can arbitrarily pick one.

Keep in mind that the house I ultimately choose must cost less than the one I am currently living in. Make sure, however, that you correct all the deficiencies that exist in my current house (the floor of my kitchen vibrates when I walk across it, and the walls don’t have nearly enough insulation in them).

As you design, also keep in mind that I want to keep yearly maintenance costs as low as possible. This should mean the incorporation of extra-cost features like aluminium, vinyl, or composite siding. (If you choose not to specify aluminium, be prepared to explain your decision in detail.)

Please take care that modern design practices and the latest materials are used in construction of the house, as I want it to be a showplace for the most up-to-date ideas and methods. Be alerted, however, that kitchen should be designed to accommodate, among other things, my 1952 Gibson refrigerator.

To insure that you are building the correct house for our entire family, make certain that you contact each of our children, and also our in-laws. My mother-in-law will have very strong feelings about how the house should be designed, since she visits us at least once a year. Make sure that you weigh all of these options carefully and come to the right decision. I, however, retain the right to overrule any choices that you make.

Please don’t bother me with small details right now. Your job is to develop the overall plans for the house: get the big picture. At this time, for example, it is not appropriate to be choosing the color of the carpet. However, keep in mind that my wife likes blue.

Also, do not worry at this time about acquiring the resources to build the house itself. Your first priority is to develop detailed plans and specifications. Once I approve these plans, however, I would expect the house to be under roof within 48 hours.

While you are designing this house specifically for me, keep in mind that sooner or later I will have to sell it to someone else. It therefore should have appeal to a wide variety of potential buyers. Please make sure before you finalize the plans that there is a consensus of the population in my area that they like the features this house has.

Please prepare a complete set of blueprints. It is not necessary at this time to do the real design, since they will be used only for construction bids. Be advised, however, that you will be held accountable for any increase of construction costs as a result of later design changes.

You must be thrilled to be working on an interesting project as this! To be able to use the latest techniques and materials and to be given such freedom in your designs is something that can’t happen very often. Contact me as soon as possible with your complete ideas and plans.

P.S.: My wife has just told me that she disagrees with many of the instructions I’ve given you in this letter. As architect, it is your responsibility to resolve these differences. I have tried in the past and have been unable to accomplish this. If you can’t handle this responsibility, I will have to find another architect.

P.P.S.: Perhaps what I need is not a house at all, but a travel trailer. Please advise me as soon as possible if this is the case.

  • @zerofk@lemm.ee
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    1189 months ago

    “This button turns on the light in the hallway. Sometimes it brings the whole house down on you, but we haven’t found a way to reliably reproduce this. If that happens just crawl from under the rubble, rebuild the house, and try again. This time the light should turn on.“

    “Oh, and send us the log messages.”

  • @owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Dear Mr. Customer,

    Thank you for reaching out to me. I’ve created a design to your specifications, and included some notes in this message.

    To accommodate for the number of bedrooms being unknown, I’ve included 1024 bedrooms in the design. If you don’t need the extra rooms, you can simply leave the doors closed. You won’t even notice they’re there!

    This design is flexible in order to balance cost vs features. For example, the house can be built from cheaper materials like OSB or cardboard, or more expensive materials like aluminum or andesite. I’ve also made the design modular, so you can include only the features you need (for example, a roof).

    In terms of maintenance fees, we can offer you a low-cost yearly management service, so you need not worry about maintaining the building. Our firm will definitely be around in 6 months still, we’re pretty sure of it.

    I was not able to get a hold of your family, but I collected some feedback from my girlfriend and two cats. My girlfriend was indifferent, but the cats were unanimous in wanting green carpet. Please offer my most sincere regrets to your wife in this matter.

    I didn’t have the specific fridge connection you requested. I would have built a custom connector, but my boss insisted we cobble together something using 18 different preexisting connectors. It should keep things cold, but the refrigerator door will open inwards.

    I’ve included the blueprints below. Please ignore the tear stains.

  • @Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com
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    839 months ago

    But before I hire you, can you please build a small house or a shed or a trampoline to show me that you have the skills of an architect. The exact details of what to build will be given to you when the test assignment starts.

    This is for free of course.

    • @vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      219 months ago

      Given the number of people in our last round of hiring who completely failed at producing said shed this step was 100% necessary.

        • @orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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          9 months ago

          Or the technical challenge being ridiculous like a lot of them are. If you have that many people failing it, that tells me some or all of these things are true:

          1. Management, or whoever they hire for handling candidates, is not screening them well
          2. The challenge is needlessly complex
          3. The challenge requirements are not clear
          4. The company expects absolute prod-ready perfection but told the candidates “don’t spend more than 2-3 hours on this,” despite it taking one of their own engineers 6-8 hours
          5. The salary is way too low and they’re not getting candidates that fit their demands (e.g. wanting “senior” while offering “junior” salaries)

          Seriously, some tech companies think they shit gold and give ridiculous challenges that reflect that delusion.

          Source: been in tech since 2005 and in a terminal since I was 12.

          • @Albbi@lemmy.ca
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            9 months ago

            and in a terminal since I was 12.

            That’s a long time to wait at an airport terminal! Is that Tom Hanks movie based off your life?

          • @vithigar@lemmy.ca
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            99 months ago

            My own take as someone internal to that process is that it was a combination of 1 and 5.

            I have no idea how candidates were screened. I do know that even before the “technical challenge” we had a large number of candidates completely faceplant on lowball questions asking what single line snippets of code did.

            I can also say that I absolutely did not expect prod-ready results from the challenge. But I did expect things like not vomiting raw uuids on the screen instead of user readable values when displaying results. Or not having commits from overseas dev contractors which did all the actual work in your git log.

            • @orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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              69 months ago

              Oof those are some stinkers. I’ve seen bad but never anything like hiring a contractor to do your code challenge work for you.

    • @jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      229 months ago

      This was somewhat comforting to me, knowing that crazy ass client requirements have always been and always will be.

  • @peak_dunning_krueger@feddit.de
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    569 months ago

    Please take care that modern design practices and the latest materials are used in construction of the house, as I want it to be a showplace for the most up-to-date ideas and methods. Be alerted, however, that kitchen should be designed to accommodate, among other things, my 1952 Gibson refrigerator.

    That’s actually too easy, because electrical systems have been standardized for a long time.

    Should be something like “15 highpowered electrical stoves, but keep the total power consumption below 15 Watts.”

    Or, homeautomation and integration with google/alexa, but using the old fridge.

  • @S_204@lemm.ee
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    299 months ago

    As a builder, I have had this scenario play out dozens of times. Clients paying millions for design and being shocked at what they get. My favorite was the charity that the architect spec’d custom handmade tile from Italy for… in a service bathroom lol. 40k to tile one wall of a bathroom for a charity that struggles to keep its doors open.

    • @suction@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      But programming is worse. In your analogy, once you finished the wall they’d come to you and ask you if you could „make the finished wall cheaper somehow?“ (because they are so incompetent that they think programming is magic and can magically change things in the real world).

      And when you logically answer „no can do“ they won’t wake up to the fact they’re asking stupid questions, but rather think of you as not competent enough…

  • Arghblarg
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    289 months ago

    I’ve spent the last 4 months living this. Thank you I hate it.

    EDIT: Actually my entire career, but most painfully the last 4 months. I hate it. And, yet, I must eat, so I endure.

        • @ferralcat
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          59 months ago

          Lol. I pitched getting these last year and my boss laughed. “Have you worked with these people? They’re incompetent. They can’t tell you how a single thing works, let alone the whole system. It sounds nice to have, but we’ll have to do it ourselves”

          • Johanno
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            39 months ago

            You should sell the document and the consultation extra. Basically you first sell them consultation on what they want and then let them sign a contract that the document that this consultation produced are the requirements. Then you can bill changes to the requirements extra.

  • @JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world
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    219 months ago

    Oh, and I can’t pay you up front, but you may use me as a reference for any future opportunities you may have.

  • @atomkarinca@lemmygrad.ml
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    9 months ago

    this is literally how we work now in construction. because everything is digital people think that this is an acceptable approach. all my costing files are purposefully extremely dynamic.

    you want to add another floor? no problem.

    you want to change some floors from 3 bedroom to 2 bedroom? no problem.

    you want to remove a parking floor and have outside parking? no problem. you don’t want to have low hanging beams? no problem.

    and so on and so on…

    i know i should not be working like this, but sometimes i have to.

    • @nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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      39 months ago

      Yeah, there were definitely some subject matter experts involved in that film. I’m not going back to that career.

  • @dan@upvote.au
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    129 months ago

    also make sure that you keep updating it for life even though I’m only paying you once.

  • @Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com
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    79 months ago

    But before I hire you, can you please build a small house or a shed or a trampoline to show me that you have the skills of an architect. The exact details of what to build will be given to you when the test assignment starts.

    This is for free of course.

    • @nelly_man@lemmy.world
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      49 months ago

      Oh, and once you build that, I’ll move in and expect you to build the rest of the house on top of it.