01/02/2026
Failing doesn’t mean you failed architecture.
And not graduating yet doesn’t mean you don’t belong here.
Architecture has many delays—boards retaken, theses revised, semesters repeated, timelines stretched. These are pauses, not disqualifications.
Many architects we admire were delayed, doubted, or dismissed:
Louis Kahn → Recognition came in his 50s.
Zaha Hadid → Called a “paper architect” for years.
Frank Gehry → Criticized before projects were trusted.
Tadao Ando → Self-taught, rejected by formal systems.
Balkrishna Doshi → Recognized late after quiet persistence.
Ieoh Ming Pei → faced political & professional setbacks
Norman Foster → rose from modest beginnings
Kazuyo Sejima → soft-spoken in a loud industry
Rem Koolhaas → criticized before influence was understood
Shigeru Ban → initially sidelined for humanitarian focus
If you failed the ALE:
You don’t walk away. You reassess. You return wiser.
If you’re still a student:
You stay curious. You keep drawing. You learn from every critique—even the hard ones.
Architecture is a long practice of staying.
You didn’t quit. And that matters.