Bio
Bio
Eric J. Jenkins, AIA
Biography
Eric is a licensed architect, author, educator and assemblage artist.
Until he decided to shift from full-time teaching in September 2019, Eric was a Full Professor and Director of the Catholic University School of Architecture and Planning's graduate Urban Practice concentration in Washington, DC. Currently, he teaches part time at the Maryland Institute College of Art, Virginia Tech's Washington-Alexandria Architecture Center and the University of Maryland's School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation.
Among other courses, he has taught graduate and undergraduate design studios, thesis design, architectural and urban theory, freehand sketching, and research methodologies. Additionally, he directed foreign and domestic programs including semester-long programs in Rome and Barcelona and short-term programs in Japan, Turkey, The Czech Republic, Hungary, The Netherlands, Morocco, Germany and the United Kingdom.
Eric's research and writing has focused on design epistemology. Over the past few years, he has focused on freehand analytical sketching in cultivating design thinking. He has published in Centropa, MIT's Thresholds and Harvard University Graduate School of Design's Paratactics. He is the author of the two books: To Scale: One Hundred Urban Plans (Routledge, 2008) and Drawn to Design: Analyzing Architecture through Freehand Drawing (Birkhauser, 2013). His current research centers on contextual interpretation in the architectural and urban design process. He is currently working on a 2nd Edition of Drawn to Design.
Eric is the recipient of several teaching and design awards. In 1996, the University of Maryland honored him with a Certificate of Teaching Excellence. In 2006, CUA honored him with the James E. Dornan Memorial Undergraduate Educator of the Year award. This award recognizes a faculty member’s outstanding classroom teaching ability, academic advising and publications. Also, in 2006, Eric was nominated for the Provost’s Excellence in Teaching award. In 2014 he was honored with the Provost's Award for Excellence in Creative Expression.
His award-winning artwork has been exhibited at several locations including the Strathmore Mansion, Specto Art Space, Waverly Street Gallery, The Circle Gallery and the Rochester Museum of Art and The Capitol Hill Art League. He is the recipient of three Architectural Record’s Annual Cocktail Napkin Sketch contest awards: Honorable Mention in 2018, First Place in 2016, and Runner up in 2014.
He has lectured and directed workshops at architectural firms--such as Gensler, Hickok Cole, Antunovich Associates--and at national universities including Clemson, Miami University, Maryland Institute College of Art, the University of Minnesota and the University of Maryland as well as The Smithsonian Institute and The National Building Museum.
As a licensed architect, Eric served on the AIA's District of Columbia chapter Board of Directors from 2013-2016 and previously from 2000-2002. He works primarily as a design consultant with several firms. It was with Studio 27 Architecture that he worked on Nusonian Homes prefabricated house prototype which was honored by The Virginia Society of the AIA with a 2004 Certificate of Merit for “Excellence in Architecture” award. In 2002, his Washington, DC loft renovation earned an Inform Design Award. Additionally, in 2017 he worked with staff of Washington DC's Department of Planning on a re-imagined master plan for Southwest DC.
He earned a Bachelor of Science in Architecture and a Master of Architecture from the University of Maryland. His Master's thesis examined the relationship between film and architecture and culminated in the design of NYU's School of Film and Television in Astor Place. He earned a Masters in Design Studies from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design in which he focused on 20th century architectural history and theory.