Boss Design: Adapting to the Demands of Flexible Workspaces

The demands and expectations of the workplace have shifted dramatically over the last two years. The mission statement of the office is being re-drafted and its role and function re-defined. Mark Barrell, Design Director at global furniture manufacturer Boss Design, argues that the advance of hybrid or blended work – and 80 per cent of Boss’ clients have adopted that model – means that offices must become 'destination spaces', or rather a series of different destination spaces.

Crucially, Barrell says, time in the shared workplace is now less a matter of routine and prescribed shifts than purpose. And people will need different types of workspace depending on that purpose.

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Courtesy of Boss Design
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Boss Design's new Amelia chair is a thoroughly modern wingback, a smartly-engineered cocoon offering visual and acoustic privacy. Image Courtesy of Boss Design

More choice

Boss’ clients include Google, Microsoft, British Airways and PwC, so Barrell has a pretty good insight into the needs of the market. "People are going to get more choice," he says, "choice about where they want to work and control over matching the most appropriate place to work with the tasks that need to be completed that day."

The advance of hybrid or blended work means that offices must become 'destination spaces', or rather a series of different destination spaces.

The office is now primarily a place to connect with company culture, collaborate with teammates and to learn or pass on learning, says Barrell. Head-down, focused desk work will still happen but ranks upon ranks of desks and task chairs is clearly an outdated model of office organization. "The best working environments offer a combination of work, interaction and relaxation," he says.

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Courtesy of Boss Design
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Durability, flexibility and reusability are the keys to sustainable design. Amelia's upholstery can be easily replaced when it's showing signs of wear and tear, while the leather version will simply get better with age. Image Courtesy of Boss Design

Reimagining the wingback chair

Barrell argues that a key trend at the moment is a softening of office fixtures and fittings, not a forced or contrived domestication, but a greater emphasis on comfort and more relaxed settings. Boss' new Amelia wingback chair exemplifies that trend.

Boss designer Aaron Clarkson wanted to create an iconic silhouette that could stand the test of time but also a chair that had a visual and actual softness and tactility. With Amelia, Clarkson elegantly re-imagines the traditional wingback as a single, gently curving form and has worked with Boss' master upholsterers to ensure that multiple fabrics work seamlessly with his simple organic lines. In the office environment, Amelia becomes a kind of instant comfortable cocoon, offering visual and acoustic privacy. Amelia can also be configured with one of four different bases and with standard or plush upholstery.

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Courtesy of Boss Design
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Boss Design's Mews system upgrades the work pod with softer, natural materials and professionally-designed lighting for video conferencing. Image Courtesy of Boss Design

Sustainability front and centre

Boss has also kept sustainability front and centre in the design of Amelia, keeping waste to a minimum during manufacturing but also using durable materials – moulded polyurethane foam over a steel support frame – which means tired and worn upholstery can be easily replaced to give the chair a new lease of life.

While many offices have concentrated on providing spaces for team collaboration, Barrell says, they have paid less attention to providing space for short one-to-one meetings, video conferencing and focused work, the spaces where the post-collaborative actioning actually happens.

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Courtesy of Boss Design
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The contemporary office should be designed around collaboration, culture and learning, says Boss Design Director Mark Barrell. Image Courtesy of Boss Design

Modular, flexible workspaces

While work pods offer welcome private space, Barrell argues that most fall short as pleasant, productive places to be. Boss’ new Mews modular pod system offers softer and more textured natural materials but also better acoustics, air quality and video conference-friendly lighting. As Barrell says, Teaming, Zooming and similar are now a permanent feature of working life and Boss worked with photographers and videographers when creating the lighting for Mews, ensuring your onscreen presence is as polished as possible.

The Mews pod system has also been designed to create usable working and meeting space between pods, which can also be curtained off for privacy. "We feel like successful workplace planning, now perhaps more than ever, relies on high levels of flexibility, modularity and adaptability," says Barrell.

Cite: "Boss Design: Adapting to the Demands of Flexible Workspaces" 23 Feb 2022. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/977071/boss-design-adapting-to-the-demands-of-flexible-workspaces> ISSN 0719-8884

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