In This Issue:
Office Demand Up By 20% in March
In this issue… Andreu World marks its 70th anniversary with a renovated, Mediterranean-inflected HQ and flexible showroom in Valencia; the broader U.S. manufacturing sector ticks up while furniture remains in contraction under tariff and supply-cost pressure; König + Neurath secures a restructuring plan to stabilize operations while preserving roughly 700 jobs; remote-work flexibility is linked to higher fertility, and mixed-use “live-work-play” developments with coworking continue to spread across U.S. cities; AI is reshaping work models—both through “tiny teams” in tech and through workplace strategies centered on well-being, trust, and Gen Z expectations—while office vacancies hit record highs and legal leasing in Manhattan stays unusually strong; design coverage highlights circular, dismantle-and-reuse exhibition thinking, the rise of human-centered, flexible workplace frameworks, and new products spanning wide-width drapery, PVC-free silicone upholstery, modular kids seating, embossed leather collections, recycled-plastic chairs, modular classroom storage, PET acoustic colors, and industrial-inspired flooring.
In this issue… MillerKnoll dominates the headlines: strong Q3 results and sales/order growth, but a softer outlook as severe weather and the Iran conflict drive higher fuel/material and shipping costs, pressure demand, and help trigger sharp stock drops and cautious forward guidance. Office real estate shows tentative stabilization, with U.S. vacancy improving as construction slows and demolitions/conversions rise. Workplace culture looks inward, from “meeting debt” and calendar overload to workers’ pessimism about the job market and what people want next from work (more creativity, autonomy, wellbeing, and connection). Design guidance argues offices must be intentionally built for community to make return-to-office stick. Product coverage spotlights new materials and furnishings—from sustainable wallcoverings and tactile textiles to fingerprint-resistant surfaces, modular transit seating, and flexible office systems and desks designed for adaptable, collaborative spaces.
In this issue… Top News covers early signs of stabilization in architecture billings, a major Artopex/Logiflex consolidation, a high-end home-office lounge chair debut, and evidence that office “stabilization” is being driven more by a construction slowdown than by demand. Main News looks at flexible workspace economics (premium flex outperforming traditional rents in London), sharp construction cost inflation driven by energy, and major NYC leasing/finance moves tied to the biggest-ever flex footprint. Features focus on how AI power users work—more mobile, more team-connected—and what workplaces must provide to support learning, connection, and collaboration. Workspace News examines return-to-office friction from inadequate space, retention and neurodiversity support gaps, happiness and wellbeing trends, fractional office sharing models, rising office attendance, and accelerating AI-driven workforce disruption. Trends explores how AI is changing office layouts, privacy, acoustics, and data-driven space planning. Design highlights employees “hacking” workspaces and the design fixes that improve focus and comfort. Products spotlights new meeting-space credenzas, steel-look folding glass walls, an award-to-market coffee table, outdoor collections, modular acoustic rooms, all-wood conference systems, and next-gen privacy pods.
In this issue… American Interiors buys APG Office Furnishings to become MillerKnoll’s exclusive dealer in Northeast Ohio; Humanscale opens a Shanghai flagship as it pushes deeper into Asia-Pacific; the Pentagon draws scrutiny for a $93B “use-it-or-lose-it” spending surge that included luxury purchases; ICE quietly accelerates U.S. office leasing as GSA prioritizes speed over price and transparency; Boston’s coworking footprint jumps as operators expand into a high-vacancy market; workplace chair politics expose status, generational preferences, and culture; energy shocks revive remote-work pushes as a conservation tool; designers are urged to co-create offices across generations; executive desks persist as modern symbols of authority; and new commercial products span rugs, modular seating, wallcoverings, and resilient flooring emphasizing craft, sustainability, and flexible use.
In this issue… backlash erupts over a Baltimore dealer’s $25.8M ICE furniture contract; Davis Furniture expands U.S. manufacturing in High Point; HON announces a 12,000+ SF Chicago Fulton Market flagship (opening June 2026); and Teknion debuts a new SF showroom with LEED/WELL certifications. Amazon outlines a plan to cut 49,000 desks and shrink its office footprint while still betting heavily on AI and in-person collaboration. Features spotlight the return of hand sketching in architecture, the rise of OEM production models in office furniture, and expert views on why offices must be redesigned for flexibility, health, and culture. Workspace News covers small behavioral “nudges” that shape culture. Trends examine new workplace power demands (USB‑C, decarbonization, AI/data centers, grid modernization) and the workplace as civic infrastructure. Design highlights flexible, modular office layouts and furnishings. Products include new outdoor booths, swivel-base lounge seating updates, decorative lighting, next-gen ergonomic lounge seating with power, transitional seating collections, multi-port power docks, and carbon-neutral acoustic solutions.
News, Insights, Research, Trends and Products for Working Spaces.