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As we start 2022, let us take a moment to look back at some of the images from the past year. During 2021 I traveled throughout the state of Or...
As we start 2022, let us take a moment to look back at some of the images from the past year. During 2021 I traveled throughout the state of Or...
There was a time when nobody cared what offices looked like on the inside . In the 1960s, America’s architects were mostly preoccupied with erecting iconic buildings along city skylines. Few concerned themselves with ergonomic chairs, acoustics, office layouts, biophilic design, or other corporate amenities that we obsess about today. The contemporary focus on office interiors is thanks to Art Gensler. The Brooklyn-born architect, who passed away on May 10 at age 85, first gained renown as an interior architect when he opened his practice in 1965. Starting with two towers in San Francisco, he proved how designing attractive interiors could attract tenants to newly-constructed buildings. The focus on a building’s interiors, which he called “inside-out design,” eventually helped his eponymous firm become the world’s largest architecture practice. Today, Gensler has over 6,000 employees in 50 offices, working on projects in more than 100 countries.
Office of the (Near) Future January 26, 2021 Credit: Garrett Rowland A completed office project by ZGF Architects Expect post-pandemic office design to feature accelerated tech, more collaboration spaces and built-world responses to the touchstones of 2020. PaperCut takes its company culture very seriously. Headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, the print management software firm has offices in London and, until last year, Portland’s Goose Hollow neighborhood. In March 2020, it expanded its Portland operations, leasing 15,000 square feet in Old Town for its 25 on-site employees and 10 remote workers, called “remotees,” in delightful Australian fashion, according to head of Americas region director Dave Farrell. Dave Farrell, head of Americas region for PaperCut Photo: Jason E. Kaplan