From the cube farm to the open plan, the conversation around office design has long focused on extremes. But there's an advantage to finding middle ground, according to Gensler's U.S. Workplace Survey 2016, which polled more than 4,000 workers across 11 industries from companies that the firm has deemed to be leaders in their respective fields. The results relate the “quality and functional make-up of the workplace and the level of innovation employees ascribe to their organization,” according to the firm.
PSFK Labs examines the key steps for designing an adaptable work environment to energize employees
Change is an inevitable process that is part of any business that wants to grow, and 75% of CEOs say that an educated and adaptable workforce should be a priority for businesses according to the Global CEO Survey conducted by PwC in 2016. Forcing executive company-wide orders is not the best way to enact any sort of change. Instead, implementing a permanent culture of empowerment is the best way to ensure continuous, positive change.
Workplaces that foster inspiration, motivation and rewards create an environment of energized employees and thriving business. In our new Future of Work report, PSFK Labs explores the steps for developing and implementing this kind of culture.
In Defense of the Open Office: The Case for the Hybrid Workplace
The once-trendy open office has taken quite a beating in the last few years. Huge, undivided rooms. Long tables lined up with laptops.
Not a wall in sight. Once the darling of agencies, startups, and big companies trying to be cool, the layout is now “destroying the workplace,” a “trap,” or quite simply, “dead.”
These articles and the hundreds like them cite multiple studies showing that contrary to their intent, open offices hinder productivity, produce a sense of emotional isolation, and basically get in the way of anybody getting anything done.
Do your home and office look the same? There's a reason for that
If you think you spend too much time at work, you're probably right. If you think the office increasingly looks like home, you're also probably right.
Receptions that look more like a lounge than an office, work areas with large communal kitchens and rugs designed to give a personal touch are all common and it's no accident.
"The boundaries between work and home have become more and more blurred, particularly with technology," says Angela Ferguson, the managing director of design firm Futurespace. "We'll answer emails on weekends, we'll be lying in bed, even from different parts of the world, emailing each other."
The Changing Shape Of The Modern Workplace
Whilst property seems to be a firm and static domain, the way our workplaces look and behave has been undergoing a great deal of flux and experimentation in recent years, urged on by a wide range of driving forces.
From an organizational perspective, there has been a need to make ones property portfolio more cost effective, whilst also providing an engaging environment that both attracts the best talent and helps them to collaborate and innovate.
From an individual perspective, there has been an urge to work more flexibly and avoid the stresses of the daily commute, and to work in more pleasant than the factory farm like cubicles of yesteryear.
Intelligent lighting can enhance workplace wellbeing and productivity
The main driver of the growing interest in wellbeing in recent years has undoubtedly been absenteeism. But workers don’t have to be ‘absent’ from the workplace to hamper productivity. Presenteeism, where employees are present but not productive can also influence the long-term success of an organisation. The interaction between the worker and their work environment has a huge influence on an individual’s wellbeing and overall productivity, with employees’ performance more likely to be enhanced when they are immersed in a comfortable and stimulating environment. This can include all the usual stipulations, such as a well-designed workstation, a comfortable office temperature and carefully considered and appropriate lighting. In fact, improved lighting is an essential element in the overall mix, not only because of the cost savings that their energy efficiency brings but also in the way lighting contributes to workplace wellbeing and people’s performance.
Do people really matter when we design workplaces?
Some may think this question is a daft question. They’ll argue that of course people matter when we design workplaces. Granted, there are those for whom the human experience of the built environment is really important. They demonstrate this it in their attitudes and actions. However, based on some of the attitudes and actions I have observed over the years, I would suggest that the belief that people really matter when some designers design workplaces for them is quite frankly all too often skin deep. How do we know this? And if we accept that it is true, it then begs the secondary question of why this should be the case. Is it entirely our fault? What might we do to address the issues? In part, we know that people haven’t really mattered enough in design because of mistakes of the past. Meanwhile, society is facing many pressing challenges, ranging from health to housing, work to economy and climate change to resource depletion.
Office Obsessions: Bethany DeLine
An eclectic designer at HGA's downtown Minneapolis office imparts the virtues of bold office art and forward-thinking space planning. Awesome offices support positive mood and healthy lifestyles. Designing a place where people may spend the majority of their time is a very influential position to be in - so why not make happy places? Providing as much access to daylight as possible is a primary goal when I’m space planning, and if our clients haven’t specifically requested amenities from the get-go, early planning is a great time to start conversations about how community spaces, such as a work café, can uplift corporate culture.
The Number One Reason Employees Should Use Collaboration Tools
When it comes to social media, are you a poster or a lurker? Do you avoid sharing blog posts, updating information on LinkedIn, or sharing your thoughts on Twitter? If so, it might be time to rethink your professional online footprint.
At the center of the future of work are workplace collaboration tools. Nearly everything else that is a part of the future of work, from flexibility to real-time feedback and gamificiation, is only possibly because of collaboration tools, or internal social media sites. There are a number of platforms to choose from, giving organizations options of what will best serve their employees and customers. These platforms are vital for forward-thinking companies, but many organizations find that their employees are hesitant to use the services. There are a lot of reasons why you should contribute to a workplace collaboration tool, but the biggest comes down to your own career: it sets you up for success. In fact, fully utilizing collaboration tools could be the single thing you could do for your career.
Six Living Walls in the Tech Workplace
For Sapphire Systems new workplace in the Norman Foster-designed Shard tower, IA’s design team in London created a winter garden that extends off of a client reception area, and connects to views of the cityscape and work areas. The central location reinforces transparency and wellness.
Bringing College to the Workplace
The job market is finally looking up for college students. This year, employers expect to hire 11 percent more new college graduates than in 2015. More than four in ten employers described the job market as "very good" or better for this crop of graduates. Yet most employers struggle to integrate young hires into the workplace. The difference between the working environment of a college student and an entry-level employee is enormous. This disconnect can be costly. Unhappy workers tend to be unproductive and are more likely to leave. That forces companies to spend more on recruiting -- and harms their reputations.
Office Design? You Need to Do These 3 Things To Reduce Employee Distractions.
Distractions at your workplace can plague your entire workforce. And, here, office design plays a crucial role. You want a happy, productive workplace, of course. But, perspectives on how to create one may be sharply divided when you compare the opinions of workers with those of leadership.
A 2016 Oxford Economics study, for example, found a gap between how both groups viewed their workplace experience: 63 percent of executives surveyed said they thought their employees had the tools needed to filter out distractions, whereas only 41 percent of employees agreed with that belief.
The traditional office is still very much alive, but it is changing
A skim through workplace features in the media and you’d be forgiven for thinking that the traditional office is no longer with us. According to the narrative, we’re all now 20-somethings, working in open-plan warehouses, with table football, bean bags and comfy sofas to lounge on, while drinking our custom-made soya lattes. When in actual fact, while more relaxed, fun and funky offices tend to make the headlines, the majority of people still work in a relatively traditional way, with their PC or laptop, a desk and an ergonomic task chair. What’s more, with an ageing workforce, we certainly aren’t all 20-somethings, with DWP (Department of Work and Pensions) figures revealing that the employment rate for people aged 50 to 64 has risen by 14 per cent in the last 30 years, and doubled for over 65s. So designing with just the youngsters in mind simply doesn’t add up. Recent research by the Senator Group, backs up this view.
THE NEW HEADSPACE HQ IS THE HAPPIEST OFFICE IN THE WORLD
Imagine an office in which health and happiness are at the core of everyday life. Wellbeing comes first, work comes second. Only one office of this kind exists in the world and it belongs to the brains behind Headspace - the meditation app dubbed "a gym membership for the mind". Headspace, along with its 80 employees, has now found some office space of its own - in the new happiness-orientated HQ in Santa Monica, Los Angeles.
Workplace Study Reveals Insight On Open Office Layouts
Workforce resistance to open office layouts has been well-documented, and the pervasiveness of this topic requires comprehensive analysis to understand the various factors contributing to employee willingness or reluctance to working in an open plan. SCG created “The State of the Open Office” Research Study to serve as an instrument to measure workforce, organizational, and geographical sentiments and trends for open office layouts.
Google, Microsoft, and Quartz are Embracing the Makerspace
As startups grow, the struggle to maintain an innovative company culture never stops. In recent years, communal “rec rooms” – where employees can tinker with side projects – have become an integral element in keeping staff engaged, generating new ideas, and averting burnout.
These workshops, makerspaces, and hackerspaces (the terms are often used interchangeably, but here are some definitions) typically resemble a nerdy man cave, with tools, wires, and gadgets centered around a woodshop table.
Three Scenarios for the Future of Work
A lot has been said about the future of work, but no one knows for sure what things will really look like. The best companies have constantly evolving strategies that incorporate talent management, human resources, and analytics. To start a conversation about the future of work, consulting giant PwC, led by Toni Cusumano, created three different scenarios for the future of work, which they broke down into worlds. These visions aren't to say that one scenario is better than the other, but rather to encourage organizations to consider what they would do if the workforce looked different and how they would adjust their strategies to stay relevant and successful.
The first world is the orange world, where small is beautiful. This world is run by companies that are broken down into collaborative networks of smaller organizations. Instead of huge conglomerates, the orange world is run by specialized smaller companies that operate on a low impact/high technology model with a goal to maximize flexibility and minimize cost. In the orange world, big businesses and corporations start to decline and are replaced by smaller, flexible organizations that provide workers with autonomy and a variety of ways to work. Instead of employees taking traditional career paths and staying with the same company for years, the orange world is ruled by a large contract workforce. This world is supported by PwC's research that found that two out of five people believe traditional employment won't be around in the future. The orange world is also reflective of the growing amount of Millennials in the workplace.
Office 2.0: Big Data is changing the design of our workplaces
It’s not an uncommon experience as an office worker to feel like a cog in the machine, a single cell in a much bigger spreadsheet. According to architects and designers working on new ways to create office space and shared working environments, you might not be far off. It’s not that they’re creating impersonal designs; quite the opposite. It’s that in an era of computer analysis and algorithms, workers are the data that’s making workplaces more efficient, connected, and comfortable.
In an era of big data design, architects want to make your workspace work as hard as you do. As office design trends swing back and forth, and new layouts seemingly leave at least a few coworkers unsatisfied with the space they work in every day, the notion that there's a better, smarter, and more informed options sounds very compelling.
The office will always live on because nothing propinks like propinquity
Perhaps the most pervasive and enduring myth about the office is that it is somehow dying off. It’s a blast of guff originally farted out at the dawn of the technological revolution in the early 1990s, which has somehow lingered and been stinking the place out ever since. The essential premise behind the idea of the death of the office is that mobile technology makes it possible for us to work from ‘anywhere’ and so that must mean ‘somewhere’ is no longer needed. It’s an alluring idea, partly because it seems reasonable enough so is especially attractive if you’re looking to make some bold statement about office design based on very little evidence or if you have a vested interest in getting more people to buy into the idea that it’s a goner. That is why you’ll hear it most from PR people, journalists who haven’t the time or inclination to look into the subject properly – and technology and telecoms companies.
Design for movement
At a basic level, architecture is like a shoe: a useful tool designed to protect the human body from harm caused by the natural elements.
Yet over time, we can become over-reliant on its comfort, losing our dexterity and our ability to withstand even the slightest discomforts. So what is meant to help us may, in fact, hinder us by making things too easy, removing all physical challenges and other stressors that are essential for optimal health.




















