Public posts from users and companies with content, media, hashtags, mentions, and engagement metrics.
Sample, not full dataset. No auth required.
| Content | Author | Hashtags | Reactions |
|---|---|---|---|
| The moment a project stopped being architecture and became logistics. We were three months into construction. The design was done. The drawings were issued. The site was progressing. Then the clien | — | — | 156 |
| Why "maintenance-free" materials are usually a lie. Every material salesperson has the same pitch: "It's maintenance-free." No painting. No cleaning. No repairs. Just install it and forget about it | — | — | 129 |
| A stair detail that looked elegant and failed brutally. We designed this beautiful floating stair. Minimal. Elegant. Modern. It looked incredible in the renders. The client loved it. We were proud | — | — | 102 |
| What went wrong the first time I coordinated MEP properly. I thought I understood MEP coordination. I'd done it before. I knew the basics. I could read the drawings. I could spot conflicts. Then | — | — | 94 |
All data is contributed by our community. Licensees must respect contributor copyright and intellectual property. Attribution where required is a material term. Use under our Terms and Dataset License only. Violation of permitted use, resale of raw data, or misuse of contributor IP will be enforced.
We’re transparent about what’s in the data. It’s user-contributed and verified—no hidden PII.
Scale, custom use, or SLAs—we work with research and product teams directly.
Data is contributed by practitioners and firms. We license it under our Terms and Dataset License. Use it well and credit creators.
| One reason we stopped using ACP on mid-rise facades. Aluminum Composite Panels look great. They're lightweight. They're affordable. They come in any color. They seemed perfect for this mid-rise res |
| — |
| — |
| 113 |
| The gap between concept and construction is where careers are made. Anyone can have a good idea. Anyone can draw a pretty picture. Anyone can make a compelling presentation. But not everyone can | — | — | 134 |
| Glass looks better in renders than in Indian summers. You've seen the renders. Floor-to-ceiling glass. Natural light. Seamless connection between inside and outside. It looks incredible. Modern. So | — | — | 99 |
| Value engineering is just late-stage design. We act like value engineering is a separate phase. Like it's something that happens after design is done. Like it's a compromise, a reduction, a necessa | — | — | 83 |
| Client feedback is not user research. Your client tells you what they want. That's valuable. But it's not the same as understanding what users actually need. Clients have agendas. They have budg | — | — | 89 |
| Most junior architects quit because nobody explains the why. They get tasks. "Draw this detail." "Update this plan." "Revise this section." But they don't get context. They don't understand why. Th | — | — | 122 |
| Good engineers save bad architecture more often than we admit. You've seen it. A design that looks great but doesn't work structurally. An idea that's beautiful but impossible to build. A concept t | — | — | 105 |
| Budget is a design constraint. Pretending otherwise is privilege. I've heard it too many times: "If only we had a bigger budget, we could do something really special." As if budget is an obstacle t | — | — | 74 |