"The way most problems are handled in buildings once they're opened
[includes] solutions which are inelegant, incomplete, impermanent, inexpensive,
just barely good enough to work."
Becker and Steele, 1995
Innovation in office design has both been a response to and has brought about organizational transformation since the turn of the century. First, open office spaces were designed by architects as a response to organizational structure that isolated people in offices and cut down communication. Later, modular work furniture and movable partitions, which worked best in open spaces became standard for modern office complexes--and much of the design of offices shifted from architecture to furniture design. More recently, the focus has shifted to technical systems design as information technology has proliferated, along with the necessary cables and wires. But buildings and the people that plan and inhabit them have over adapted to change and transient ideas with partial, single-focus "solutions," inviting colossal mistakes. Solutions to individual problems lead to bigger and bigger problems--sealed office buildings becoming "sick" office buildings--saving energy resources and costing in human resources. Efficient solutions became a problem as it was discovered that only technically-trained experts could cope with even minor failures.
For
the knowledge worker inhabitants of these "transformed" spaces, impersonalization,
difficulty of getting maintenance accomplished, and inefficiencies in use
patterns dominated their relationship with their environment, decreasing
productivity, creativity, and job satisfaction. Now there has been a partial
retreat--back to more private spaces, more variation, more available real
communication--the "cave and commons" approach. Adaptation is coming
along as a method to cope. A premium is being put on spaces that can adapt
and endure.
Most organizations face formidable blocks to designing functional, aesthetically pleasing, healthy, enduring environments. Chief among the barriers that prevent good design are:
As
a subsidiary of MG Taylor Corporation,
AI's mission is to design and build superior workplaces that facilitate
the knowledge-based work requirements of the 21st century. We support
creative work processes through the integration of the architectural armature;
WorkWallTM and WorkFurnitureTM
systems; and information technology. AI manufactures through a ValueWebTM
community of designers, shops, engineers, architects, contractors, suppliers,
shippers, installers and logistic teams, turnkey systems that can realize
projects of a vast variety of scope and complexity--from home offices to
major corporate installations. Each element of our environments,
tools, and processes is developed in collaboration with our clients. Customized
or modular, single units or total environments, all items receive the same
careful attention to design--adaptability, flexibility, mobility, beauty,
balance--integrated into functional, knowledge rich work environments.
In our designs, there is a tremendous amount of utility in a relatively
small space. The spaces have variety and flexibility, yet a sense
of place, order and organization.
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