 |
Career opportunities brought to you by Studica.com
AutoCAD® and Autodesk VIZ® software help lay a broad
foundation on which countless design careers can be built. Designers
develop and refine concepts and prepare technical drawings and plans.
Production and construction teams use these documents to build
everything from manufactured products like spacecraft, tools, and
toasters to structures like office buildings, theater sets, and sports
stadiums.
In any major newspaper, you can find a job ad listing AutoCAD
experience as a requirement. Learn more about professions in general
design and drafting and get a head start on your career.
|
Construction
Put on your hard hat, flex your muscles, and build! Houses, apartments,
factories, offices, schools, roads, bridges—these are only some of the
products of the construction industry.
The construction industry is divided into three major segments: general
building contractors, heavy construction contractors, and special trade
contractors. General building contractors build residential, industrial,
commercial, and other buildings. Heavy construction contractors build sewers,
roads, highways, bridges, tunnels, and other projects. Special trade
contractors are engaged in specialized activities such as carpentry, painting,
plumbing, and electrical work.
Autodesk software you’re likely to use in construction careers include
AutoCAD® Revit® Architecture Suite, AutoCAD® Revit® MEP Suite, AutoCAD® Revit®
Structure Suite, AutoCAD, AutoCAD® Architecture, AutoCAD LT®, AutoCAD® Raster
Design, Autodesk® Buzzsaw®, Autodesk® Design Review, Autodesk® VIZ, and
Autodesk® 3ds Max®.
Find out more about the construction industry, including job descriptions,
salaries, and training requirements.
Construction and Building Inspectors
Put on your hard hat and head to the site. You decide whether the work
measures up—and if it doesn’t, you determine what needs to be done.
Construction and building inspectors examine the construction, alteration, or
repair of buildings, highways and streets, sewer and water systems, dams,
bridges, and other structures to make sure they’re up to code—building codes,
ordinances, zoning regulations, and contract specifications. Inspectors make
an initial inspection during the first phase of construction, and then follow
up with inspections throughout the construction project.
Building inspectors look over the structural quality and general safety of
buildings. Some specialize—for example, in structural steel or reinforced
concrete structures. A primary concern of building inspectors is fire safety.
Inspectors consider such things as alarm systems, fire exits, and risks posed
by adjoining buildings. There are many types of inspectors, including elevator
inspectors, electrical inspectors, and plumbing inspectors.
Autodesk software you’re likely to use in this career includes AutoCAD
Revit Architecture Suite, AutoCAD Revit MEP Suite, AutoCAD Revit Structure
Suite, AutoCAD, AutoCAD Architecture, AutoCAD LT, AutoCAD Raster Design,
Autodesk Buzzsaw, Autodesk Design Review, Autodesk VIZ, and Autodesk 3ds Max.
Find out more about construction and building inspectors, including job
descriptions, salaries, and training requirements.
Designers
Can you imagine a world without design? From the clothes we wear to the
cars we drive, design touches all aspects of our lives. Designers combine
practical knowledge with artistic ability to turn abstract ideas into formal
designs for clothes, living and office space, and countless other things that
make up our world. Designers usually specialize in a particular area of
design, such as automobiles, clothing, furniture, or movie and theater sets.
The first step in developing a new design or altering an existing one is to
determine the needs of the client and the ultimate function for which the
design is intended. When creating a design, the designer considers such things
as size, shape, color, and materials to be used. Computer-aided design (CAD)
gives designers greater ease and flexibility. This in turn reduces design
costs and cuts the time it takes to deliver a product to market. Industrial
designers use computer-aided industrial design (CAID) to create designs and to
communicate them to automated production tools.
Autodesk software you’re likely to use in this career includes Autodesk®
AliasStudio™, Autodesk® ImageStudio, Autodesk® Showcase™, Autodesk®
PortfolioWall®, Autodesk® Sketchbook® Pro, Autodesk VIZ, Autodesk 3ds Max,
Autodesk® Maya®, Autodesk® Inventor™ Routed Systems Suite, Autodesk® Inventor™
Simulation Suite, AutoCAD Revit Architecture Suite, AutoCAD Revit MEP Suite,
AutoCAD Revit Structure Suite, AutoCAD, AutoCAD Architecture, AutoCAD Raster
Design, Autodesk Buzzsaw, and Autodesk Design Review.
Find out more about designers, including job descriptions, salaries, and
training requirements.
Drafters
A structure doesn’t create itself from thin air: It takes a design. And the
design must be communicated in a way that everyone who needs to use it can
understand. Drafters prepare technical drawings and plans used by production
and construction workers to build everything from manufactured products such
as spacecraft or industrial machinery to structures such as office buildings
or gas pipelines. Their drawings provide visual guidelines, showing the
technical details of the products and structures, specifying dimensions,
materials to be used, procedures and processes.
Drafting these days is done mostly on the computer using computer-aided
drawing (CAD) systems. These electronic drawing files don't fade or crumble,
like old paper drawings do. At the same time, the timeless values of clarity
and elegance are as important today as they were in the days of drawing boards
and protractors.
Autodesk software you’re likely to use in this career includes AutoCAD
Revit Architecture Suite, AutoCAD Revit MEP Suite, AutoCAD Revit Structure
Suite, AutoCAD, AutoCAD Architecture, AutoCAD Raster Design, Autodesk Buzzsaw,
and Autodesk Design Review.
Find out more about drafters, including job descriptions, salaries, and
training requirements.
Engineers
You can’t go anywhere or do anything without encountering the work of
engineers. They provide the link between science and commercial applications.
Engineers design products, machinery to build those products, factories in
which those products are made, and the systems that help ensure the quality of
the product and efficiency of the workforce and manufacturing.
Engineers design, plan, and supervise the construction of buildings,
highways, and transit systems. They develop and implement improved ways to
extract, process, and use raw materials. They harness the power of the sun,
the earth, atoms, and electricity. Engineering knowledge is applied to
improving things, including the quality of health care, the safety of food
products, and the efficient operation of financial systems. Engineers use
computers to produce and analyze designs; to simulate and test how a machine,
structure, or system operates; and to generate specifications for parts.
Autodesk software you’re likely to use in this career includes Autodesk
Inventor Routed Systems Suite, Autodesk Inventor Simulation Suite, AutoCAD,
Autodesk® Productstream®, Autodesk VIZ, AutoCAD® Map 3D, AutoCAD® Civil 3D®,
AutoCAD Raster Design, Autodesk Buzzsaw, and Autodesk Design Review.
Find out more about engineers, including job descriptions, salaries, and
training requirements.
|
|