office space

Tons of inspiring office spaces at http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/offices

and also an inspiring article – http://www.thecoolhunter.com.au/article/detail/1373/offices

World’s Most Creative Work Environments

August 25 2008

“Our environment has a direct impact on our work and on how we feel about our work. From the time you sit down with your Monday-morning latte to the moment you make the mad dash to the elevator late on Friday afternoon, innumerable stimuli affect your every action and reaction.

Can you gaze out, or better yet, open a window to let in fresh air? Is your concentration broken each time a nearby coworker turns on the external speaker when he answers the phone? Do you spend most of your day away from your workstation? Are the meeting rooms and common areas in your office inviting and inspiring?

Fortunately, designers have become increasingly ingenious when designing office space, but the ones making the decisions at the top deserve praise as well. We’re noticing more and more collaborations between designers and organizations that unquestionably result in satisfaction throughout the staff.

The focus of attention has started to shift. As leaders, we expect employees to produce more, better, faster, cooler. But we often spend all our time and energy ‘evolving our brand,’ and don’t pay much attention to work environments. If we changed the workspace, we’d probably start seeing more of what we want. Creative environments foster and attract creative minds.

Designers have figured it out — change the cube, evolve the thinking. Designers collaborate with interior architects and now the focus is on the entire space. How can we use space better? How do we create an interesting working environment? What if we did something really unusual? Like creating workspace inside a giant pipe — or a series of pipes?

Designers have now also been paying attention to elevators, stairwells, bathrooms, meeting rooms and other social spaces. These previously ignored and undervalued spaces are becoming an integral part of design strategies — and not just to look good, but also to function well. By adding colour, neon, digital interiors, irregular shapes and patterns — cool stuff to look at, to touch, or to sit in or on — we’ll heighten the senses and draw out creative thinking.” – the cool hunter (Andrew J Wiener)

Anastasia Mastrakouli

The photographic series by greek-based  student Anastasia Mastrakouli  titled NAKED SILHOUETTE ALPHABET is a latin alphabet art, formed by the naked body and performance of experimental textures that depict the silhouette. In this series the goal is to highlight the dialectical relationship between anatomy and visual arts. Each image displays the way in which the body turns into one illustrative and choreographic communication channel of a message. The body is cut off from its physical nature and is perceived as an imprint. The body shape becomes a letter through a deliberately abstract and other-worldly aesthetic.

http://www.feeldesain.com/naked-silhouette-alphabet.html

Pae White

Los Angeles artist Pae White creates site specific installations merging art, design, and architecture. Presently at the South London Gallery you can find her latest installation titled Too Much Night, Again where 48km of yarn is interwoven and criss-crossed into connecting supergraphic letterforms spelling out the words “Unmattering” on one wall and “Tiger Time” on the opposite one. The work was inspired by a period of insomnia which is hinted at in its name. Depending on your location within the space, the words emerge and fade. Pretty spectacular.

http://collabcubed.com/2013/04/02/pae-white-typography-yarn-installation/

online collaborative tools

Wow, amazing amount of tools available on this site a bit dated from 2010.

http://www.mindmeister.com/12213323/best-online-collaboration-tools-2010-robin-good-s-collaborative-map

A shorter, more current list can be found here:


http://www.creativebloq.com/design-tools/10-great-online-collaboration-tools-designers-912855

 

Lighting: why it matters.

“Research demonstrates that light has a profound impact on people —
on their physical, physiological, and psychological health, and on their
overall performance — particularly in the workplace. And yet, despite
having an intuitive understanding of the importance of light, as well as
research-based data that proves its significance, we often fail to give it
adequate consideration when planning for the workplace”

facts and studies from Steelcase about light

http://www.oneworkplace.com/pdfs/whitepapers/TheImportanceOfQualityLighting.pdf

Articles on designers’ desks

These examples show how you can pick a dominant element to give your space personality — light, color, plants, wall-hangings, desk material, etc.

20 Leading Web Designers’ Desks for Your Inspiration

http://www.designer-daily.com/30-enviously-cool-home-office-setup-9693

30 Enviously Cool Home Office Setups
http://www.netmagazine.com/features/20-leading-web-designers-desks-your-inspiration

Ellen Lupton on organizing your desk

http://www.fastcompany.com/1312986/visibility-principle

Ellen writes here about organizing your desk corner to make your interests/responsibilities visible. Visualizing what you’re doing. Five key points: Show, don’t tell; See and be seen; Out of sight, out of mind…for a while; Make a list.

================
The Visibility Principle
BY ELLEN LUPTON
JULY 20, 2009

alicia-cheng

Shown above is the desk of Alicia Cheng, a graphic designer whose Brooklyn-based firm MGMT creates exhibitions, publications, and identities for cultural clients. Cheng’s desk may be cluttered, but it’s beautiful. A pile of paper sits next to her keyboard. Books lean against a sorting tray. The wall is covered with calendars, contact sheets, works in progress, and odd bits of inspiration. Cheng’s desk is an image of her busy, productive mind. It is a simple, direct manifestation of how designers think.

Many people believe that design is about how things look. Is a laptop, logo, or coffee mug pink or green, classic or contemporary, dumpy or sleek? Designers will tell you that design goes way deeper than appearances. Design is about thinking. It’s about strategy and structure and systems.

Yet thinking itself often takes a visible form. Many people do their best thinking with a pen, pencil, or keyboard. By making ideas visible, we make them concrete, giving thought an understandable shape. From quick sketches to detailed blueprints, visualization is an essential tool for thinking. It’s also a tool for communicating. A project team creating a new software application might compile a wall of PostIt notes to collaborate and brainstorm. Teachers use chalkboards to explain how a bill becomes a law, and kids learn to add and subtract by drawing pictures of apples and oranges. With that in mind–and in sight–here are four visibility principles for organization.

Show, don’t tell. A sign saying “Show, don’t tell” hangs in my daughter’s fifth-grade classroom. Generations of writers have embraced this slogan, learning to build an argument or tell a story using concrete actions and images rather than disembodied abstractions. (“The dog wagged his tail” trumps “The dog was happy.”) Thinking and communicating with examples that people can see–whether through literal pictures or mental ones–works better than trafficking in generalized “objectives,” “goals,” and other corporate vagaries.

See and be seen. Work is a social activity. Even writers, whose work requires periods of sacred isolation (fifteen minutes is often all we can find), also crave the buzz and jangle of people and public places. Everyone values some degree of privacy, but in today’s workspaces, people are increasingly visible to each other, not only through direct contiguity (Sheila’s desk is next to Fred’s desk) but also through social media and networked devices.

Out of sight, out of mind…for a while. The stuff sitting on Alicia Cheng’s desk and hanging on her wall is stuff she wants to keep in mind and find easily. The problem is, many of us post photos and reminders on our bulletin boards and soon stop looking at them. Eventually, even materials staring you in the face become invisible, fading into the background like a pee-stained rug. A vital personal workspace is constantly changing, inspiring you to keep looking.

Make a list. (You’re reading one.) Lists are one of the oldest genres of written communication. Long before people wrote down poetry, they were keeping track of flocks of sheep and bales of hay. Freeform and non-linear, lists are quick to make and easy to absorb. The act of writing a list helps you kick-start your memory and ignite new ideas. To-do lists are interactive: we often put things on lists for the sheer pleasure of crossing them out.

This week, Ellen Lupton is exploring the Visibility Principle. Whether you manage a big office or run your own show from home, you can use it to enhance your productivity.

Related:
Introducing Guest Blogger Ellen Lupton: Welcoming Design Into Our Daily Lives