Life After Graduation: Becoming an Architect in Canada

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Life After Graduation: Becoming an Architect in Canada

Written by Benjamin Bomben of Issued for Interns

Going through architecture school is a unique experience. Pulling all-nighters, pinning up drawings, making models with an X-Acto knife and no sleep, only to then defend your design concepts in front of panels of critics. All of this while preparing yourself for a profession of continuous learning and development.

However, when you graduate from your master’s degree in architecture and you are met with the realities of the profession, you realize you are really only halfway there.

In Canada, you can’t call yourself an architect the day you get your degree. There’s an entire second chapter, one that may take years to gain the required amount of experience and to truly learn what it means to become an architect.


The Path Nobody Explains in Studio

In Canada, the road from graduate to licensed architect runs through something called the Internship in Architecture Program, or IAP. It’s a structured process where you log thousands of hours of post-grad professional experience across specific categories.

The standard roadmap to becoming an architect in Canada is completing your undergraduate degree in architecture, then going on to complete a master’s degree from an accredited architecture school. It is important to note that in Canada, the Canadian Architectural Certification Board (CACB) is the sole organization that accredits professional degree programs in architecture. If your undergraduate degree is from an accredited pre-professional program, you can typically complete your M.Arch in two years. If it is not, you will likely need to complete a three-year M.Arch program instead. You can check which schools hold CACB accreditation at cacb.ca.

Once you graduate, you begin to focus on obtaining the required hours as part of the Intern Architect Program. You are required to have 2,800 hours to be eligible to write the exams.

While you are working, although your experiences prepare you to write the exams, it can be difficult to figure out the best way to study for them. The ExAC is comprised of four three-hour exams spanning two days, and they can only be written once a year. That means if you fail any of the exams, you have to wait a full year before you can retake the failed exam(s)! While preparing for your exams, it is extremely helpful to meet regularly with your mentor and to efficiently compile all of the recommended ExAC readings to figure out what topics you need to focus on.


The Real Shift: School vs. the Profession

The bigger adjustment out of school is realizing how different the learning curve is compared to anything you experienced in studio.

In school, you spend weeks refining a concept. You iterate on floor plans. You agonize over renderings, diagrams, and perspective sections that you see as works of art. This is extremely valuable in your development, especially the ability to communicate effectively through drawing. But once you are in a professional environment, you realize that every line drawn is a representation of money to be spent, something to be built, and something to coordinate.

What surprises most graduates is how much you continue to learn once you start working, as well as how much of your day involves coordinating through email alongside AutoCAD or Revit. Architecture school develops your way of thinking, how you approach problems, and how the elegance of your solution fits within a design intent. Once you are full time in the profession, you begin to learn how buildings truly come together. You understand how your drawings translate to real construction, what information builders look for in a set of drawings, how different consultants contribute to a project, and how decisions made on paper play out on a job site.

Terms like RFIs, site instructions, addenda, and supplemental details become part of your daily vocabulary. These are things that are rarely discussed in school, but they are how design actually reaches the real world. Most of us had a sense of the complexity involved in architecture while in school, almost as this magical black box. But when you begin to work in the profession, that black box opens up, and you realize the depth of knowledge that still lies ahead.

The good news is that every day on the job is a learning opportunity. The hours you log for the IAP aren’t just a requirement to check off. They’re an education in themselves.


What We Wish We’d Known Going In

If we could go back and tell ourselves a few things before starting the IAP, here’s what we’d say:

Ask questions constantly. In school, you’re expected to have a strong concept and defend it. At work, especially early on, the smartest thing you can do is ask why something is done a certain way. When starting out, because you don’t know what you don’t know, taking a moment to reflect and ask why gives you an opportunity to truly understand what you are doing rather than simply generating output to meet deadlines. Every site visit you attend, every coordination meeting you sit in — those are learning opportunities that add up fast.

The exam is its own challenge. When it is time for you to write your exams, the ExAC covers a massive range of topics: building science, structures, professional practice, project and construction management, programming, and more. Studying for it on top of a full-time job requires a real plan. When you then factor in commuting and other events outside of work, it becomes very important to have a set of organized resources you can easily access.


Is it Worth It?

Becoming a licensed architect in Canada is demanding, but it’s also deeply rewarding. Every hour logged, every shop drawing reviewed, every exam section studied for — it all adds up to a level of competence and confidence you can’t get any other way.

The profession needs people who understand both the big design ideas and the small construction details. The IAP and ExAC process, for all its challenges, is designed to make sure you develop both sides.

If you’re a student reading this and wondering what comes after graduation — it’s a lot, but it’s totally doable. The path can be long. The learning curve is steep. And the day you finally get those letters after your name, you’ll know you earned every single one of them.



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