LEADERSHIP

Eric Einhorn with his daughter Reese on P Street in Georgetown

Eric Einhorn with his daughter Reese on P Street in Georgetown

ERIC J EINHORN, AIA, LEED AP

Design Principal, Director of Sports Architecture

Eric currently is the Design Principal and Director of Sports Architecture of BallParchitecture in Washington, DC.  He holds a Master of Architecture from the University of Michigan, and a Bachelor of Science in Architecture, Minor in Architectural Technology, and Concentration in Marketing from the University of Virginia.

During his 21 year career, Eric has led and creatively solved complex design problems on over 70 sports projects across 50 campuses.  Past positions include Vice President & Sports Practice Leader at CannonDesign in Washington, DC, Sports Focus Market Leader at RDG Planning & Design in Des Moines, Iowa, Director of Sports Architecture at McMillan Pazdan Smith in Greenville, South Carolina, and Associate at S/L/A/M-Heery's Sports Design Studio in Atlanta, Georgia.  

Eric currently resides in Bethesda, Maryland with his daughter.   When out of the office he enjoys cooking, long distance running, large format acrylic painting, and rooting on the DC area sports teams.  

Favorite Architect: Richard Meier
Favorite Building: Flatiron Building (NYC)
Favorite Stadium: Los Angeles Coliseum (pre renovation)
Favorite Team: University of Virginia Cavaliers
Favorite Athlete: Ryan Zimmerman
Favorite Stadium Concession: Ben’s Chili Bowl Half-Smoke all the way
Favorite Way to Stay Active: Long distance running
Favorite Sports Movie: “The Natural”
Walk Up Music: “Take On Me” by a-ha

hejduk.jpg

our inspiration

From stadiums, culinary creations, Rothko's paintings, to John Hejduk's urban sketches, we'd like to share some imagery that has inspired our work over the years.  

Blu.jpg

our art

When not at work, spending time with his daughter, or out enjoying in the rich social offerings of our Nation's Capital, Eric can be found painting large format acrylic on canvas works.  His work has been hung in private residences in Georgia, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina.