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Jan Achilles Miller

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Jan Achilles Miller

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Education2011 Kent State University College of Architecture and Environmental Design Masters of Architecture Graduate School of Management Masters of Business Administration2009 Kent State University College of Architecture and Environmental Design Bachelors of Science College of Arts and Science Minor German Literature2004 Shaler Area High School High School Diploma

Jan Achilles Miller1002 Lake St. 440Kent, OH 44240

Phone: (412) 608-4447Email: [email protected]

TechnicalProficienciesArchitectural Desktop, Revit Architecture, Revit Structure, Revit MEP, Google Skecthup, Adobe Master Suite, Maya, Rhino, V-Ray Render, Viz Render, Climate Consultant, ECOtech, Microsoft Office, ImagePrint

WorkExperienceSimply Color Industries- Simply CanvasNovember 2010/ March 2011- Akron, OHAt Simply Color Industries, my primary responsiblity was the printing of images on canvas, which would later be stretched and mounted. I was responsibile for laying out images in Imageprint to be printed on canvas rolls, and ensuring that all proper paperwork was passed on through the production line.

Burt, Hill- Summer Intern ArchitectJune 2008/August 2008- Pittsburgh PAJune 2006/August 2006- Pittsburgh, PA / Butler, PADuring my first internship I organized the Architectural Archives for the Pittsburgh and Butler offices. I also buily models for the Canal Pointe project in Dubai. In 2008, I assisted the Hospitality Department with several projects for Pittsburgh North Shore development and the creation of presentation boards.

Kent State Residence Services- Resident AssistantAugust 2005/ December 2008- Kent, OHAs a Resident Assistant, I was charged with maintaining a healthy community, on the 2nd floor of Verder, that would encourage the residents of my floor to succeed both socially and academically. I was responsible for floor and building wide meetings, as well as developing community based programs and activities that focused on diversity, respect and academic exploration.

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ARCHITECTURE is a means of permanently capturing and event or experience. However, this captured

event or experience is not independent of its surroundings. Cultural and economic forces interact with one another daily in the context of the city, constantly altering the identity of a city. In each major city, the ways in which these forces blend together is unique to that location, with some forces enacting more influence upon the development of the city than others.The way in which cultural forces interact within a city help to create particular architectural experiences and events that are unique to a specific city. Realizing the power that these cultural forces exert upon the generation of architecture within a city helps one to understand a city’s architectural identity. Each city develops it’s own characteristics and attitude that contribute to how architecture is conceived and developed within the confines of a city. Therefore, the activities and lifestyles that happen within the density of a city become the generative forces that shape specific events and architectural experiences that become a manifestation of that city’s personality. As a designer it is important to be able to perceive these forces and how unique interactions occur within a city to create its identity. This perception helps the designer to develop and generate architecture that is relevant and site specific. By creating relevant and site-specific architecture,

the designer is able to make a contribution to the city’s environment, helping to highlight certain forces and interactions that are specific in that urban landscape. In order for a designer to be able to create something that is rooted in its urban environment, the designer has to learn to focus their creative process to understanding how the generative forces of a city interact with one another. The best way for a designer to develop these skills is to constantly put themselves in new and foreign environments. In these periods of adjustment and exploration, many of the generative forces that shape an environment become exposed. Therefore, the more types of forces and interactions that the design experiences, the more diverse their knowledge and creative processes become. For a designer, the creation of architecture is process that the designer should not allow to go stagnant. The creation of architecture should be viewed as a life process that is constantly evolving. A designer should be continuously seeking new experiences that will uncover new ideas and processes, allowing them to generate architecture that will contribute to a city’s personality, helping the city’s identity to expand and evolve. In a world where perceived boundaries are being broken down and the sharing of information has become a global phenoneumna, designers from all over the world are constantly seeking out new solutions to the complex problems that surround them. Now more than ever, designers are coming in contact with foreign ideas and processes that are allowing them to design new and exciting solutions to the various problems that scatter the man built environment. As a result, the rate at which architecture and the identities of cities and their cultures is also rapidly evolving.

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