A study published this month in the journal Occupational Medicine suggests that buildings designed to promote active workstyles have a positive effect on the health of occupants. The research, led by Dr Lina Engelen of the University of Sydney, set out to explore whether an ‘active design’ office increased the physical activity, productivity and mindset of occupants. Although a small scale study with just 34 employees working in four locations at the University, the results suggested that people responded to the active design of the spaces by spending less time sitting and more standing and consequently reported lower levels of back pain. However, there was no improvement in productivity or physical activity. The research was based on 60 percent of people working in open plan areas, compared to just 16 percent before. Other studies have shown that sedentary work is linked to a wide range of ailments including heart disease.
Building Collaboration into Workspace Design
An office is an external expression of a company's ethos and personality. Employees, customers and prospects draw significant — even subliminal — associations with organizations based on the place they call home. Collaboration, creativity and innovation are key components of the modern workplace and an increasingly important recruitment tool for successful companies to attract top-tier talent.
Gunlocke: The Five Biggest Workplace Trends of 2016
What are the biggest workplace trends of 2016? What are companies looking to accomplish by designing or reconfiguring their work spaces this year? We consulted design firms, workplace design magazines and leading business journals to find the answers. We discovered companies want to increase productivity and employee health and well-being by designing spaces to support the way their employees work. But, they want to do this within a smaller footprint. What's more, they are seeking to design offices that reflect their brand and culture in spaces that also reduce their organizations' impact on the environment.
Could a sexy office help you seduce clients back to your place?
I am not suggesting that a cool or sexy office is all you need to drive business outcomes. Nor am I going to suggest that all you need to do to grow a successful business is to invest in a fully loaded, bells and whistles, technology laden, productivity enabling office environment. Not that all of those things won’t help, they very well could be the things that prove to be difference makers. What I will suggest however, is that in most instances a business’s success relies almost exclusively upon the satisfaction of their customer base. Any deliberations associated with office space should, therefore, in some way consider their needs and desires. No doubt these considerations will be highly dependent on the type of business you are in and whether the model it embraces is business-to-business or business-to-consumer, but when contemplating the needs of your clients, you should at least ask yourself the following 4 simple questions.
2016 OFFICE TRENDS
According to Contract Source Group, a office furniture rep firm, a lot has changed and those changes have come to us at warp speed with no notice. When was the last time that you wore a suit with a tie or a suit with a skirt and heels to work 5 days a week? They still have their place for the right occasion of course, but everyday work life is no longer requiring that level of formality. We have seen a more relaxed, more congenial workplace emerge, using collaborative space to aid in this less formal office.
Next In Fancy Office Amenities? A Private James Turrell Sculpture
As competition to hire the best talent heats up, companies are hoping inventive design will help lure employees to their offices. Lounges, recreation areas, and flexible workspaces have become ubiquitous. But how many companies can brag about having their own private James Turrell sculpture? For an unnamed Midtown client, Situ Fabrication collaborated with Turrell on a massive two-story-tall installation that transports spectators into an ethereal, prismatic sea of light.
Why Hammocks and Slides aren’t Office Must-Haves
Office interiors are changing fast and the likes of Google have rewritten the rules on what facilities an employer should provide its employees. But, is what companies are choosing for their office interiors what actually works?
How Connected Spaces are Changing the Way We Work
A Tour of WeWork’s New Coworking Space in Amsterdam
WeWork, the global shared workspace provider that rents office space to freelancers, entrepreneurs and startups, recently opened a new european location in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Located a short walk from the city center, WeWork – Metropool offers members panoramic views of the Amsterdam canals along with convenient access to restaurants, nightlife, and leisure.
9 ways the workplace will be different in 2050
Over the years we've seen the workplace go through a number of dramatic changes: The dress code has shifted away from the suit and tie. There are entire jobs devoted only to the strategic use of social media. People are "job hopping" every year or two, rather than committing their careers to one company.
A Year in Review: Ten Workplace Trends of 2015 - Part 1
In 2015, I was asked to speak to a "Future is Now" team at a large Sporting Goods Company - a team of twenty- to thirty-somethings working in beige cubicles surrounded by white walls and looking to better their workplace and culture for the future. While many workplace trends are common knowledge to the Contract Interiors Industry, many of our clients and potential clients - like this team - are also very interested, and scratching their head a bit as to where to start. In honor of our beiged brethren, here is a review of 2015 for those in and out of the industry looking to understand what is happening in the world of workplace today.
The Open-Office Backlash
Ever since companies began tearing down walls to replace private offices with open space, there have been plenty of naysayers, and the latest is Maria Konnikova in The New Yorker. Earlier this month, she declared that “the open office undermines the very things that it was designed to achieve” (better communication and idea flow). Pointing to old perceptions — noise and lack of privacy — she calls the open office a “trap” that “may be ingraining a cycle of underperformance.” Yet, in her criticism, Konnikova overlooks the greatest value of the open office — it’s dramatically more sustainable.
Ergonomics Faces Future With More Handhelds, Fewer Desks
The shift to handhelds is a game changer and represents unchartered territory for ergonomists and the office furniture industry.
Tech startup PointDrive picks furniture close to home
This impressive young company was looking for an office furniture company with the same commitment to moving fast and creating products that work well and are adaptive. They didn’t have to look far.
A New Look for Legal: A Bold Vision for the Law Firm of the Future
Expansive corner offices, hierarchy-based seating arrangements, an abundance of paperwork, and some mahogany for good measure: This is the law firm we know from TV.
But what do today’s actual law firms look like, and how is law changing? Though the industry has been a bit slow to embrace the “Workplace of the Future” movement, law is inching its way closer to more progressive workspaces that reflect how work is shifting across all industries—the rise of teamwork and a greater importance placed on a shared company culture.
Healthy Workplaces Produce Employees Who Work Smarter – And Longer
"Productivity goes ‘through the roof’ when companies invest in building design that improves their workers’ physical and mental health."
Adaptive Re-Use Gives Old Assets a New Lease on Life
Shorenstein, the San Francisco-based owner and developer, isn’t recreating the wheel, just the building where the wheels were attached. The building in question, located in Los Angeles, is a 260,000-square-foot structure built by Henry Ford in 1914 for the assembly of Model Ts—and later, Model As—to feed the local, growing automotive need. (This is LA, after all.) Shorenstein bought the building last year for $35 million, and is now elbows-deep in its renovation.
The Sane Way To Approach Space Planning
If you’ve done as many space plans as many of us have, you’re well aware of the “Raging Bull Syndrome” that occurs when department heads or divisions put their comments in on a new plan.
The Yard Coworking Offices – New York City
David Bers Architecture has developed the new coworking offices of The Yard located in New York City. Through years of design research and member input we’ve struck a perfect balance of office size, privacy, and technology that works best for the widest variety of business needs. A yard member can expect the same contemporary, clean, efficient and versatile space to work at any location.
This Swanky Coworking Space Comes With A Perk: Architectural Pedigree
While coworking spaces began as places for freelancers and startups to rent a desk and gain an office-like community, the industry has become a big business in and of itself. WeWork, arguably the best-known network of coworking spaces received a (likely inflated) $10 billion valuation in 2015. Meanwhile NeueHouse, a "private work collective" based in Manhattan, raised $25 million—and has used the investment to open its Hollywood outpost inside the landmarked CBS Radio Building and Studio.




















