Tag: Office Interiors (page 12 of 13)

New Google Offices In London Shrouded In Secrecy

There are reports that Google is planning to have developers build several new offices in London, notably in Kings Cross where an 11-storey office building has received planning permission.

The new building only received the go-ahead last month from Camden Council and in typical Google style it is unlikely to be the run of the mill kind of office development. Plans include a large roof terrace overlooking the city and there are certain to be many other features you would expect from Google’s office designers.

According to Joe Borrett, Google’s director of real estate and construction, the new office building will cement Google’s expansion in Kings Cross as well as make the area its new home in London. The tech giant has already revealed plans to spend 1 billion on its UK HQ according to reports, but it is not clear if this new building will be part of it even though the firm has been buying up additional plots in the Kings Cross area.

The planned regeneration of areas of Kings Cross have not gone down well with everyone. Architect Peter Cook has allegedly branded some designs as boring while Google’s Larry Page himself has allegedly considered scrapping one scheme because he too labelled it as boring.
Google’s current London offices feature anything from allotments to grow veg to dodgem cars and beach huts.

The 3 Big Office Design Trends For 2016

If you want to project your company as ahead of the curve of office design, now is the time to start thinking about changing things around so that spaces are more collaborative as well as being compatible with wireless technology.

The End Of Permanence
Having a rigid office layout that never changes is rapidly becoming old fashioned in today’s forward thinking technology conscious offices. A trend this year will be towards offices with modular components which can be moved around or combined when the need for collaboration arises.

Embracing nature
Rapid advances in technology have pushed us further and further away from nature. The trend this year will be to bring nature back in with natural materials incorporated into office design. Letting in as much natural light as possible will always be fashionable in offices that are lucky enough to have it. Also expect lots more plant life coming to an office space near you. Plants help to keep the air clean and add some character to what can be dull soulless spaces.

The rise and rise of multipurpose workspaces
The thought of having your staff leaving their desks to collaborate over large oval tables would have been the stuff of nightmares for bosses until fairly recently. Now collaboration is actively encouraged and non-assigned seating is replacing the traditional rows of desks as people are becoming unshackled from sockets thanks to the continuing development of wireless office technology.

An Office With No Walls Or Doors?

How would you like to be sitting in an office where you can see everything the boss is doing? This is the case with US banking giant Citigroup which is not just opening the doors to a new HQ but removing them altogether!

The bank is about to take the open office a stage further with its no-door design according to the Wall Street Journal. While open offices are more in line with what you might expect from the likes of Google and other trendy creative firms, this marks a significant departure for the more sober world of banking (though some might argue that creativity is alive and well in banking for better or for worse).

CEO of Citigroup, Michael Corbat, will swap his current 600-square-foot office for a 360-square-foot office which doesn’t have walls or a door. How is this possible? Well the walls are replaced with 7ft glass panels.

Desks in the office won’t be assigned either which might freak out anyone who likes to make desk space their own.

With the current trend now moving towards a mix of spaces which people can make their own and also areas to collaborate, this extreme open-plan idea is pushing things in the wrong direction but maybe bankers will be happier keeping an eye on each other through the working day.

Is Having A Stuffy Office Bad For Your Brain?

Research into the effects of bad air quality in offices says so. Poor air quality is said to be responsible not only for poor cognitive performance but also health.

Researchers have reported in Environmental Health Perspectives that working in stuffy offices can halve cognitive scores. The news that half of office staff could be performing at half their normal mental capacity is unlikely to be well received by business owners.

Research found that simply opening a window or two to let in some fresh air can bring positive benefits, however this may not be possible in the depths of winter when staff may complain about the cold instead.

Yet if productivity levels are to reach their maximum it is clear that offices should be designed to expose people to at least some fresh air during the day. A fresh breeze might be all staff need to increase their production levels and brain functioning.

The study was limited to just 24 professionals, but it did include architects, designers and engineers. The study was conducted over 2 weeks in what was laid out as a typical office space. The study examined Co2 a VOC levels and how the gas impacts on performance.

Scores in tests were over 60% higher when conditions were set for these gases to be reduced indoors.

Is Office Furniture As We Know It About To Change Forever?

The introduction of computers into the office as well as tablets, and mobile phones in some cases has helped to change the way everyone works, making work more efficient and easier. What hasn’t changed too much is the traditional office layout but this could soon be transformed as we all get used to not being chained to the desk by the wires that once powered various devices.

Change hasn’t happened yet of course. The average office worker will still be turning up for work at 9am grabbing a coffee and then sitting static at a desk for the best part of eight hours. Yet when you look at how technology has advanced, then it is a mystery why we still stick to the old habits.

The standard office furniture consists of desks, chairs, maybe a sofa or two and a large meeting table. This could however soon be replaced with ‘smart furniture’ which allows you to plug in and charge up mobiles, and tablets or areas that allow us to move around and be more mobile. Furniture for collaborative workspaces is likely to be far more radically designed in the not too distant future.

What will remain however is the office as a place to meet face to face. While technically the need for an office no longer really exists there is still no technological substitute for real human interaction in the workplace.

Supermarket Warehouses Worth More Than Their Stores

The big supermarkets may well be axing many of their high street convenience stores due to a combination of high costs and low profits, but the supermarket warehouse boom is continuing and attracting the attention of commercial property investors in the process.

According to the Financial Times recently, customers are increasingly shopping online and this is what is driving demand for large warehouse spaces from supermarkets such as Tesco, Morrisons, Sainsbury’s and Aldi.

Online sales are currently growing at 12% a year and although they still account for only 12% of spending, the convenience of online shopping is likely to see online sales rival those of supermarkets in the years to come. It may also bring an end to the traditional weekly shop. People may be more likely to gather round a tablet or desktop computer to shop rather than venture out in the car.

The expansion of warehousing may be halted temporarily by the lack of space to build and a shortage of available units. This may well act to push up the prices of warehouses across the UK and land that is suitable for the purpose.

Investors are likely to find the prospect of high demand now and in the future a good reason to put more money into what was previously seen as an unglamorous and low yield investment.

Robots Manage Hitachi Warehouse Workers

Ever get the feeling that your manager is cold and lacks any kind of emotion? This feeling must be all too familiar with workers in Hitachi warehouses in Japan where robots are giving out the orders.

The new machine manager uses artificial intelligence to manage human workers. The intelligence is gathered from learning human techniques and then processing them to continuously improve efficiency according to an article published in the Daily Mail recently.

While true robot intelligence is some way off, production work in warehouses seems to be the ideal environment for this first generation of robot managers. This may make unsettling reading for the average warehouse worker however. While robots are likely to be far more efficient and cheaper than hiring a human manager, they are not going to be sympathetic or empathise if a worker has problems.

Fortunately humans are still in control of the process and robots at the Hitachi warehouses are there purely to increase performance. This is something they are already achieving with productivity boosted by 8% in those warehouses using them.

Warehouse workers will take orders from the robots and then they will be asked to come up with better ways to do things and suggest ways to solve problems. The robot will then choose the best ones and make the necessary improvements. Scary stuff.

Are Robots About To Replace Humans In The Warehouse

It’s the stuff of nightmares for your average warehouse worker to think that robots might eventually replace them.

After all, robots don’t get ill, they don’t need to be trained in health and safety and they can just keep on working around the clock when us humans are spending 8 hours recharging our batteries every 24 hours.

Amazon which is one of the world’s biggest employers of warehouse staff held a competition recently to find out if robots really could do the work of its 50,000 US warehouse staff. Robots were put to the test packing anything from toasters to thin paperbacks.

Unfortunately while robots hold advantages over human workers, the competition proved that robots are still no match for humans when it comes to using a bit of initiative. Warehouse picking and packing is a much more intellectually demanding job than most people think and the robots involved soon showed that they were nowhere near up to the task.

The robots were not only slow and cumbersome compared to human workers, they also failed to identify objects as well as humans. Ironically for a company that began life distributing books, the robots had more trouble with paperback books than anything else.

Ways Good Office Design Makes Employees Feel Better And Work Harder

A global study on the influence of office design on employees well-being has produced some important findings that all business owners should be aware of.

The study led by psychologist Sir Cary Cooper looked at biophilic design and the workplace and examined subjects on how they felt about it. The results were significant but really not surprising given that it is merely drawing attention to what we already know – human beings like to work in natural environments and that includes when they are working in an office in front of a computer all day.

Employees who were lucky enough to find themselves working in a more ‘natural’ office space reported that their overall sense of well-being was 15% higher, they were 6% more productive and 15% more creative.

Despite how advanced civilisation has become there is still the need to connect with nature in some way and this is what biophilic design is all about – reconnecting with nature by including natural elements in the design of an office space.

Modifications can be as simple as letting in more natural light. Yet nearly half (47%) of all employees had no natural light in the study.

What Will The Office Of The Future Look Like?

Office design and even furniture has changed a lot in recent years to accommodate changes in technology. We’ve also become a lot more knowledgeable about what makes a pleasant and healthy place to work.

Some of what we can expect to see happening in office design of the future can be seen already. Sustainability in office design has led many architects to experiment with creating office spaces with anything from shipping containers to wooden pallets.

Alongside sustainability it is a sure bet that how we get to and from work will affect how office spaces are designed. Like it or not offices even today are built around the needs of car owners. In the future we might see offices designed more with people in mind. People will probably be cycling to work more and if they do have cars they may well be put on charge through the working day.

Because sitting down is supposed to be bad for us, we are likely to see less of the humble chair in the future, or at least those attached to desks. Staff may well be encouraged to work at stand up desks even though some might take convincing after a full 8 hour shift.

Who know even the conventional nine to five might disappear and be replaced by mobile workers who often work from home to reduce pollution or avoid what are likely to be gridlocked commuter routes.

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