Beware of the DC Office! - Project Architect DLR Group Employee Review

1.0
12 Oct 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Nice looking, sunny studio -Free snacks and Beverages -All DLR Group staff--external to DC office--seems nice and friendly and genuinely cares about their company and their people

Cons

-DLR Group acquired Sorg Architects recently to establish an East Coast presence. I would strongly caution anyone interested in working at the DC office to go read the Glassdoor reviews for Sorg Architects. They have a notoriously poor reputation within the DC area regarding their employees. -As part of the acquisition DLR Group kept all the bad actors in place that make this a horrible place to work to begin with, citing "office culture". All the management in the DC office are the same people that ran Sorg Architects. -The DLR Group name is really all smoke and mirrors. I think Sorg is no longer able to attract quality people to this office and win any work. The whole operation feels like a desperate sinking ship. -For the goodt project you see in their DC portfolio these are the exceptions! There are TONS of boring grunt work projects that no one wants to work on to keep the office afloat. Any interesting project will probably involve working with the Princial which is plain painful and dehumanzing! -They are notorious for having an extremely high turnover rate. They seem to staff based on projects hiring and firing at will and frequently. I’ve seen at least 10-14 people go through this tiny office within a year. You'll also inevitably ending up having to clean up other people's messes--without any real idea of what's happening since that person is no longer there. -On the bright side if you can last here more than a year you will build a tremendous network from the amount of people that pass through this firm. -Even clients seem to be not too happy with performance on many different projects. They've been quite a few projects that just stopped based on the direction the project went and a few more lawsuits that are kept really hush hush through the office. I think the majority of this can be attributed to the disfunctional work environment. -There is also a new focus on "Justice Architecture" i.e. Jails out of the East Coast/DC office. See boring grunt work above. - The studio actually does not work very well as an office environment. Too few bathrooms, no private areas to work or make a phone call, no privacy/acoustic separation from co-workers conversations or the principal screaming through the office.

Explore other reviews about DLR Group

5.0
9 June 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Fantastic growth opportunities and great teamwork.

Cons

A large firm, so you must make yourself seen.

1
1.0
24 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Good support for getting your license -Lots of office locations

Cons

-You aren’t valued as an employee, you are seen as a person in a seat and replaceable. This is made very clear during layoff seasons. -You don’t move up based on your project work or even your annual reviews. Promotions, raises and bonuses are heavily influenced by who you are friends with in leadership and how well you play corporate politics - Company has long term relationships with corrupt clients and refuses to damage or end this relationship despite internal employee outrage when this was shared. Multiple articles have been released about this incident and despite outrage they are continuing this work. I highly recommend googling this company before working for them as they lie about this during the interview process. -Have to pay to park at work -Process for receiving associate and principal titles is a popularity contest and not based on your actual contributions. -Regularly expected to work unpaid over time and project staffing is very inconsistent and unorganized. -Many people are underpaid and raises are percentage increases vs performance based. -Culture of Dallas office is extremely draining and hypocritical. Younger staff being held to higher standards than leadership. (Example - holding younger staff back salary wise due to not having a license while having multiple unlicensed people in positions of leadership) -Took away Hybrid work option and brought back mandatory 4 days in office -Sustainability is used as a marketing tool instead of actually being applied to projects. Lots of greenwashing happening on projects to meet AIA requirements.

6
See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All