design - features - corporate design
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Interiors Awards 2010: Small Office Winner
29 January, 2010
-By
Jean Nayar, Photography by Bruce Damonte
project/client: Confidential Financial Client
location: San
Francisco
designer: Gensler San Francisco
After the economic
meltdown that touched virtually every corner of the world over the past year,
the surviving players in the financial industry have begun to reinvent
themselves to survive and flourish in the new global climate. And the design of
a small office by Gensler for a financial start-up firm in San Francisco
reflects a fresh point of view for a new era of investing.
"Our clients
had a clear sense of the image they wanted to project," says Gensler design
director Terry Walker. "They wanted a space that was light, bright, open,
clear-cut, comfortable, and worthy of their clientele, but not ostentatious."
Delivering on every count, the designers produced a crisp environment with a
clean, no-fuss profile that's all about business—and light and views for
all.
Located on the entire
top floor of a brand new 34-story LEED-certified building designed by Kohn
Pederson Fox and occupying about 12,750 sq. ft. of usable space, the office is
divided into four suites of private offices for managing directors and directors
and three work and teaming clusters dedicated to the different aspects of the
client's business. With managing directors in glass-enclosed offices, analysts
in workstations around the perimeter, and administrative support personnel
located in workspaces just outside the enclosed offices, the entire staff has
access to natural light and panoramic city and bay views visible through
floor-to-ceiling windows all around. The reception area, boardroom, conference
room, and small informal teaming areas were also positioned near windows,
allowing everyone—employees and guests alike—the right to light and views at all
times. Even in the long elevator hall that leads to the reception desk, a slot
cut into the wall offers a surprise glimpse through the adjoining space to a
window beyond.
Visually, the setting is sleek yet comfortable, "like a
residential penthouse," says the designer. Though quiet and understated, finely
finished, highly crafted materials and furnishings in a neutral palette define
the space with a sense of quality. Aged European oak floors, for example, enrich
public areas, including the lobby, reception area, boardroom, and coffer bar
area. In enclosed offices and workstation areas, floors are topped with a
sisal-like carpet, while worksurfaces are made of rift-cut oak and storage units
are lacquered white. In the communal café and pantry area in the long hall
bisecting the space through the core, on the other hand, a long coffee bar made
of dark fumed oak plays off wall paneling and cabinetry in pale quartered olive
ash. Thoughtful juxtapositions of materials like these and careful attention to
detail throughout define a space that is at once of its time and
timeless.
jury comment:
“A crisp, elegant solution that is
likely to be perceived this way for years to come. The reflectivity of materials
largely contributes to the overall lightness of space. The sculptural quality of
portal, slot, and simple planes creates a space that is calm as well as
intriguing.
There is great care involved in presenting the work, and that
leads me to think that there is great care in making the
work.”
who
Project: Confidential Financial Client. Client:
Confidential. Design team: Gensler; Terry Walker, Chris Brown, Lisa Bottom, Steve
Suzuki, Batya Aloush, Brenden Mandoza. Mechanical/electrical engineer: Flak
& Kurtz. General contractor: Skyline Construction Inc. Lighting designer:
Alfred Scholze. Furniture dealer: Sidemark. Photographer: Bruce
Damonte.
what
Wallcoverings: KnollTextiles. Paint: Benjamin
Moore. Laminate: Formica. Flooring: Hakwood Rustic. Carpet: Constantine. Carpet
fiber: Ultron Nylon 6.6. Ceiling: Armstrong, Eurospan. Lighting: Mark Lighting.
Pendant lighting: Clavius Collection. Doors: Custom. Door hardware: Rockwood.
Glass feature wall: Skyline Design. Plumbing fixtures: Dornbracht. Window
treatments: Building Standard Perforated Mini Blinds. Casegoods, workstations,
conference tables: HBF. Task seating: Steelcase. Guest seating, informal meeting
tables: Bernhardt. Lounge seating: Martin Brattrud. Other seating: Holly Hunt.
Dining stools: Emeco Icon. Upholstery: Bernhardt, HBF, Nobilis. Coffee table:
Ligne Roset. Files: Teknion. Architectural woodworking, cabinetmaking: Design
Workshops. Specialty metals: DeVincenzi Architectural Products. Accessories:
Saladino Table Lamp. Artwork: Dolby Chadwick
Gallery.
where
Location: San Francisco, CA. Total floor area:
14,718 sq. ft. No. of floors: 1. Total staff size: 25. Cost/sq. ft.:
Confidential.
Interiors Awards 2010: Small Office Winner
29 January, 2010
Bruce Damonte
project/client: Confidential Financial Client
location: San
Francisco
designer: Gensler San Francisco
After the economic
meltdown that touched virtually every corner of the world over the past year,
the surviving players in the financial industry have begun to reinvent
themselves to survive and flourish in the new global climate. And the design of
a small office by Gensler for a financial start-up firm in San Francisco
reflects a fresh point of view for a new era of investing.
"Our clients
had a clear sense of the image they wanted to project," says Gensler design
director Terry Walker. "They wanted a space that was light, bright, open,
clear-cut, comfortable, and worthy of their clientele, but not ostentatious."
Delivering on every count, the designers produced a crisp environment with a
clean, no-fuss profile that's all about business—and light and views for
all.
Located on the entire
top floor of a brand new 34-story LEED-certified building designed by Kohn
Pederson Fox and occupying about 12,750 sq. ft. of usable space, the office is
divided into four suites of private offices for managing directors and directors
and three work and teaming clusters dedicated to the different aspects of the
client's business. With managing directors in glass-enclosed offices, analysts
in workstations around the perimeter, and administrative support personnel
located in workspaces just outside the enclosed offices, the entire staff has
access to natural light and panoramic city and bay views visible through
floor-to-ceiling windows all around. The reception area, boardroom, conference
room, and small informal teaming areas were also positioned near windows,
allowing everyone—employees and guests alike—the right to light and views at all
times. Even in the long elevator hall that leads to the reception desk, a slot
cut into the wall offers a surprise glimpse through the adjoining space to a
window beyond.
Visually, the setting is sleek yet comfortable, "like a
residential penthouse," says the designer. Though quiet and understated, finely
finished, highly crafted materials and furnishings in a neutral palette define
the space with a sense of quality. Aged European oak floors, for example, enrich
public areas, including the lobby, reception area, boardroom, and coffer bar
area. In enclosed offices and workstation areas, floors are topped with a
sisal-like carpet, while worksurfaces are made of rift-cut oak and storage units
are lacquered white. In the communal café and pantry area in the long hall
bisecting the space through the core, on the other hand, a long coffee bar made
of dark fumed oak plays off wall paneling and cabinetry in pale quartered olive
ash. Thoughtful juxtapositions of materials like these and careful attention to
detail throughout define a space that is at once of its time and
timeless.
jury comment:
“A crisp, elegant solution that is
likely to be perceived this way for years to come. The reflectivity of materials
largely contributes to the overall lightness of space. The sculptural quality of
portal, slot, and simple planes creates a space that is calm as well as
intriguing.
There is great care involved in presenting the work, and that
leads me to think that there is great care in making the
work.”
who
Project: Confidential Financial Client. Client:
Confidential. Design team: Gensler; Terry Walker, Chris Brown, Lisa Bottom, Steve
Suzuki, Batya Aloush, Brenden Mandoza. Mechanical/electrical engineer: Flak
& Kurtz. General contractor: Skyline Construction Inc. Lighting designer:
Alfred Scholze. Furniture dealer: Sidemark. Photographer: Bruce
Damonte.
what
Wallcoverings: KnollTextiles. Paint: Benjamin
Moore. Laminate: Formica. Flooring: Hakwood Rustic. Carpet: Constantine. Carpet
fiber: Ultron Nylon 6.6. Ceiling: Armstrong, Eurospan. Lighting: Mark Lighting.
Pendant lighting: Clavius Collection. Doors: Custom. Door hardware: Rockwood.
Glass feature wall: Skyline Design. Plumbing fixtures: Dornbracht. Window
treatments: Building Standard Perforated Mini Blinds. Casegoods, workstations,
conference tables: HBF. Task seating: Steelcase. Guest seating, informal meeting
tables: Bernhardt. Lounge seating: Martin Brattrud. Other seating: Holly Hunt.
Dining stools: Emeco Icon. Upholstery: Bernhardt, HBF, Nobilis. Coffee table:
Ligne Roset. Files: Teknion. Architectural woodworking, cabinetmaking: Design
Workshops. Specialty metals: DeVincenzi Architectural Products. Accessories:
Saladino Table Lamp. Artwork: Dolby Chadwick
Gallery.
where
Location: San Francisco, CA. Total floor area:
14,718 sq. ft. No. of floors: 1. Total staff size: 25. Cost/sq. ft.:
Confidential.
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