Greg Lozinski is an interior architect with a background in cultural and educational studies. From a young age, creativity has been a constant in his life, from playing music in a punk rock band and painting to experimenting with photography, spending days in a photography dark room, and eventually exhibiting his travel-inspired photographs. He later formalised his design path through academic study and eventually moved to the U.S., where he earned a design degree and began pursuing interior design professionally.
His career began in the United States, where he worked at major interior design and architecture firms on a broad spectrum of commercial projects, innovating office and real estate solutions and supporting clients’ brands, cultures, and operational needs. After relocating to the Netherlands, Greg opened his own studio and began focusing more on residential interiors, while continuing to take on select office projects for advertising agencies.
This shift to smaller-scale work sparked an interest in furniture design and led to a number of creative collaborations. Now based in Amsterdam, Greg’s work spans the Netherlands and occasionally other European countries. He offers clients an end-to-end service, from site visits and design development to construction and installation, which allows him to build strong, long-term relationships.
Greg joined Contact about four weeks ago and is still in the process of fully setting up his space, though he has already welcomed clients there. He values being part of a diverse creative community where ideas are exchanged freely and projects are seen through different lenses, something he finds energizing and inspiring.
Currently, Greg is working on several residential interiors, including a strategically planned vertical house extension. He’s also developing a new line of furniture that combines ceramic and wood, and has recently created his own color collection, which he is planning to bring to market. Expanding his “material vocabulary” is one of his key goals and Contact is a place where he feels that kind of growth is encouraged.
Inspiration for Greg comes from many places like food, music, nature but especially travel. Each summer, he takes a road trip through Southern Europe, stopping in small and big towns to visit cathedrals and architectural landmarks. The textures, colors, and forms he encounters often find their way into his work.
One of the most rewarding parts of running his own studio is the ability to revisit early projects that still hold meaning for clients years later. For Greg, the goal is always to design spaces that are lived in, personal, and enduring.