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Shades of Gray—And One Green

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Shades of Gray—And One Green

How a simple palette enhances this company’s signature color 


By powered by Valspar | May 22, 2015

This office interior in Austin, Texas, spotlights the firm's green color throughout, from a signature wall (pictured above) to the decorative accents (below).

Many companies utilize their signature colors for the exterior and interior of their office suites, buildings, and more. But for a product strategy and design firm in Austin, Texas, just one simple hue was needed to represent the brand.

Walk into the newly decorated frog design office, and the eye is immediately drawn to the bright green objects throughout the space. The colors are like a highlighter on the page, attracting attention to different architectural features of the office, including chairs around the table and panels along the wall.

That shade of green is frog design’s signature color, and when lauckgroup was tasked with designing the new office, they chose to feature the distinctive shade prominently in the space. The office primarily features white and shades of gray, with a yellow used sparsely—but it is the green that really stands out amidst the gray carpeting, the white and gray desks and walls. The team made green a prominent part of the design early on in the planning process, “to pay homage to the history of the firm and those that created great products before frog.”

“The frog employees love the space. The client-facing conference rooms are designed distinctively for presentations and video conference, while the back of the house remains casual with the flexibility for teams to relocate often when they have new engineering assignments,” said lauckgroup senior project designer April Warner, RID, LEED ID+C.

From the office lobby, the color can be seen in the company logo on the front desk, the books on the table, and in the chairs. One particularly prominent use of the color is a signature wall where employees can write down their ideas. “We also highlighted the main ‘tunnel’, which abstractly signified the timeline of the when the company was established,” Warner said. “Striking a line through the green tunnel in a graphic signals the event of becoming a frog.”

The building that houses frog design was previously a Google office, and so the design took advantage of the elements already in place in the structure. “We carefully removed the main Google branding elements and colors, but kept all of the heavily engineered infrastructure,” explained Joe Gowing, RID, lauckgroup’s principal-in-charge for the project.

Employees of frog design are enjoying the new space and the clean look the color palette creates. The effective use of a signature color took frog design’s branding into a direction that was both creative and simple. 

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