My work draws from media systems engineering, spatial design, and large-scale project delivery, giving me a clear view of how technical environments are conceived, built, and why they succeed.
At Dolby Laboratories, I led technical space strategy and media systems engineering across a global portfolio of environments supporting research, content creation, broadcast, cinema, and experiential.
This work included:
•Facility planning and consolidation initiatives
•Large-scale media system integration programs
•Engineering standards and operational frameworks
•Cross-functional alignment between engineering, real estate, and leadership
Today, I support architects, engineers, integrators, contractors, and stakeholders across a range of projects and organizations. I provide independent technical direction, helping teams define scope, align disciplines, and carry decisions through to execution. This includes producing clear, buildable documentation and supporting delivery through structured coordination and project leadership. This flexible model allows expertise to be applied where it’s needed, when it’s needed.
Quincy Kowolik
LISTEN
Every project begins by defining intent; how the space will be used, what it must support, and where constraints exist. This goes beyond functional requirements and includes how people actually work, create, and make decisions within the environment.
I work to understand the broader context of the project, including business objectives, timelines, cost, and long-term goals. This stage is critical. It establishes the foundation for every decision that follows and ensures the work is grounded in real-world use, not assumptions.
ENGINEER
From there, systems and infrastructure are developed to align with that intent. This includes defining technical requirements, evaluating trade-offs, and structuring solutions that balance performance, usability, and long-term flexibility.
Documentation is central to this process. Drawings, system design, and technical packages translate concept into something that can be built, coordinated, and executed without ambiguity. This is where ideas become actionable and where alignment across disciplines becomes possible.
LEAD
Technical direction is carried through execution, ensuring that decisions made early in the project are not lost as the work moves into design, coordination, and construction.
This involves aligning teams, resolving ambiguity, and maintaining clarity across architects, engineers, integrators, and contractors. The role is not just to define systems, but to ensure they are implemented as intended, adapting as needed while preserving the integrity of the original vision.