045 - ARE Procrastination - Time is Your Most Valuable Resource
Release Date: 12/01/2025
Architect Exam Podcast
The War of Art by Steven Pressfield explains why you keep sabotaging your architect exam prep and how to stop. This episode is a war of art summary applied to the ARE, breaking down Resistance, self sabotage, and what it means to turn pro. If you've ever cleaned your refrigerator instead of studying, researched materials for weeks without opening one, or told yourself you'll schedule the exam "when you're ready," that's not laziness. Steven Pressfield calls it Resistance. I break down the five ways Resistance shows up for ARE candidates, the difference between discipline vs motivation,...
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Fire sprinkler systems explained: wet pipe, dry pipe, pre-action, and deluge. Learn when to use each one and how to choose the right system. Architects don't design fire sprinkler systems, but you make dozens of decisions that directly affect how they get designed, installed, and coordinated. This episode breaks down all four types of fire sprinkler systems, explains what makes each one different, and gives you a simple decision framework for choosing the right system based on occupancy, climate, and what's inside the space. We cover how wet pipe sprinkler systems work as your default starting...
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Owner's consultants vs architect's consultants: know the difference before the ARE tests you on it. In this episode, we break down who hires who on a construction project, where the liability falls, and why getting this wrong can cost you your career. Every project has two teams of consultants. The architect's team designs what's going to be there. The owner's consultants deal with what's already there, the land, the soil, the surveys, the environmental hazards. That distinction sounds simple, but the liability implications run deep. We break down the existing versus proposed framework, the...
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How to become an architect in the US comes down to four steps: education, experience, exams, and fees. In this episode, Michael Riscica breaks down the full path to getting your architecture license, from choosing the right degree to passing all six ARE exams. Most people think architects sit at a drafting table sketching buildings all day. The reality is that design is maybe five to ten percent of the job. The rest is construction documents, code reviews, cost estimates, project management, and client meetings. We start with what architects actually do on a daily basis, then get into how long...
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PA, PPD, and PDD share the same topics but test them from completely different perspectives. Understanding the difference between these three technical ARE exams before you start studying will save you serious time and frustration. In this episode, Layla breaks down what each exam actually covers, how they connect to each other, and why so many candidates study the wrong things for the wrong test. She walks through the "Define It, Design It, Document It" framework that shows how PA, PPD, and PDD follow the natural progression of a building project from pre-design through construction...
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Division 01 General Requirements is the most skipped section in the project manual. Here's what's actually inside and why every division depends on it. Division 01 is the rulebook that governs every trade on a construction project, and almost nobody reads it. We start by clearing up the number one confusion in specifications: the difference between General Conditions and General Requirements. They're both Contract Documents, but they do very different things. Then we walk through every major section from Summary (01 10 00) to Commissioning (01 91 00). Whether you're studying for the ARE,...
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Plumbing valves explained - every type you need to know for the ARE exam and real-world practice. This episode covers gate valves, ball valves, butterfly valves, globe valves, check valves, backflow preventers, PRVs, pressure relief valves, angle valves, and float valves, organized by function so you understand what each one does. We break down the four categories every plumbing valve falls into: stop valves, regulating valves, one-way valves, and specialty valves. Each valve gets its own custom diagram showing how it works open and closed, plus a simple analogy to make it stick. Visit...
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Building acoustics explained: STC, IIC, and NRC are the three rating systems every architect needs to know. This episode breaks down how sound actually works in buildings and what each rating measures. STC rates how well walls and floors block airborne sound. IIC rates how well floor assemblies block impact sounds. NRC measures how much sound a material absorbs within a room. We explain why a material can be great at absorbing sound but terrible at blocking it. You'll also learn why the IBC requires both STC 50 and IIC 50 between dwelling units, how to upgrade a basic wall assembly step by...
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Control joint vs expansion joint is one of those topics that trips people up because the terms sound so similar. This episode breaks down all four joint types you need to know for the ARE and the job site. We cover expansion joints, control joints, isolation joints, and construction joints. For each one, we explain what it does, where you'll see it in real construction, and how to remember the difference on exam day. We also give you the rebar test for telling isolation and construction joints apart, plus clear analogies so you're not just memorizing definitions. π Key topics covered: ...
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PcM, PjM, and CE are three different exams, but most people study them without understanding what makes each one unique. This episode breaks down exactly what NCARB is testing on Practice Management, Project Management, and Construction and Evaluation so you can study smarter, not harder. Too many ARE candidates jump into prep materials without ever looking at what each exam actually focuses on, and that leads to wasted time and confusion. PcM zooms out to the firm level. It's about business operations, finances, risk, and how an architecture practice stays profitable. PjM zooms into one...
info_outlineAre you procrastinating on your ARE exams? You're not alone. Most candidates delay their license for months or years
Learn why time is your most valuable resource and how to stop making excuses that delay your architecture license.
In this episode, Michael shares his personal journey through the excuse trap and the moment everything changed when he realized the real cost of procrastination.
Getting your architecture license is a 700-1500 hour investment that will be the most important project of your career. Yet many candidates spend months making excuses about money, experience, or timing instead of taking action. This episode breaks down why professional development requires prioritizing time management over perfect conditions.
π Resources & Links:
- π Beat ARE Procrastination: Read our complete blogpost at https://academy2.youngarchitect.com/procrastination/
- π― ARE 101 Course Membership: Stop procrastinating with our comprehensive ARE prep program at https://academy2.youngarchitect.com/join/ncarb-are-101/
- πͺ ARE Boot Camp: Join our 10-week intensive coaching program for accountability and community support at https://youngarchitect.com/arebootcamp/
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