Tuesday, August 8, 2017

CURRICULUM VITAE


Personal Profile :

Name : Stefany Imanuel
Address : One Waldorf Place, Birmingham UK
Phone : 5802 289 532 0188
Email : fanyimanuel@gmail.com

Education Background :

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Cambridge, USA
Master's degree in Architecture
110/110 magma cum laude

Yale School of Architecture - New Haven, USA
Exchange Programme

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Cambridge, USA
Bachelor's degree in Architecture

Skills :

  • Ability to Work Under Pressure
  • Decision Making
  • Self-motivation
  • Time Management
  • Teamwork
  • Graphic Design
  • Software :
    • AutoCAD
    • Sketchup
    • 3ds Max
    • Cinema 4D
    • InDesign
    • Rhinoceros
Achievements :

Graduate Award for Design Excellence - ( Second Place )
Annual Architecture Award at MIT

National Glass Building Design Competition - (Silver Award)
Award by Architecture Society of England

National Digital Art Design Competition - ( First Place )
Award by Ireland Art Design Committee

Eco-Cities Exhibit - Idea Hub
Hold by Co-Lab, USA

Experiences :

Urban Planning Designer ( January 2014 - July 2014 )
K+P Architekten und stadtplaner gmbh
Munich, Germany

Architectural Intern ( October 2014 - January 2015 )
Kengo Kuma Architecture Associates
Tokyo, Japan

Assistant Architecture ( February 2015 - December 2016 )
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
Cambridge, US

International Chair ( January 2017 - Now )
Vice President of GENSLER
San Fransisco, California, US

Languange :
  • Indonesia : Native Languange
  • English : Native Languange
  • Japanese : Intermediate ( Speaking, Reading ) ; Basic ( Writing )
  • Germany : Fluent ( Speaking, Reading, Writing )

Hobbies :
  • Sports : Basketball
  • Games : Chess
  • Computing
  • Marathon Running
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


* The datas above are not real and just an example for making a CV 😏








No comments:

Post a Comment

SUPERMOON!

What is a supermoon?  We confess: before a few years ago, we in astronomy had never heard that term. To the best of our knowled...