When Joe Lozowski took over Tangram Interiors about 15 years ago, the Los Angeles-based distributor of office furniture was down on its heels. “Just being a furniture provider was not an exciting story,” recalls Lozowski about a company that dates back to 1963.
So the first thing he did after assuming control was to reach out to architects, designers, and clients about what they wanted from companies like his.
Fast forward to the present: Tangram Interiors has six furniture dealerships in southern California and 300 employees. It is the area’s second-largest flooring contractor. And under Lozowski’s leadership, Tangram has diversified into furniture customization (more than 40 of its employees are designers), fabrication, technology, and a “move management” business called Tangram Onsite.
Tangram Interiors’ revenue is expected to hit $180 million in 2017, from $127 million in 2014. (Add another $20 million or so from direct sales via Steelcase, its main furniture supplier.) Its growth engines are a custom furniture division Tangram Studio, which Lozowski started in 2004, and whose sales are projected to reach $12 million in 2017, from $7.75 million in 2014; and Tangram Technology, started in 2013, which is on pace to hit $5 million in revenue this year from $2.3 million in its first full year in operation.
Lozowski, 58, the company’s president and CEO, says his goal this year is to expand its Studio brand to a national level. He told GlobeSt.com that Tangram currently is installing projects for clients in Seattle (where it’s working with Juno Therapeutics, a biotech firm, to co-design furniture for 12 floors and build technology into that furniture), Portland, San Francisco, Dallas, Chicago, and New York.
Lozowski recalls that his company’s path toward diversification began when, around the time he took over Tangram Interiors, he was approached by a client who wanted furniture “that looked like it was made at Home Depot,” with a rough-hewn, DIY appearance. He accepted that commission, which got him thinking “maybe this is something we can make a business from.”
Tangram Interiors is not an interior design firm, Lozowski explains. Its design team, which includes 45 consultants, works with manufacturers, as well as its clients' designers, architects, engineers, and project managers to develop schematics for resilient workplaces, a concept borrowed from Steelcase that views office space as an adaptable ecosystem that evolves over time. Its principles revolve around design for wellbeing and providing employees with ranges of options within the workplace.
Boston Consulting Group's offices in downtown Los Angeles include 30 meeting rooms and 24 private offices. Image: Courtesy Tangram Interiors.
Tangram Interiors’ client list includes Perkins + Will, Loyola Marymount College (with which it has worked for 10 years), Hulu, Brookfield Residential, Experian, Intuit, and UCLA Health. Tangram Studio helped with the furniture design for Tangram Interiors’ headquarters. (Lokowski refers to his showrooms as “learning labs.”)
Among Tangram Studio’s more recent projects is its collaboration with Boston Consulting Group (BCG) and the design firm Shubin Donaldson to create a new concept for the 45,000 sf of office space that BCG occupies in the north tower of City National Plaza in downtown Los Angeles. Tangram Studio’s research discovered that most of BCG’s consultants were in the office only 25% of the time. So its design solution includes 130 traditional workstations and 80 “touchdown” spaces with standing height stations incorporated into metal railings, lounge seating, and semi-private spaces throughout the office.
The design for this project includes 24 private offices and 30 meeting rooms within the office interior, leaving the perimeter open to allow for better outside views.
Lozowski started Tangram Technology after hearing from clients about how they couldn’t find reliable contractors that could coordinate the details between office design and technology. He says that, except for two big providers, this sector remains highly fragmented. Opportunities lie in the fact that “beside your chair, there’s nothing in an office that isn’t attached to a wire.”
Lozowski observes that most office designs lack “vision” because too many clients are still focused on what’s the least they can spend. He says the key to successful office furniture design is “mass customization.” And what’s winning clients over the Tangram Interiors is “that people love we’re co-designing with them.”
Related Stories
| May 20, 2014
Gensler envisions 'law firm of the future' with pop-up office project
Called "The Legal Office of the Future," the pop-up demonstration project made its debut this week at the annual conference for the Association of Legal Administrators in Toronto.
| May 20, 2014
Using fire-rated glass in exterior applications
Fire-rated glazing and framing assemblies are just as beneficial on building exteriors as they are on the inside. But knowing how to select the correct fire-rated glass for exterior applications can be confusing. SPONSORED CONTENT
| May 20, 2014
World's best new skyscrapers: Renzo Piano's The Shard, China's 'doughnut hotel' voted to Emporis list
Eight other high-rise projects were named Emporis Skyscraper Award winners, including DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture and Tour Carpe Diem by Robert A.M. Stern.
| May 19, 2014
What can architects learn from nature’s 3.8 billion years of experience?
In a new report, HOK and Biomimicry 3.8 partnered to study how lessons from the temperate broadleaf forest biome, which houses many of the world’s largest population centers, can inform the design of the built environment.
| May 13, 2014
19 industry groups team to promote resilient planning and building materials
The industry associations, with more than 700,000 members generating almost $1 trillion in GDP, have issued a joint statement on resilience, pushing design and building solutions for disaster mitigation.
| May 11, 2014
Final call for entries: 2014 Giants 300 survey
BD+C's 2014 Giants 300 survey forms are due Wednesday, May 21. Survey results will be published in our July 2014 issue. The annual Giants 300 Report ranks the top AEC firms in commercial construction, by revenue.
| May 1, 2014
Chinese spec 'world's fastest' elevators for supertall project
Hitachi Elevator Co. will build and install 95 elevators—including two that the manufacturer labels as the "world's fastest"—for the Kohn Pedersen Fox-designed Guangzhou CTF Finance Center.
| Apr 30, 2014
Visiting Beijing's massive Chaoyang Park Plaza will be like 'moving through a urban forest'
Construction work has begun on the 120,000-sm mixed-use development, which was envisioned by MAD architects as a modern, urban forest.
| Apr 29, 2014
Best of Canada: 12 projects nab nation's top architectural prize [slideshow]
The conversion of a Mies van der Rohe-designed gas station and North Vancouver City Hall are among the recently completed projects to win the 2014 Governor General's Medal in Architecture.
| Apr 29, 2014
USGBC launches real-time green building data dashboard
The online data visualization resource highlights green building data for each state and Washington, D.C.