Showing posts with label office. Show all posts
Showing posts with label office. Show all posts

Monday, November 5, 2012

The New Cubicle


Let’s face it, cubicles are back.

We’re not talking your garden ‘Dilbert’ variety though; gone are the days of three walls surrounding an individual rectangular desk you wheel your task chair around in.

Cubicles today are about escaping the hustle and bustle of the open-plan office for specific tasks: meeting, emailing, napping, etc. They help office workers join and separate from the rest of the team when needed, and create different environments to provide a change of scenery and seating positions.



Premiered at the Orgatec 2012 Office furniture fair, Workbays by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec are a system of sheltered work spaces which let each individual pick the environment that suits them best for the work they are planning on doing.




Another Bouroullec Bros. design, the Alcove, which started as a sofa in 2006, has now morphed into a workstation.

 After the Alcove Work, which provides a space for an individual to work on a laptop, the new Alcove Meet creates a meeting space wrapped up in a cozy sofa, insulating a group of up to four from the sights and sounds of the rest of the office.


For those less fortunate workers in a spatially challenged office, there is also the option of making a cubicle directly out of the office chair to find a little relief from their open-space neighbors; like in this hooded configuration of Citterio’s ID chair concept.




To escape the office completely, there is always the option of Vitra’s 15 minute Power Nap; or in extreme cases the Ostrich pillow by Kawamura-Ganjavian should do the trick.








Cubicles can also be used to encase other activities which would normally disrupt the work environment. Docklands by Bene and Pentaphone by Robert Stadler are designed to muffle mobile phone conversations for a little privacy.

With offices so well endowed, home offices have developed major cubicle envy. Here are a few of our favorite home versions:



By Claire Toussaint

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Back to the Office

Summer vacation is over, and it’s time to head back to the office; which for a lucky few means it’s time for the grown-ups to do all the fun stuff the kids got to do all summer.


Playground:

If part of your job description is to get in touch with your inner child, you might work in the development department at LEGO. Designed by Rosan Bosch and Rune Fjord, the space is more of a playground than an office, including a slide from the top to the bottom floor and a plethora of toys to play with.
 
 
 
 
Space camp:
For those more likely to have gone to space camp as children, the Google engineering headquarters in London has a techy space-craft feel in greys and bright blues and oranges. The cool lighting and integrated furniture give the impression of wondering the halls of the Death Star.
 

 
Building a fort:
To counteract rainy-day boredom, there is always the option to build a fort. Although blankets and the backs of chairs are traditionally used as building materials, a large scale office version requires a cardboard structure, like this tessellated cave by Liam Hopkins of Lazarian. Recycled cardboard is pulped and reconstituted into hollow triangular blocks which fit together to create the shelter’s organic shape.
 
 

 
Secret club-house:
The faceted red object in the middle of an office in Shanghai has the mystique and draw of a secret club house. Its size indicates that only a small number of people are able to fit inside, and its unusual shape heightens one’s natural curiosity. A fortress within an office, it is a perfect place to hold secret meetings and spy on others through the small windows.
 
 

 
 
 
Other offices to check out:  
 
 
Fun house gallery of mirrors
 
Coloring in the lines
 
 
 
by Claire Toussaint