Office meetings, gatherings and fresh air in the post-COVID workplace by Matt Loosemore

This is part two of my three-part series on creating and designing offices and workplaces in a post-COVID world. In this post, I’ll walk you through reception spaces, conference rooms, common areas, and gathering spaces, and will explore the importance of mechanical systems.

Reception areas: Hands off
No surprise here: Technology will reign as the first line of defense for visitors to your offices. Look for larger offices with many visitors to install fever-screening systems. The technology, first used in Asian countries as a response to the early 2000s SARs outbreak, acts like a metal detector, scanning visitors for high temperatures or fevers and alerting the reception team that there may be an issue.

In post-COVID offices, technology will also be used for guests to check-in via a smart device, by simply selecting the person you want to meet via a mobile app and they receive a notification of your arrival. A receptionist’s role will be to assist and guide the process.

For more formal reception areas, you’ll still check in with a live person, wait for your appointment, and then be escorted back to an office. However, look for reception desks and counters to increase in depth to further separate the receptionist from the guest for their safety. Depth will provide a more elegant way to social distance without plexiglass screens, lines or arrows on the floor—strategies that are well-intentioned today, but will become obsolete when better, more designed solutions replace them.

Due to their naturally antimicrobial surfaces and make-up, materials like wood, metal, stone, wool, and cotton will be used in reception areas and offices in general. These materials will replace laminate, plastic, nylon carpets, and petroleum-based products. 

Lastly, that bowl of candies on the reception desk? You’ll still get a breath mint or a jelly bean, but it’ll just be delivered through a dispensing system or single-serve packages.

These before and after illustrations below illustrate how an office can be designed to be healthier.

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Conference rooms: Larger spaces, more air
Conference room layouts and access to them will change. For instance, a typical conference room with an 8’-0” table, chairs, exterior window, and a three-foot door that gets shut during meetings is a scenario that will become obsolete.

To combat these tight spaces, conference rooms for larger groups will have larger thresholds, with a sliding door system that opens up to the full width of the entry wall so it can be left partially or all the way open. This not only provides fresh air from outside the room but allows occupants to feel less trapped in a stifling box.  Additionally, offices will look to place conference rooms on exterior walls with operable windows so that fresh air can be brought in for comfort most days of the year.

New tech will accelerate in conference rooms, such as gesture-based devices and web-based conferencing. Cameras, microphones, and speaker technology is advancing quickly and will continue to enable off-site meetings of any size. From a distance perspective, teleconferencing will save time —traveling for 60 minutes for a 30-minute meeting eats up the day. You’ll get some time back.

A look at a traditional, pre-COVID break room.

A look at a traditional, pre-COVID break room.

Existing workspaces provide may opportunities to improve for safety. 

Gathering spaces more like ‘zones’
Hanging out and talking about last night’s Blazers game or how much fun you had on your vacation around the water cooler will still happen, but there will be options for staff that don’t wish to congregate with others in large groups.

In the breakroom area, tasks will be split into zones. The sink and dishwasher will be separated from the refrigerator and microwave and garbage /recycling. This will allow people to go about their tasks without having to get too close co-workers.  A portion of closed cabinets will turn into open shelving so that plates or mugs can be grabbed without having to open doors. Additionally, refrigerators will have ice and water dispensers or you will see countertop appliances that provide this service. Faucets will be motion-activated and soap will come from a dispenser.

We will also see coffee bar zones spread throughout the office so staff doesn’t have to congregate in one central room. These areas will host coffee, tea, water, and perhaps a small refrigerator for cold drinks. These areas can also be used for posting notices or updates on what is new in office culture.

You will also see more options for introverted employees to work outside of the workstation, but not have to be part of a larger group setting.  Smaller 2-4 person “booths” can be used for heads-down work near windows or just off of the community room, within earshot of group activity, but still private enough to work.  Additionally, you will see small to medium size collaboration areas that will be “just right” sized for team projects located near workstation areas to cut down on inter-office travel.

Socializing and collaboration will still occur in offices, it will just look different as gesture/motion-based devices, and voice command technology will thrive.

Break rooms will still provide amenities but will look and act much different.

Break rooms will still provide amenities but will look and act much different.

Break rooms will still provide amenities but will look and act much different. 

Better, safer air with HVAC and mechanicals
National building code requires a certain amount of fresh air to be distributed via mechanical systems so that less stale air is being re-circulated. Offices will voluntarily install systems that go beyond national code to bring in more fresh air.

Night flushing, typically found in the LEED rating system, might become the norm, too. This “flushing” of air involves clearing out the daytime air and bringing in outside air throughout the night to help cool the space, but also bring more fresh air in. This LEED technique could possibly be used in non-LEED buildings, not for a higher energy efficiency rating, but to provide cooled down, fresh air in the future.

Obviously, a retrofitted space will have different techniques and technology used to transform HVAC. In an older, smaller building, it could be a matter of putting more inline filtration in the mechanical system itself, setting it up so that there's less recycled air and more fresh air, or opening windows that have been painted shut for increased airflow. Clean air will be a hot-button topic.

In my final piece, I’ll focus on general design, good strategies, and how we can all move forward with designed solutions.

I’d love to hear your thoughts. Email me here or leave a comment in the post.

SUM financial project featured in Banking Matters magazine by Matt Loosemore

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Our Clackamas County Bank project in Gresham, Oregon, was recently featured in Banking Matters magazine, the premier publication of the Oregon Bankers Association and Independent Community Banks of Oregon. 

Written by Matt Loosemore, the piece looks at design trends in banking as well as what techniques and strategies were used to design and construct the new bank. 

The new branch complements the culture of the bank: a warm, inviting place that offers a professional, but personal atmosphere for its customers. 

Any questions about how we see financial institutions’ designs changing post-COVID?

Get in touch with Matt here. 

Read the piece here.

Breaking Ground: First Federal Branch and Headquarters by Matt Loosemore

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We’re excited to announce the groundbreaking of the First Federal Savings & Loan Association project in McMinnville, Ore. 

At more than 31,000 square feet, the project, taking up an entire city block in downtown McMinnville, will provide new flexible, expandable headquarters for a growing Yamhill County financial institution that looks toward the future.

Our plan for the design is for a contemporary modern look, using traditional materials like Norman Brick (Moana Loa color), Neolith stone panels (Pietra di Osso color), glulam beams, and glass and aluminum windows, curtain walls, and doors. 

Our partners include R&H Construction, AKS Engineering & Forestry, Hayden Engineers, and The City of McMinnville, who will assist in the selection of a local artist to provide an installation along Third Street. 

Completion is planned for summer 2021, but until then, be sure to follow project updates on Instagram



Introducing: Long-term office design in the COVID era by Matt Loosemore

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A three-part series of articles to help guide you on how to design offices in a post-COVID world

In the past few months, I’ve given a lot of thought to how the office space will change in the coming years due to the COVID outbreak and the lasting effects on the work community, even after the pandemic is contained. I want to share these thoughts and with you through a series of articles on workplace design to help incorporate what I’ve learned from experience into actionable steps to improve your own office.

The first part of my three-part series will explore work areas. Part two will look at reception spaces, conference rooms, common areas and gathering spaces, and will explore the importance of mechanical systems. The final piece will help illustrate SUM’s general take and deep knowledge on what makes for good building design.

Whether you’re a small business owner, CEO, or head of HR, in the long run, your offices will not be the same, but they might work even better than before.

Part 1: Redefining work areas and how they function

Hand sanitizer on desks, one-way hallways and staggered work schedules will be the short-term norm in the current workplace. That’s a given. As a designer who has created countless workspaces, I’ve always strived to make them work better for their inhabitants, and COVID has amplified how I do that. Here’s how work areas will be redefined.

Less ‘benching,’ hot desking and don’t even think of returning to the mile-high workstations
You’ve seen these popular tables in many offices, typically facing each other, almost like a dining room or a farmhouse table where employees crowd around.  Benching is popular because it saves space and creates clusters of collaboration.  But the closeness that saves space also allows for the easy transmission of pathogens. Even after a vaccine, staff will naturally shy away from any work area that puts people within a few feet of one another.

During the next 12 months, there will be little usage of hot desking or desk sharing, with a steep decline in offices using hot desks for the next 2-6 years. Following this pandemic, people will suffer from a “COVID / Office PTSD,” and will not want to work in the office the same way as they did pre-COVID, or may not be allowed to. Post-COVID, employees just won’t want to use hot desks for fear of contracting the next big virus.

Additionally, we won’t, or at least shouldn’t, go back to the seven-foot tall fabric covered workstations that were so popular in the seventies and eighties. Remember giant open office spaces where everybody sat at their workstation and didn’t talk to anybody? That’s a trend no one will miss.  

That said, we’ll need a happy medium, somewhere between a benching solution and the old school 8x8x7-foot-tall cubicle solution. We’re going to see solid elements between 48 to 54 inches. Above that, glass or plastics that will either be clear or offer an opportunity for graphic elements, from 48 inches up to 65 inches.

Some of the benefits that came from station heights dropping are that employees can be deep inside an office space and still see outside, see office activity and see daylight— important components to productivity and health. Lower panel heights also lead to spontaneous conversations, idea sharing and collaboration. We don’t want to lose these benefits.

There’s going to be a paradigm shift in workstation design too, not just in heights, but in the layout of the workstation and the acoustics. Undoubtedly, furniture manufacturers will adjust their design with workstations that aren’t necessarily rectangular, either. We’re going to start seeing different shapes that take up the same amount of floor space, but set up to accommodate the safety of employees.

Aisles between workstation clusters will grow in width to accommodate two-way traffic with enough room to pass comfortably. Typically aisles between work stations have been 42 – 48”.  Look for an increase to 60” and beyond to give breathing room to staff as they move about the office.

The rise of modular systems in tenant improvements
If you’re about to start an office tenant improvement, there’s nothing less expensive than getting a contractor to go in and build some steel stud gypsum board walls to create an office. But it makes reconfiguring difficult and expensive because it’s time consuming, dusty, and inconvenient.

Enter modular systems: not only do they add aesthetics to a workspace, they can be easily disassembled, moved to a new location and put back together, without dust or time delay by a specialized contractor or an in-house facilities team. This will be important during the post-COVID design of offices when flexibility and speed will be key.

Systems like DIRTT, SMED, and Hayworth let you reconfigure a space to bring employees back now, but when the health crisis has subsided, workspaces can be quickly changed again to accommodate a different workflow cycle with little disruption to the space.

Though initial costs of a modular system can exceed traditional construction costs, these expenses can quickly pay for themselves, in terms of timeframes, cleanliness and mobility. Modular wall systems are likely to gain market share, thanks to COVID.

More web conferencing and new designs to meet it
In-person meetings will decrease as online meetings become the norm. That means you and your employees will have to get more savvy being “on the air.” In my own office, I've had to make adjustments to lighting, furniture layout, and background to accommodate web conferencing. 

To be set up for an online call, the typical workstations will be replaced with shapes that break out of the typical rectangle. These new shapes will provide a clear entry point into the station, private areas, acoustical separation, and specific location for a monitor and camera so that a web conference can take place without overhearing your neighbor. Workstations and offices will be designed so that backgrounds will be less crowded, personalized, branded and flexible too. 

It’s easy to envision a system of lighting at the entry to employees’ workstations or offices that illuminates green for “available,” yellow for “working,” or red when on a web conference. This type of scenario could be incorporated into the workstation furniture for a built-in appearance.

Parting thoughts
New policies, rules, and regulations might also drive the design of wellness spaces in the workplace that let employees rest if they’re feeling ill and need to be quarantined until they can be picked up and taken home. That’s a topic I’ll explore in a later piece.

Rethink windows, too. Many older offices have had their windows painted shut for decades. When your employees come back into the office, even if it’s warm or cold out, they’re going to want fresh air.

In my next piece, I’ll look at reception spaces, conference rooms, common areas, and gathering spaces. I’d love to hear your thoughts. Email me here or leave a comment in the post.

Our own offices, before COVID.

Our own offices, before COVID.

A typical mid-sized office, pre-COVID.

Using some of the ideas discussed here, we are transforming our own workspace to respond to challenges presented by COVID.

Using some of the ideas discussed here, we are transforming our own workspace to respond to challenges presented by COVID.

Same office, illustrating how to adjust to a permanent post-COVID environment, not just as a temporary solution.

Designing for a new way to provide healthcare for kids by Matt Loosemore

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Whether it’s their 24/7 nurse line, onsite lab and x-ray, or symptom checker tool, Portland-based Brave Care makes it easy to get the care kids need through urgent care, wellness checks, and virtual care visits.

Their mission is to provide impactful pediatric care that’s fueled by empathy, research-driven, grounded in trust, and made more personal with the support of modern technology.

That’s why we were thrilled to design their new, 3,500-square-foot location in Portland’s Sellwood/Westmoreland neighborhood. 

We were able to fast track the project through the City of Portland with the assistance of Faster Permits due to Brave Care’s ability to provide pediatric COVID services such as testing and treatment. We anticipate a completion date of July 2020. 

SUM drove the design of the branded tenant improvement project through the use of materials like concrete and birch to communicate a clean, simple, inviting aesthetic. 

Our ultimate goal is to provide a flagship location with an original design that can be replicated in multiple locations for the fast-growing urgent care organization. 

Welcome to the neighborhood!

Partners
Contractors: BnK Construction Inc.
Permitting: Faster Permits

Notes from the Eastside: 4.21.20 by Matt Loosemore

Buildings are still being designed and built. News is still being reported. Communities are readjusting what it means to be a community. The way we work and where we work might be forever changed. Eating out? What will that look like? 

There’s not a lack of reporting and discussions online. 

That’s why we launched Notes from the Eastside, a bi-weekly transmission that offers resources, news, and conversations about the architecture, building, and design industry that we have curated for our clients, friends, and partners. Basically, things that make us think or inspire us. 

We hope you find Notes from the Eastside useful, informative, and even sometimes fun. 

Architecture after COVID
Is the open-plan office dead? Can skyscrapers survive? Will our phones control everything from the lights to ordering coffee? No one really knows but this piece does raise some good questions.

Mapping your neighborhood
CityLab recently invited its readers to draw maps of their worlds (that includes neighborhoods and their own homes) in the time of coronavirus. Readers delivered!

11 Great Podcasts for Historic Preservation Fans
We wonder how much podcast traffic has spiked in the last month. If you’re still searching for that one podcast you’ll listen to maniacally, this is a great list to start with, courtesy of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Animals are wandering our empty streets
You’ve probably read that with fewer people on the streets, nature is making a comeback. Birds are out chirping, coyotes are cruising down Broadway, and we’ve all seen that image of LA’s big blue sky. But wait! Artist Vadim Solovyov takes it to the next level with these surreal scenes of animals not merely wandering but invading a Russian city.

SUM work continues at Red Canoe Credit Union
Construction at Red Canoe Credit Union in Washington is moving along nicely.  Thanks to our wonderful partner, MOMENTUM, and credit unions like Red Canoe who are continuing to grow and help their local communities. It’s good to see projects still in the pipeline.