As technology plays an ever-growing part in our daily lives it is also becoming more prominent in the workspace; new tech-based products, systems and uses are regularly presented to modern workers and processes are constantly advancing. Meanwhile, commercial spaces have become more agile and the flexible office trend has topped the office furniture industry in recent years. Hence, the incorporation of technology within a workspace now often legitimises a business or brand, as well as creating a more flexible and collaborative environment for staff.
HOK and Polsinelli Collaborate to Evolve the Modern Law Office
Polsinelli, one of the country’s fastest-growing law firms, has partnered with HOK on more than 13 projects in 11 cities over the last five years. From New York to Denver, these projects have played an integral role in establishing Polsinelli’s workplace design standards and creating a consistent brand experience across its offices.
REDISCOVERING PURPOSE IN THE WORKPLACE
For some of us work at times starts to feel repetitive and mundane. We’re prying ourselves out of bed most days, dreading heading into the office because we’d rather be on a beach enjoying life opposed to dealing with the pressures of completing large projects. It is said that only one in eight workers are psychologically committed to their jobs. This means that only one in eight workers are making positive contributions to the organizations they work for. A lot of us assume that in order for us to find purpose it has to be outside of the workplace, which is why we often find ourselves discouraged and unmotivated daily. What if we were to change the narrative when it comes to living a purposeful life? The first step in doing this is discovering a list of ways to begin viewing our purpose in the workplace differently. You do this by returning to why you started. Find a joy in your day to day efforts and contributions. The longer you’re working, the harder it becomes to stay positive and purpose driven, but it doesn’t take much to get you back on track with what drives purpose for you.
Workplace design that hands people control is the key to their wellbeing
Giving employees more control over workplace design is the single most important contributing factor to their wellbeing, according to a new study. The Workplace & Wellbeing report examines the workplace design factors that influence wellbeing. The research team discovered that an invitation to participate in the design of the work environment raised levels of wellbeing, although increasing the level of participation did not necessarily increase the level of wellbeing. The research was led by the Royal College of Art’s Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design in partnership with architects Gensler and supported by a consortium of leading industry names: Milliken, Bupa, Royal Bank of Scotland, Kinnarps and Shell. The context for this project lies with a current ‘wellbeing deficit’ in the workplace which means absence from work costs the UK economy more than £14 billion a year according to the Confederation of British Industry.
Focus on Focus (Spaces)
For decades, corporate office layouts have fluctuated between fully open and partially enclosed workspaces. But the latest swing back to fully integrated, collaborative work environments has generated a myriad of complaints about a lack of privacy, both acoustic and psychological. To balance our clients’ needs for real estate efficiency and staff comfort, we aim to design an optimal balance of public and private space for a successful workplace.
THREE STRATEGIES TO INCREASE MOVEMENT BY DESIGN
Can design make you healthier? Can you leave work in the evening feeling better than you did when you clocked in that morning? Leigh Stringer thinks so. In this piece, exclusively for our premium subscribers, enjoy an excerpt from Stringer’s new book, The Healthy Workplace. The tips below appear in chapter four, “Maximize Energy, Avoid Crashes”.
Read the article on workdesign.com > [paywall]
Work in Progress: Putting Evidence-Based Design Into Practice
Above all else, global architecture and engineering firm HDR values the importance of teamwork and collaboration—not simply as the core of its creative process, but as a visible element of its designs. And so when HDR decided to relocate its Twin Cities architecture studio to a new location, it had one basic concept in mind: “Start by listening.” Designed with input from surveys and focus groups, this office stands as a first-hand experiment for HDR’s evidence-based design process.
THIS COWORKING SPACE IS GIVING OFF MAJOR SUMMER CAMP VIBES
El Segundo, Calif.-based ad agency Ignited recently designed and developed El Camp, a coworking space that will serve both as the agency’s new home, as well as a “plug and play” workspace for other like-minded marketing companies. The facility is located in a converted aerospace manufacturing plant, with the old-school features to prove it: high ceilings, lots of parking, and expansive indoor and outdoor areas. What’s more, Ignited decided to give the coworking space a “distinct summer camp vibe”, and included everything from picnic table-like workstations to outdoor fireplaces for barbeque and s’mores.
Your Ugly Office Might be Costing You (Infographic)
Office aesthetics are a major selling point when looking to draw in new employees, as the way your workplace environment looks often says a lot about your company and culture.
When someone walks into an office, it’s important they think “I want to be a part of this.” And if your office isn’t up to par, people will take notice. Indeed, it only takes 1/10 of a second for someone to have a lasting negative impression on your company based on your office, according to a recent survey conducted by British manufacturer CMD. The company found that cluttered workspaces was the number-one turnoff, followed by poorly dressed staff and bad lighting.
THESE ARE THE BEST OFFICE COLORS FOR WORKING MORE PRODUCTIVELY
Countless books have been written about how to boost your work productivity. But all along, you may have just needed a paint brush.
The environment you work in can have an incredible effect on your energy, creativity and focus — but, let's be real, you don't have time to read a textbook on color psychology. Instead, there's a handy infographic from office supply company Quill that consolidates all the information you need into one handy guide. Now that's productive time management.
How Your Office Design Can Help Your Team Get More Done
What has no internal walls, height-adjustable desks, floor-to-ceiling whiteboards, the latest in video communications technology - and a great view of Mount Fuji on a clear day?
This is #WhereIWork! When Rakuten headquarters relocated last year to a new building in Setagaya, Tokyo, we did more than change our address. We changed everything about our office and the way we work in it every day. For example, instead of a traditional CEO office, with doors and waiting rooms, my own new workspace just flows into everyone else's. We did away with all of the traditional offices. And to encourage communication and collaboration, there are no internal walls between workstations.
Beyond the Five-Foot Grid: Age-Neutral Design in the 21st-Century Workplace
Metropolis publisher and editor in chief Susan S. Szenasy moderated State of Design: Where We Work, a panel discussion hosted by Meadows Office Interiors in their Manhattan showroom. The panel featured Tom Krizmanic, principal of STUDIOS Architecture; Simon Speak, business development director of Haworth, Inc.; and Gabrielle Rubin Deveaux, senior director of real estate at BuzzFeed. The group discussed the challenges and benefits of creating age-neutral office spaces for today’s employees.
The group acknowledged that some older workers are resistant to drastic changes in the traditional work environment: the key is to try and balance individual concerns with the needs of the business. Said Krizmanic, “You look at the decisions through the lens of what the organization is trying to do so that everybody, from the youngest person to the oldest person, should be on board with that, and then peel off the slight variations that may make the acceptance of the design more palatable.”
How to Craft a Top-Notch Shared Office
Coworking spaces are nothing new, but their designs have now entered uber-luxurious territory. Take the NeueHouse Hollywood off of Sunset Boulevard in LA. The six-story oasis for entrepreneurs and startups in the entertainment industry couldn’t sit in a more appropriate space: the former CBS Radio Building and Studio, where the first pilot of “I Love Lucy” was filmed. Designer Rockwell Group was on hand at the recent Dwell on Design conference in LA to paint the picture of the 70,000-square-foot shared workspace that opened doors last year.
Q&A WITH LUKE PEARSON AND TOM LLOYD, PEARSONLLOYD
Luke Pearson and Tom Lloyd founded PearsonLloyd design studio in 1997. Since then, the London-based practice has served many sectors- including healthcare, office furniture, aviation and urban design- with a focus on identifying and responding to the shifting patterns of behavior in contemporary life. PearsonLloyd takes a collaborative approach to its work, embracing the restrictions imposed by production, the market, and other factors that define a brief. It’s work is grounded in research, and at the core is an attempt to understand the relationship between a product, its place, and the way people use it. in 2008, Tom and Luke were awarded the distinction of Royal Designers for Industry by The Royal Society of Arts. In August 2012, they were named one of the Top 50 Designers Shaping the Future by Fast Company magazine in New York.
In 2016, Teknion launched Zones, a comprehensive collection of furniture and workplace applications that address new workstyles and applications.
What Happens When You Let an Artist Design an Office?
A recent study estimates that 40% of the American workforce will be freelance by 2020. This new normal isn't limited to the United States, as it's a situation London-based artist and Frieze Artist Award winner Yuri Pattison explores in a new solo exhibition at Chisenhale Gallery. user, space, fills up the entire gallery space and is made of a series of industrial racking equipped with interconnected computers that control the space’s light. Film-covered windows as well as a series of LEDs are constantly switched on and off to create Pattison’s custom interpretation of the workday.
The Outdoor Office is the Latest Innovative Workplace Trend
Going outside to get some fresh air has always been a great way to reenergize your workday. And these days, you can bring your work outdoors with you.
Outdoor office spaces are the latest trend in a string of innovative and ever-evolving solutions for the changing workforce. The rise of the gig economy means on-demand workers now make up a large portion of the workforce (as of 2015, 53 million Americans worked as freelancers), and new technology is enabling companies to hire remote workers in increasing numbers.
Frontline technology, flexibility and food will define London’s future office workspace
Strutt & Parkert launched new research about London’s office employees, which examines how they work and what they want from their office workspace and wider urban environments. The Office Futures: Workshift survey reveals that occupiers in the coming decade are likely to pursue far more flexible leasing strategies, particularly with regard to their satellite or non-core office space. They will seek to align real estate costs with a volatile business environment, technology that is redefining previously-fixed workspaces and a younger generation, different enough to their forbears, in order to shift long-established working patterns off their axis.
Open-plan office design is preventing workers from concentrating, studies find
Lack of private space in office interiors is constraining the creativity and productivity of workers, according to data from two new UK workplace surveys. Gensler's 2016 UK Workplace Survey found that workers were more likely to be innovative if they had access to a range of spaces supporting different working styles, including private, semi-private and open-plan environments.
The people centric urge to personalise space helps firms to engage employees
In America at least, the great symbol of corporate conformity is the office cubicle. Satirised in the Dilbert cartoons and a staple in any movie about the degrading aspects of modern working life, the cubicle provides a perfect shorthand way of portraying an individual crushed by the corporate jackboot. Yet what these things miss is the propensity of people to personalise their surroundings and claim a space as their own, even if only for the short time they may be there. This seems to be particularly the case when it comes to office design and so we were much taken with this blog which lists the most far out and quirky ways people in the US have found to personalise their cubicles. Of course the need and urge to personalise space are not limited to the US. We often find in the course of our own installations that the first thing people do when they occupy an office for the first time is to personalise their space.
How Can the Workplace Impact Innovation?How Can the Workplace Impact Innovation?How Can the Workplace Impact Innovation?
Gensler’s U.S. Workplace Survey 2016 is the latest in a series that builds on over a decade of workplace research. We started our journey in 2005 by uncovering a link between a better designed work environment and performance. In every subsequent survey, we have tried to peel back the layers of comprehension—to understand why, and how, workplace makes an impact. Through the years, we have uncovered how people work, and we’ve found that effective workplace design links to higher business performance. In our 2013 survey, we discovered that choice drives performance and innovation. That finding really intrigued us and led to this year’s research question—how can the physical workplace environment impact innovation?




















