Being an architect, designing this office was never a matter of personal preferences for me, as one would typically think it to be. It was, through and through, a matter of usefulness, meaning, and relevance. All at once, I was in the architect’s chair as well as in the client’s shoes. The double perspective, I believe, was necessary to conceptualise a space that broke the barriers of a traditional office interiors, without breaking function.
I’ve designed this office on three pillars:
- Natural light
- Sustainability
- Minimalism
Light is the chief guest in a building; it deserves to be treated with respect. Our south-west corner office on the 6th floor gets abundant sunlight, so it was critical that I decided what not to do before what I should.
Building on this idea, I envisioned our office spilling with natural light all through the day: the workstations receive the morning light, when our employees are just arriving; the conference room takes the midday/early-afternoon light angling in gently; the master cabin receives the last mile – the setting sun in all its glory – filtering in through sheer blinds to block UV and heat.
Where there is no sunlight, there is sunless illumination through the large windows. It was counterintuitive to “cover up” the fenestrations – only a few blinds for privacy.