Toxic - Technical Designer Gensler Employee Review

1.0
May 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The coffee machine was awesome!

Cons

I worked at the Gensler Chicago office for several years and was laid off shortly after a major and expensive office renovation. That experience raised serious questions for me about the firm’s financial judgment and its commitment to employee retention. To put it plainly, Gensler was the most toxic workplace I have experienced in my career. In my view, advancement within the firm was driven less by architectural ability, integrity, or technical competence than by political conformity and alignment with upper management. The higher the position, the more important it became to protect the system rather than challenge it. The firm’s co-CEO structure exemplifies this culture. It creates layers of upper management with diffuse responsibility and limited accountability. If multi-billion-dollar technology companies can function with a single CEO, it is difficult to see why an architecture firm requires such an elaborate executive structure. The extent to which this leadership model is promoted by the firm’s PR apparatus only reinforces the sense that image management is prioritized over substance. The practical effect is that accountability tends to flow downward. When problems arise, blame is often pushed onto lower-level staff rather than owned by leadership. Gensler’s slogan, “changing the world through the power of design,” would be admirable if it reflected the reality of practice within the firm. Instead, there is a rigid separation between “design” staff and “technical” staff, as though architecture were not fundamentally the integration of both disciplines. The result is a hierarchy in which conceptual design is elevated while technical expertise is marginalized, despite the fact that successful architecture depends on both. In practice, this structure often shields high-level designers from responsibility for the practical execution of their ideas while placing the burden of resolving conflicts and constructability issues on technical staff. The firm’s approach to diversity struck me similarly: highly performative and heavily oriented toward branding. Public messaging around inclusion appeared to carry more weight than meaningful cultural change or equitable professional development. As a Black person, I often felt there was an unspoken expectation that participation in diversity initiatives was part of one’s professional identity within the firm. At the same time, I experienced moments that revealed how superficial some of this commitment could be. During one conversation with a senior White designer, for example, I was told that I was “articulate,” a comment that carried obvious undertones given my background and credentials. Ultimately, my experience at Gensler was that success depended largely on navigating internal politics, projecting the right image, and reinforcing the firm’s preferred narratives. Those who excelled at that often advanced. Those more interested in thoughtful architecture, technical rigor, or honest critique were far less valued despite the firm’s rhetoric about design excellence and innovation.

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Gensler Response
1w
Thanks for the feedback. We treat workplace concerns seriously and address them in accordance with our internal policies and procedures. We have multiple channels for reporting issues and we train and encourage our team members to use them. Encouraging everyone to ask questions and provide honest feedback is critical to supporting our culture and our values of integrity, trust and mutual respect. We appreciate your feedback and will share your comments with the firm’s leadership.

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5.0
Apr 20, 2026
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Cons

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Gensler Response
1mo
Thanks for providing feedback on your experience at Gensler. We value our interns and love to hear their perspectives. We are thrilled and delighted to see your 5-star rating!
1.0
May 29, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice office, lots of “rah rah Gensler” events with food & booze, some nice people

Cons

Where do I start…..some studios are TOXIC. Favoritism permeates every aspect of working here. It’s nauseating. There is zero loyalty, zero recognition for hard work (yeah you get a bonus but sometimes a kind word is needed). Oh-and never ever express an opinion that may be in opposition to “leadership’s”. Your private life, beliefs, politics and other personal things are fair game for letting you go. I’ve seen it happen-fired because someone expresses in a private conversation that one has ethical concerns regarding projects that are in the office (but in another studio/office) will get you fired. They will make up some bs about “work performance”, yet no conversation ever with anyone about “needing improvement “. Out of left field. Bye bye. Management tells leadership that they’d already “warned” the person-completely untrue. Hear later it was likely due to having concerns about a client/project. Lesson learned-shut up, work 12 hrs a day and be happy with the scraps you’re thrown. Also-egos galore! Unwillingness to take accountability for mistakes.

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