– Waste-to-Energy Plant _ Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects + Gottlieb Paludan Architects
– House of Sustainability _ hiperstudio
– Canadian Canoe Museum _ Heneghan Peng Architects
– Papalote Children’s Museum in Iztapalapa _ MX_SI + SPRB Arquitectos
– Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2016 _ BIG
Headline
– Headline Drawing Studio _ CRAB Studio
– Headline White Walls _ Ateliers Jean Nouvel
The Creative Workplace
Office Design for the Knowledge Economy
The Creative Workplace: Office Design for the Knowledge Economy _ Isabel Potworowski
– JTI Headquarters _ Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
– “Cube 2” Office Tower _ Estudio Carme Pinós
– Bestseller Office Complex _ C.F. Møller Architects
– Alliander HQ _ RAU architects
– Yidian Office Complex _ Jacques Ferrier Architecture
– Pevasa Headquarters _ Cuantics Creatives Lab
– PTTEP-S1 Office _ Office AT
– Dolce & Gabbana Office _ Piuarch
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C3 no.382 (2016 #6/10)
The Creative Workplace
Office Design for the Knowledge Economy
The Creative Workplace: Office Design for the Knowledge Economy _ Isabel Potworowski
Today’s knowledge economy places great importance on innovation and knowledge work as the driving force of value production. Companies compete with each other to secure top talent, and devise strategies for cultivating their main source of innovation: the creativity of the individual worker. Fostering the kind of dialogue that leads to new insights, allowing for the concentrated work of the creative process, and motivating worker engagement are primary concerns for companies today, and are reflected in the design of work environments. Circulation areas and in-between spaces are designed to stimulate serendipitous meetings and informal conversation, workplaces with varying degrees of privacy accommodate focused work, and high-quality, sustainable work environments demonstrate that companies share their employees’ social and environmental values.
C3 no.382 (2016 #6/10)
The Creative Workplace
Office Design for the Knowledge Economy
The Creative Workplace: Office Design for the Knowledge Economy _ Isabel Potworowski
Today’s knowledge economy places great importance on innovation and knowledge work as the driving force of value production. Companies compete with each other to secure top talent, and devise strategies for cultivating their main source of innovation: the creativity of the individual worker. Fostering the kind of dialogue that leads to new insights, allowing for the concentrated work of the creative process, and motivating worker engagement are primary concerns for companies today, and are reflected in the design of work environments. Circulation areas and in-between spaces are designed to stimulate serendipitous meetings and informal conversation, workplaces with varying degrees of privacy accommodate focused work, and high-quality, sustainable work environments demonstrate that companies share their employees’ social and environmental values.