STUDENT VOICE | Page 29

SPECIAL FEATURE DAVID ROSS Needless to say, David lasted the course and is now thriving in his Glasgow-based company. However, if he had his way, Ayrshire would be a legitimate option for those wishing to study architecture. “From this experience I thought perhaps construction would be the career for me. I enrolled in what was then Ayr College and studied ONC Building Craft. The course was not for me yet there was something about it that caught my imagination and that was the building design side. “I found out about a part-time course at the Glasgow School of Art which you could attend if you were working in an architect’s office. So I moved to a new job with Keppie and at the age of 22 years started a seven year apprenticeship.” Becoming an apprentice at such an advanced age is a daunting prospect, but it’s not something that fazed David. In fact, it inspired him to be the best he could be. He said: “I remember being told, ‘You’ll never last the course’ but this made me more determined to achieve success. I really enjoyed the course and I truly believe that if it had not been for the college course in Ayr I would not be an architect today. It’s made me a better architect because it filled the gulf between the academic and practical side. Finally I had found what I was good at!” THE STUDENT VOICE: EDITION 3 David said: “Although I was born in Glasgow, I’m an adopted son of Ayrshire after living in Kilmarnock for almost 40 years. It really pains me that you have to apply to Universities in Glasgow or the other major cities in Scotland to find a course. “My dream would be to help change that and support the formation of a new creative course in Ayrshire through a college / university partnership but driven and supported by private practice.” They’re not just empty words – David is really making an impact in Ayrshire. Thanks to his role as a local Business Leader for East Ayrshire Council’s Enterprise Fund, his design company is in the middle of an enterprise project with pupils across East Ayrshire schools. Ayrshire College is also playing its part. “ My dream would be to help change that and support the formation of a new creative course in Ayrshire through a college / university partnership but driven and supported by private practice.” INTERACTION INTERACTION sees eight secondary schools attempt to design an inspirational, flexible and open learning space for the College’s new Kilmarnock campus. The winning school works with Keppie’s design team as their design is then actually implemented in the new building. “At this stage in their education young people really have to think about what they might be good at, so we have a launched a design competition to inspire interest in the creative industries.” David explains. “...young people are our future.” “As an employer I believe it is important to work with our educational partners to provide opportunities and encourage talent into our profession young people are our future.” It’s an exciting time for David who is just about to release his first novel. ‘The Last Days of Disco’ is a fictional story set in Kilmarnock in 1982 about two young friends trying to start a mobile disco business against the backdrop of the Falkands War. It’s due for release as an e-book from December 2014, and as a paperback from February 2015. 29