Navigating a Multi-generational Practice: Fulfilling Experiences, a Sense of Belonging, and Authentic Purpose at Every Career Stage ls3p
Navigating a Multi-generational Practice: Fulfilling Experiences, a Sense of Belonging, and Authentic Purpose at Every Career Stage

Navigating a Multi-generational Practice: Fulfilling Experiences, a Sense of Belonging, and Authentic Purpose at Every Career Stage

Those who are drawn to work in the architectural profession are a unique bunch. We may arrive at a design firm with different backgrounds, career goals, workflows, and perspectives, but we tend to have more commonalities than differences in the things that matter most. We believe that design matters, and we believe in using our critical thinking and problem-solving skills to address important challenges.

As we progress through our careers, we experience both opportunities and challenges at every stage, but are continually drawn together by the common themes of value, belonging, and purpose.  These threads of meaning are woven through the paths of our careers and expressed uniquely at different phases along the way.

Working multi-generationally with team members from student interns to seasoned practitioners gives us the invaluable opportunity to draw from the perspectives that each stage of career development brings.  The multidisciplinary nature of architectural practice requires a high degree of collaboration among staff at all levels, with each contributing something vital to the team; our individual progression through various career stages can influence our work flows, our expectations, our fluency with technology, and our habits. Embracing our common values, creating a sense of belonging, and working towards a meaningful purpose are key to creating a culture of well-being and influential practice.

Celebrating Individual Experiences and Shared Values

The architectural profession comes with rich opportunities for all team members to “design a career we love.”  Our work encourages exploration, divergent thinking, and expression of individual personalities, with the core belief that greater diversity elevates our work. Bringing a variety of perspectives to the table in terms of age, experience, and background, we enrich our cognitive processes and problem-solving abilities to create more innovated solutions.

New team members often emerge from school as inquisitive thinkers and optimists. With recent immersion in architectural theory, young practitioners see possibilities that might otherwise be overlooked. As we have opportunities to explore and establish ourselves in terms of work, life, and the community, Emerging Professionals grow into new leadership roles. Bringing individual passions and personalities to new challenges, collaborative team members continue to be united by common values and a shared focus as we progress through our careers.

As we gain experience and settle into our careers, we may take on additional responsibilities with expanded horizons. This is a time when intentional decisions and shifts are made in life and at work. With increased opportunities, we begin to shape the path that best matches our personal interests and values. As we find our niche, we begin to find our places in leadership of firms, organizations, and the community.

In the later stages of our careers, we become masters at certain skills which we have practiced for most of our life. In these areas, we are viewed as experts and act as advisors to others within our practice. We maintain our desire to grow and eagerness to discover new things as we partner with the next generation to discover how innovation and technology might shift the way we practice architecture and business.

Personal development is rarely linear, as we cycle through season of discovery and expertise, of stability and challenge. Personal development is unique, as we each discover the career path that best reflects our personality, experience, and interests. Personal development is not a solo endeavor; it is a formative process best realized in a team of people with diverse experience and perspective.

Cultivating a Sense of Belonging for all Team Members

With our unique experiences, we come together to form a collaborative community built on a foundation of respect, support, and common purpose. Generational diversity enriches the collective experience of deep expertise, varied styles of creativity, cross-discipline cooperation, and innovative energy. Setting the expectation for lifelong learning ensures that every team member has the opportunity to invest, and be invested in, as we grow. Mentorship and coaching programs, informal peer discussions for exploring and testing new ideas, and infrastructure that supports continuous sharing of experience, learning, and discoveries all remind us of the joy of working with people who partner together to contribute personal passion toward the success of our shared goals.

As we gain experience in the profession, our position within the team shifts over time. Early in our careers, we are looking for partners to help us discover what we don’t know, and who support us as we try new things. These partners may be our peers, or other team members with more experience; we want to be shown how things work, and we want to learn along with others. Mid-career, we may seek partners for collaboration and brainstorming.  We know enough about the technical aspects of architecture to challenge what is and propose what could be. We look to test these ideas on those who have gone before us, and those who will come after. As senior leaders we are looking to the next generation to transition our legacy. At this stage, we have invested our lives in building a career and community, and we are looking for partners to carry our values and mission into the future.

Our teams and firms are stronger when everyone contributes to, and benefits from, a healthy community of partnership. We are truly better together when all voices are heard, all ideas are explored, collaboration is encouraged, and all team members are valued.

Authentic Purpose

People tend to be most satisfied when we are working towards meaningful goals and have the opportunity to be part of something bigger than ourselves. We all want to contribute by designing solutions, executing plans, and solving problems. As we move through our careers, we know that our designs matter; our work creates better places, successful practices, and a richer culture. Through our practice and our interactions, we have daily opportunities to impact the lives of our clients and our coworkers for the better. In remembering and continually investing in our shared purpose, we see the importance of outreach, collaboration, and mentorship at every career stage.

Outreach: We strive to contribute to our cities, our profession, and our neighborhoods – both through our work which is used by the public, and through volunteering with causes of importance to us. These values are woven within our practice. We want to love our work, and working towards a higher purpose adds value and meaning.

Collaboration: We want to enjoy the people with whom we work, both our co-workers and our partners in the industry. Building complimentary relationships that strengthen our individual efforts is critical for our teams to accomplish shared goals.

Mentoring: We want to continue to improve. Individually, we desire growth, and as part of a firm, we desire strong teams. We want to build a legacy that will carry our purpose forward, beyond our time at the firm; we are committed to the good of our community and our people, and so we invest today in what will be realized in the future.

Better Together

As a multidisciplinary profession, architectural practice is primed for success in multi-generational collaboration. We may bring different cultural references, different mindsets, different interests, and different work flows, but we are united as a team, and are well positioned to harness our shared values, create a sense of belonging, and celebrate a common purpose to create a thriving practice.

There were many obstacles along the way, but the shared vision between client, user group, design team, and city are what brought this project through to success. It’s my opinion that the best buildings are the ones that have a positive impact on the world; I truly believe this building will have a far-reaching positive impact on the welfare of children in North Carolina for decades to come. It was an honor working alongside the team that made it possible.

Eileen McDonough

What are the services available at “The Hope Center”? What ages can be served here? How many staff members work here?

Kate: Services include triage, assessment, and discharge planning and assistance in a Behavioral Health Urgent Care by licensed clinicians and nursing.  These services are accessed 24/7/365 by walking in.  If the situation is emergent, a facility-based crisis admission can be done where the medical and clinical team can work to stabilize the situation and begin the work toward discharge, with support and connections to the appropriate providers.

Tammy: The Hope Center for Youth and Family Crisis offers mobile outreach response and engagement services in Orange, Durham, Wake, and Johnston counties, 24/7 behavioral health urgent care, and a licensed 16 bed facility-based crisis inpatient unit for stays of up to 2 weeks for ages 6 through 17.

 

What impact on the community are you hoping this facility will have? Do you think that we are starting to see a shift in the prioritization of mental health services across the board in our communities?

Kate: We hope it will serve as a specialized place that is conducive to work with children, adolescents and their families that is trauma informed and responsive.  We want to see children and adolescents safely be in the community with family as quickly as we can and give families the support they need.

Tammy:  The impact will be a reduction in the number of youth and families seen in local emergency rooms for mental/behavioral health care, a reduction in long-term out of home placement, and a reduction in placement disruptions for youth involved in foster care and juvenile justice.

Like all good design, this project provides safe, beautiful, and relatable architecture in which to heal and explore wellness. A critical component to this success is the integration of nature and our built environment. From a colorful and bright entry vestibule to the colored and blinds-operable windows in the patient rooms – the views to nature are abundant. Huge skylights in social spaces, experiential graphics on the walls, and a joyful color palette bring the outside in. A central, secure outdoor space is also integrated into patient therapy. This outdoor space allows for fresh air, outdoor games, and safe sensory engagement.

Julia Badorrek

What was your favorite part of managing this project, overall?

Kate: Mine, hands down, is program design.

Tammy: The process. Although projects like this are long, watching the progress, and being a part of it, has been an excellent experience.

We are not yet there as a society where people see their brain health as part of their physical health or where people see mental health as something that all of us need, not just that person over there on the street corner.

Jeff Mural

What are the critical goals for this facility in its first year of operation?

Kate: Some of the critical goals are to obtain its Involuntary Commitment Process (IVC) designation, and to become a destination for families and their children/adolescents experiencing significant stress.  Other goals are to get youth out of non-therapeutic settings and emergency departments when it is appropriate for a sub-acute facility.  We also want this facility to become a significant community resource, not only as an employer, but to support first responders in behavioral health crises.

Tammy: Once open, to change the way youth and family experience our system of care, by drastically reducing the number of youths that are seen in emergency rooms for mental/behavioral health, and who experience placement disruption due to mental/behavioral health needs.

 

Learn more about behavioral health, the building selection process, and how this amazing project was pulled together by listening to our “Human Scale” podcast episode here.

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