Huitt Zollars Los Angeles Office - Architect Huitt-Zollars Employee Review

3.0
Jan 8, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits are good Pay is competitive

Cons

Not a true design firm. The Los Angeles office now focus mostly on health care. Mostly small little jobs for Kaiser. The office manager that was leading the office to pursued design projects was let go a couple of years ago. The people managing the office now has only healthcare experience, so the office is only focus on infrastructure work. Not a good firm to be if a person is actually looking to work on group up projects or anything creative. The firm is run by a Texas engineer firm that does not really understand the Los Angels (California) market or life style. The office space is very generic and does not have any good design aesthetic. It lacks personality.

Explore other reviews about Huitt-Zollars

5.0
Jan 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Willing to teach and help you grow.

Cons

No cons that I can think of.

1.0
Nov 19, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The health benefits are decent. The young staff, those below 40, make the environment fun.

Cons

Over six years, an employee contributed to multiple teams and built strong peer relationships. Most of the experience was positive. The resignation process, however, was hostile and unprofessional. After submitting a resignation already discussed with their supervisor, the employee was pulled into a meeting by someone outside their reporting line. The person criticized the notice period, speculated about future employment, and ignored boundaries. They referenced alleged negative feedback from a former supervisor and applied pressure to reconsider the resignation. The next day, a second meeting was held without HR, the supervisor, or practice leadership. The same individual continued pressing about the departure, made sarcastic remarks about PTO, and claimed the employee held “company secrets.” The employee’s final day was made immediate. Personal items were packed without consent, and the employee was followed to the lobby despite requests for space. The offboarding was coercive. No apology was offered. No opportunity to transition work or say goodbye. No information was provided about benefits or final pay. The employee was locked out of their computer before departure. The exit process revealed a toxic culture. Boundaries were ignored, gossip was used as leverage, and intimidation replaced professionalism. After six years of service, the employee was treated like a problem to be removed.

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