While companies are still debating back-to-work plans for their employees, it’s clear that what quite a few workers are returning to breaks from the past in terms of design.
Recent examples—two completed, one in the design stage—illustrate this point: The new headquarters for Traffik, a global marketing company in Irvine, Calif.; the Manhattan office of Ducera Partners, an investment banking advisory practice; and BrainFactory Bochum, an office building scheduled to open in northern Germany in January 2023.
Traffik’s two-story, 22,000-sf digs, designed by LPA Design Studios, combines elements of retail, hospitality, and office. Located in what was originally intended for a steakhouse within an outdoor shopping center, Traffik’s workspace nestles near Apple and H&M stores. Street views of the firm’s glass-enclosed podcast studio and main conference room highlight the retail component. The headquarters’ entry and reception area are meant to feel like an urban hotel, with a check-in concierge, lounge waiting area, and luggage carts.
“Our goal was to create an interactive design that informs the way the user thinks, socializes, works and collaborates,” Rick D’Amato, workplace design director at LPA, explained in a prepared statement. “We leveraged our extensive tenant improvement expertise to create an immersive experience for Traffik’s employees that reflects the firm’s buzz-worthy culture.”
The design also harkens back to an old-school ad agency with its emphasis on metal framing, brick, wood floors, and leather seating. There is a constant connection with socialization and collaboration with the inclusions of a stadium stair, library, barbershop with vintage chairs, and cocktail lounge.
Indeed, Traffik’s actual workstations are designed as “libraries” between event spaces, with long tables for group meetings and specialty spaces for smaller gatherings. Each conference room has a unique theme and purpose, offering various meeting modalities that inspire creativity and alternative thought.
LPA was also the engineer on this project, and Bogart Construction the GC. Traffik moved in September 2020.
IS IT AN OFFICE OR A MUSEUM?
A different, more understated design approach is found at Ducera Partners’ headquarters, which was completed last November. Ducera was a growing firm when it leased 29,089 sf on the 36th floor of 11 Times Square in New York City. It retained the interior design services of Ted Moudis Associates to create a modern and mirrored interior that maximizes client and staff comfort, showcases Ducera’s art collection, and provides 360-degree views of the surrounding cityscape.
The space’s jade-tinted ceiling pattern refers to the interlocking geometry of Ducera’s logo. The office’s 85, 120-degree workstations encourage employee collaboration, and a client-facing lounge offers an intimate meeting area.
Conference rooms feature muted color tones on the walls and furniture, and their tinted glass walls expose the city outside. Warm wood and stone colors grace an elegant lobby that is complemented by a dramatic lighting scheme and an oversized decorative front door. A simply designed reception desk can be converted into a bar for social events. Beyond tinted glass doors, a private lounge with a circular seating area, upholstered walls, and an additional bar provide an intimate venue for informal client meetings.
The building’s landlord, SJP Properties, was the general contractor on this project. Robert Derector Associates was its engineering consultant. As of late September, Ducera’s back-to-office plans were uncertain.
EMOTIONAL RESPITE
New York-based HWKN Architecture has been marketing a concept and branding for office design it calls Spirit, which embodies the firm’s design principles: respect for nature, a happy and healthy work environment, intelligent design, and community concern.
“We have to lure people back to the office, said HWKN’s Principal and Founder Matthias Hollwich, in a prepared statement. “With Spirit, we achieve that by turning the building into a destination, adding lifestyle amenities, greater flexibility, and openness to what was once just a commodity. By adding emotion, we turn the commonplace into the unforgettable.”
BrainFactory Bochum, a 186,100-sf office building that will house about 600 employees, is deploying the Spirit concept. Working with its development partner Landmarkem, HWKN’s approach starts with the exterior, where sections of “the prefabricated box” have been removed and replaced with a distorted-column grid. (Goldbeck, a prefab specialist, will be the project's general contractor.)
“We have reinvented the box while still taking advantage of mass production,” said Hollwich. “The early Modernists of the 20th Century sought to make elegant, mass-produced housing. A hundred years later we are doing the same for the office with an emotional twist.”
The interior design opens the floor plans to allow for more natural light to enter seating lounges and coworking areas. The exterior brass finish extends throughout the building, creating an aesthetic link. The building will also be distinguished by what HWKN calls “lifestyle amenities” such as terraces, a gym, and a café.
When BrainFactory Bochum opens, its Spirit offices “will help our clients attract top talent by creating an energized workplace and culture that beat the home office,” predicted Jochem Hermanns, Landmarken’s Managing Director. Construction is scheduled to begin on this project next Spring.
Related Stories
| Aug 11, 2010
Top of the rock—Observation deck at Rockefeller Center
Opened in 1933, the observation deck at Rockefeller Center was designed to evoke the elegant promenades found on the period's luxury transatlantic liners—only with views of the city's skyline instead of the ocean. In 1986 this cultural landmark was closed to the public and sat unused for almost two decades.
| Aug 11, 2010
200 Fillmore
Built in 1963, the 32,000-sf 200 Fillmore building in Denver housed office and retail in a drab, outdated, and energy-splurging shell—a “style” made doubly disastrous by 200 Fillmore's function as the backdrop for a popular public plaza and outdoor café called “The Beach.
| Aug 11, 2010
Integrated Project Delivery builds a brave, new BIM world
Three-dimensional information, such as that provided by building information modeling, allows all members of the Building Team to visualize the many components of a project and how they work together. BIM and other 3D tools convey the idea and intent of the designer to the entire Building Team and lay the groundwork for integrated project delivery.
| Aug 11, 2010
Inspiring Offices: Office Design That Drives Creativity
Office design has always been linked to productivity—how many workers can be reasonably squeezed into a given space—but why isn’t it more frequently linked to creativity? “In general, I don’t think enough people link the design of space to business outcome,” says Janice Linster, partner with the Minneapolis design firm Studio Hive.
| Aug 11, 2010
Great Solutions: Products
14. Mod Pod A Nod to Flex Biz Designed by the British firm Tate + Hindle, the OfficePOD is a flexible office space that can be installed, well, just about anywhere, indoors or out. The self-contained modular units measure about seven feet square and are designed to serve as dedicated space for employees who work from home or other remote locations.