The Smart and the Beautiful: Dichotomies in Workplace Design (Part One)
09.5.2018
Jim Prendergast in legal trends, workplace survey

DLA Piper’s Chicago office. Photo: Steve Hall © Hall+Merrick.

This is the first entry in a two-part series exploring how the design dichotomy of the smart and the beautiful plays out through the example of our Legal and Management Advisory clients.

When looking at the future of workplace design, the central challenge that confronts progressive organizations is one of continuous and transformational change. To stay ahead of change, the next intelligent workplace must move beyond collaborative environments towards providing a more immersive, tailored experience. For tomorrow's workplace, the prime differentiator will be realizing a firm’s cultural promise through the physical form and sequence of its space.

Designing workplaces always involves bringing together two complimentary perspectives that shape the impact of market forces on the final space: the business/strategic and the cultural/experience perspectives. This is the dichotomy of the smart and the beautiful.

This two-part blog series explores what each means and how this dichotomy plays out through the example of our Legal and Management Advisory clients. This first entry explores the “smart” business/strategic perspective, looking in depth at the three drivers behind business/strategic perspective (area, innovation, change) and the design imperatives that correspond to them (smart geometry, deliberate improvisation, embedded adaptability).

Smart Geometry: The footprint drives the deal

Every project has its genesis in small, probing questions that are inevitably more complex than they appear to be at first. Key among them is “does my project have an ideal shape?” This is where smart geometry comes in—that is, the optimum balance between geometric and proportional characteristics that inform planning utilization. As fee pressures drive productivity and utilization targets higher, there is a need to reduce fixed costs, such as real estate. Building geometry is only one factor in a real estate decision, but unlike financial terms and lease durations, a building’s geometry does not change—using it well can make office both more efficient and more effective—and even lead to progressive planning and the adoption of alternative officing strategies.

Smart geometry’s key design criteria include:

Smart geometry is the first step towards ensuring an adequate level of flexibility in design performance and opportunity. The role it plays in enabling or inhibiting growth, organizational dexterity, and design potential is crucial and permanent.

For DLA Piper’s Chicago office, the law firm selected an elliptical floor plate profile with a 42’-0” core-to-window column-free planning zone. Geometrically, an elliptical form encloses the same area with 10 percent less perimeter circumference than the same area enclosed in a rectangular form. Combining a 4’-9” perimeter module, in lieu of the marketplace norm of 5’-0,” with a universal office philosophy for all functions meant DLA reduced their occupancy footprint by 34 percent while still growing staff capacity. Photo: Steve Hall © Hall+Merrick.

Deliberate improvisation: innovation is the deliverable

Maintaining high levels of innovation requires understanding work behaviors and designing workspaces that elevate outcomes—removing barriers to people’s best work. As a design principle, “deliberate improvisation”—the anticipation of diverse behaviors within a set of intentional choices—can facilitate this. Building improvisation in allows a space to support a wide range of not entirely predictable behaviors by making worksites (offices, open workstations, shared workspaces) as agile as possible; adaptable without requiring additional hard construction or acquisition of new furniture. We continually find that redefining the most basic building block of space—the worksite—plays a significant role in the effectiveness of the overall design. Deliberate improvisation in the worksite becomes the smallest unit of measure of success.

In a Confidential New York Law Firm’s offices a universal office planning structure was used for partners and senior staff utilizing a “galley” configuration. This configuration increases the amount of accessible storage within easy, arms-length access while supporting multiple complimentary work behaviors such as informal meetings at multiple scales. Photo: Garrett Rowland.

Embedded adaptability: the only constant in business is change

Indeterminate business futures and accelerating change drives a need for agile, intermodular and multi-modal space types that can easily adapt in function and purpose through embedded adaptability. Our clients see on average 60 percent reduction in reconfiguration costs due to interoperable planning.

At Seyfarth Shaw’s Chicago, a 150 usable square foot (usf) universal office footprint was designed to organize intermodular interior attorney offices. Each office features ceiling fixture and sprinkler layout that accommodates dividing it into two 75 usf hoteling attorney or administrative staff offices. Demountable glass façade systems feature interchangeable components to facilitate this quick and economical conversion. Photo: Steve Hall © Hall+Merrick.

The “smart” business/strategic perspective addresses the issues driving a workplace’s efficiency. The design imperatives of smart geometry, deliberate improvisation, and embedded adaptability ensure that the potential and competitiveness of the facility are not at risk. This perspective requires careful study, planning, and detailed integration into the project’s technical documentation to ensure that the intrinsic promise of these design imperatives can build the foundation for the “beautiful” cultural/experiential perspective to follow.

To further engage in this subject, learn more about our Legal and Management Advisory practices.

Jim Prendergast, FAIA IIDA, is a Design Principal and Global Management Advisory Industry Expert based in our Chicago office. Jim specializes in innovative and refined workplace designs. Over the last 30 years Jim has designed nearly 10 million square feet of commercial interiors. An innovative award-winning designer and progressive thinker, Jim is frequently invited to present his work at client professional forums and lecture as part of university curriculums on design and its impact on client culture and performance. Jim’s work is frequently featured in premier design publications, receiving multiple design awards as well as AIA-Chicago's Young Architect Award and is a member of the AIA's College of Fellows. Contact him at jim_prendergast@gensler.com.
Article originally appeared on architecture and design (http://www.gensleron.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.