
George Spiridakis is an architect who has always believed that the spaces we inhabit shape the way we feel, think, and live. He studied Architecture in Portsmouth and Thessaloniki, carrying with him from early on, a curiosity about how light, materials, and subtle spatial gestures can transform the entire experience of a place.
After his studies, he collaborated with architect and professor at the Technical University of Crete, Dimitri Tsakalakis—a period that strengthened his view of architecture as a field of research, experimentation, and cultural responsibility. He later founded his own practice in Sitia, working on residential, commercial, and public projects. There, he discovered that what moved him most was not just what he designed, but how people lived it: the atmosphere, the materiality, the tactile qualities, the temperature, the movement through space.
For George, interior design is not decoration—it is the craft of shaping emotion through architecture. He has designed interiors that aim to calm, activate, or embrace their users. Spaces built on the belief that mental and physical health are deeply connected to the environments we encounter every day.
His work has been featured in national and international competitions, most notably earning First Prize in the 2012 Panhellenic Competition for the Revitalization of Schisma Eloundas.
George holds a postgraduate degree from the Technical University of Crete in Urban and Landscape Planning, a study that helped him understand how intimate interior spaces relate to larger urban and natural contexts. From 2016 to 2025, he worked for the Technical Services Department of the Municipality of Heraklion, designing and supervising new school complexes. In this role, his architectural philosophy meets real-life impact: creating schools that are not just buildings, but everyday landscapes of learning, safety, and well-being.
Today, he is running GSarchitects+ Renovations & Interior Design in Delft, where his work continues to explore how architecture can elevate everyday life. Based in a city shaped by design, research, and experimentation, George focuses on thoughtful renovations, sensory interiors, and small-scale transformations that make a meaningful difference.