"Workplaces that look like your living room; flexible, multi-use spaces; outdoor terraces. Today's new hybrid work styles are reshaping the office buildings of tomorrow.
Leading architects and real-estate developers are pioneering concepts aimed at workers who are splitting their time between home and office, and they predict these innovations will become mainstream.
The rethinking of office design comes as the return of employees to office buildings remains sluggish, reflecting new remote and hybrid workplace strategies. Workers' office use on average is around 50% of prepandemic levels in 10 major U.S. cities monitored by Kastle Systems, which tracks security swipes into buildings.
Here's a look at some of the trends that will transform the next generation of office buildings.
At Home in the Office
Your office is going to look a lot more like your living room (that is, if your living room has high-end decor). In a trend dubbed "resimercial," short for residential commercial, some office designers are going for an at-home vibe with fewer desks and more couches, armchairs, stools and bistro tables -- even fireplaces. The goal is to make offices less corporate-looking and more welcoming to employees who have become accustomed to working in the comfort of their homes.
The residential touches long used by gaming and tech companies will be showing up more broadly, says Talia Olson, interior designer at JPC Architects LLC in Bellevue, Wash. A recent client who wanted a complete office redo showed images that looked residential, with sofas, pillows, area rugs and lots of plants, Ms. Olson says. "A lot of this is getting people back into the office after we've been working from home for some time," she says. "So why not design a space that has that feeling?"
Texas Tower, a 47-story office tower in downtown Houston by global real-estate developer Hines, opened in December 2021, has a living-room feel in amenity areas furnished with sofas, armchairs and coffee tables. Tenants include Hines, international law firm Vinson & Elkins LLP, and Cheniere Energy.
Lounge-like areas that in the past would have been reserved for executives will be available to all employees in the future, designers say. At the office headquarters that architecture and design firm Gensler designed for Marriott International Inc. in Bethesda, Md., opened in September 2022, a communal space on the 21st floor features a fireplace and cabinets with an inset TV screen. Nearby are sofas and seating at a high-top island where employees can work or meet with colleagues -- with beverages at hand.
A Flexible Approach
New office designs reflect another lesson from pandemic remote work: Be flexible.
The office of tomorrow will have more open environments that accommodate varied working preferences, says Brett Williams, senior managing director, asset services leadership at commercial real-estate firm Cushman & Wakefield. These will include a mix of areas for individual focused work, private meetings and collaboration -- often within steps of each other rather than on different floors as in the past.
Meeting rooms will be "less boardroom-style," Mr. Williams says. Instead, they will be adaptable areas that can be changed to suit the specific needs of a meeting. To accommodate hybrid gatherings, they will increasingly be equipped with immersive technology that allows those on videoconference to feel as though they're in the room, office planners say.
The new Marriott headquarters in Bethesda has an atrium-style area with a staircase that connects three floors. It could accommodate a 1,000-person town hall, doing what a traditional auditorium would have done in the past, says Jordan Goldstein, co-firm managing principal at Gensler. "We're seeing, in all the projects we have on the board, the need to think about how space can be flexible to bring people together in different ways -- spaces that can convert, and be something that is comfortable as it is but then could easily handle greater capacity," he says.
Equipment and instrumentation company NI Corp. (formerly National Instruments) is renovating its Austin headquarters to create a mix of large traditional conference rooms, small meeting rooms, focus rooms and bookable areas of various sizes. Furniture is on casters to boost flexibility.
"What we discovered in designing this workplace of the future is that we need a workplace that has choices for all these work styles," says Scott Strzinek, NI Corp.'s senior director of global facilities. The company had employees test the changes, designed by Gensler, before going ahead with a renovation of 450,000 square feet, to be completed in 2024. NI Corp., which has 70 offices in 25 countries, plans to roll out the designs to other locations over the next few years.
A Breath of Fresh Air
Outdoor terraces, greenery and access to natural light and windows are a major feature in plans for new buildings. While Covid concerns spurred some of the open-air ideas, they are also aimed at replicating what many employees enjoyed when working from home.
"A huge priority for us is to add outdoor space with new developments vertically throughout and as many floors as possible, whether it's a skyscraper or a shorter stack," says Whitney Burns, global client strategy lead at developer Hines.
In the past if there was a terrace in the building, it was only for that one lucky company. "We want to make it more accessible for all tenants," Ms. Burns says.
Architects see a move away from lining the perimeters of buildings with offices, a change that would allow more employees access to windows. One building Hines is developing will have "air porches" aimed to give a balcony feel in the absence of an actual deck. These areas, next to windows, are divided from the rest of the office with glass walls. The windows can open for fresh air, and the porches can be decorated with plants and lounge chairs.
At Lever House, a landmark 1951 office building on New York City's Park Avenue, the third floor that historically would be leased to a tenant is being turned into an amenity floor for the entire building, featuring a 13,540-square-foot outdoor area. "Now everyone in the building will be able to enjoy that outdoor space," says Ben Friedland, vice chairman of CBRE Group Inc., which represents the building's landlord.
A Quiet Place
The libraries appearing in new office buildings have less to do with books and more with the "Quiet Please" sign.
"This idea of a need for more privacy is really driving a number of different space types that we may not have seen in the office before, because everyone works differently," says Janet Pogue McLaurin, global director of workplace research and a principal at Gensler.
"To focus on my work" was the top reason employees said they wanted to come into the office in a Gensler survey of 2,000 employees in the U.S. conducted between June and August of last year, with 48% expressing that sentiment. This marked a shift from the previous year's survey, where respondents placed greater importance on working in person with colleagues.
"We have to create more spaces for people to do concentrated work, and that's starting to drive quiet zones in an office, like those you might see on Amtrak [trains]," she says. "They may be tech-free zones or they may just be areas where everybody knows not to take a phone call."
Individual soundproof booths will also be must-haves for office buildings, architects and developers say.
The London office of McCann advertising agency, completed in 2021, has an 800-square-foot library as well as designated quiet rooms where employees can retreat and recharge. Gensler, which designed the library, created an etiquette guide that stipulates no food and no group meetings. It has a large communal table, reference books and plush carpet that helps damp sound." [1]
1. The Future of Everything: The Work Issue --- Hybrid Work Is Changing How Offices Will Look --- Architects and real-estate developers are pioneering concepts to entice workers who will permanently split their time between home and office. Here are the innovations you'll see in years to come.
Smith, Ray A. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 23 Feb 2023: R.4.
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