Music, Art and Architecture - S. Florida Business & Wealth

Music, Art and Architecture

It’s late morning at the West Palm Beach offices of Garcia Stromberg | GS4 Studios and a catchy riff of reggae funk wafts through the air in Peter Stromberg’s cavernous workspace. As a visitor arrives, he’s hunched over a drafting surface working on a sketch and surrounded by monumental examples of his paintings scattered around the office. Off to the side is his row of guitars.

The setting is the first hint of how he blends art, music and architecture to create great places at his architectural firm.

The reggae funk turns out to be the work of a Jupiter band called Boxelder, which has been around since 1997 and ended up touring nationwide into the 2000s. The band never achieved total stardom, “but sometimes that makes bands stay really good and really hungry,” Stromberg says.

Stromberg, the firm’s president, says his father dabbled in guitar and he started playing by the fifth grade, focusing on classical guitar until seventh grade when he and a friend started a band called Syrinx, named after the “Temples of Syrinx” by the rock group Rush. Stromberg says he played through 12th grade, when he had to get serious about college. He ended up at Mississippi State University after his parents moved to Jackson, Mississippi.

After meeting his wife in college and graduating with a degree in architecture, he met Jorge Garcia at a construction site, where he was interning. The two became friends and, eventually, business partners.

During the early years of the firm, where Garcia is CEO, the guitars provided an atmospheric visual presence, but Stromberg didn’t start playing again until the architecture practice started taking off. He found another guitarist, a bass player and a drummer and started playing every weekend after his kids went to sleep. “It was ‘grab a bottle of whiskey and play everything from the Grateful Dead to Tool,’ ” he says. The group had some gigs in Jupiter area bars.

Despite a lack of formal art training, Stromberg discovered he liked to paint. He bought a four-car garage in Stuart that was converted to a paint and music studio. Garcia Stromberg was booming with about 80 employees, but then the Great Recession hit and the firm dwindled to a few people. One of the few positives was that he had plenty of time to play guitar and paint.

What he also found was a creative process where he would meld architectural sketching, playing the guitar and picking up a paint brush. He found the rhythms of the music could transfer to canvas and then to architecture. A painting, often done after carefully studying a project site, could set the mood and tone for a project. Stromberg started to create music to go with the animation in architectural presentations. Client projects would have a rhythm and tone, part of what Stromberg calls a “philosophy of life” design.

Clients like the art- and music-flavored presentations because it exudes a hands-on creative process rather than something spat out by a computer, Stromberg says. His art turned into a triumph. For example, one of Stromberg’s small sketches turned into a 15-by-15-foot painting that hangs in the lobby of 1000 Ocean at the Boca Beach Club.

Ecuadorian designer Adriana Hoyos used Stromberg’s artwork in her furniture catalogs and then hung them in her gallery. Stromberg participated in shows at Forré Gallery in Fort Lauderdale and Atlantic Gallery in Jupiter with other architects.

He also does sculpture work, such as using balsa and metals to create project models.

There’s a lot of back and forth in his multidimensional creative process. Concepts can go from sketches to scanned images. Sketches are sometimes superimposed on top of paintings. An architectural model might be taken out in the parking lot during the day to see how the angles of the sun highlight it, which can result in design tweaks and a sketch of the model. Ultimately, the studio can use Oculus Rift (virtual reality) technology to let clients get a 3D moving visualization of what it’s like to walk through a project.

Garcia says their mutual love of music is one reason he and Stromberg struck an immediate rapport.

Garcia says he and Stromberg don’t have grand design meetings, in favor of quick deskside discussions. They work fast. Garcia likes how he can philosophize and visualize and then Stromberg can take the ideas and put them into a physical form with his artistic abilities.

They have an eclectic taste in music that encompasses rock, jazz and country, which mirrors their ability to do architecture in a variety of styles.

“Sometimes people look at our work and they don’t get that we are not subscribers to any style,” Garcia says. “We know how to do an authentic Mediterranean home. If they want to do something that fits them like a glove, then we will fit them like a glove.”

There’s a lot of trust between the partners. Garcia talked about heading off to Panama for a presentation for a 26-story building. When he started driving to the airport, they only had one tiny sketch. He and Stromberg talked as Garcia drove to Miami International Airport. Garcia arrived in Panama and asked Stromberg how things were going. “ He says, ‘Kill some time. I need some time to get it done, scan it and print it in their office.’ ”

Garcia apologized to his would-be client saying, “I cannot believe I left documents at the office.” (He says he later confessed.)

The client’s architectural staff printed Stromberg’s electronically transmitted work and Garcia proceeded to present a final design that he hadn’t seen beforehand. “I walked through it like I had been through it the last five hours,” Garcia says.

You May Also Like
Powering the Creator Economy 

In South Florida’s increasingly influential creator economy, Olivia Ormos is less focused on content than on what powers it.  As founder of mavn, the Miami entrepreneur is building the infrastructure layer

Read More
A woman in a black outfit stands holding a microphone in front of a MAVN sign, with two black chairs and display boards reading “influencer marketing done right” and “where creators, brands, + culture collide.”. South Florida Business & Wealth
Building Through the Bottleneck 

 Demand remains strong across South Florida, but rising costs, stalled deals, and execution challenges are reshaping how projects move from concept to completion  South Florida’s construction market is not slowing down. It

Read More
A mature man with gray hair and glasses, wearing a gray suit and white shirt, stands indoors and buttons his jacket. There is a brick wall with framed art and a beige couch in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
A Study in Light: Brandon Amira Redefines Light in Modern Design

In an era where lighting is often treated as an accessory, Brandon Amira approaches it as architecture. Miami-based kinetic artist and designer Brandon Amira continues to expand his exploration of

Read More
Cleveland Clinic Health Matters Event

✨ On April 22 ✨ we hosted a truly one-of-a-kind evening—bringing together high-level networking and the opportunity to connect directly with renowned physicians from Cleveland Clinic. The night was created

Read More
Six people, five in white lab coats and one in a blue blazer, stand smiling in front of a backdrop with repeated "SFBW" logos at an indoor event. South Florida Business & Wealth
Other Posts
MHC Fund II Expands Space Coast Retail Footprint with $16M Acquisition

The purchase of Shoppes at Victoria Square underscores continued investor confidence in high-performing retail centers tied to Florida’s aerospace-driven growth corridor

Read More
Aerial view of a shopping center with stores, including Ross Dress for Less, Ulta Beauty, and Five Below, in front of a large parking lot with scattered cars and a residential neighborhood in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Related Ross Invests in Waterfront Vision at Phillips Point

A $1 million Trinity Park upgrade anchors a broader $120 million transformation, blending office, public space, and cultural programming

Read More
Two modern mid-rise buildings with large windows and beige exteriors stand among palm trees under a blue sky with scattered clouds. Cars and pedestrians are visible along the street in front of the buildings. South Florida Business & Wealth
Night of Literary Feasts Returns with Exclusive Author Dinners 

The Broward Public Library Foundation’s Literary Feast returns with author-led dinners, a community-wide celebration, and proceeds supporting local literacy programs

Read More
Five adults, dressed in semi-formal attire, stand together smiling at an indoor event. The group includes three men in jackets and two women in dresses, with other guests visible in the background. South Florida Business & Wealth
Glow Together

Women United Pamper Party

Read More