Archive for June, 2011

The Cubicle Conversation Is ON!

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

People still seem to assume that big businesses don’t listen to the little guy. That’s changing with the advent of social media. Huge cubicle manufacturing and design firms like Herman Miller have teams working hard to scour the internet for the latest industry news to share with their loyal blog readers. This level of online involvement gives HM the opportunity to discover all kinds of attitudes that folks have developed regarding the company’s brand and products. This week, the topic generating much discussion is a satirical post on McSweenys.net.

Ms. Jennifer DiOrio took a swipe at Herman Miller’s iconic Action Office cubicle system in a section on the McSweeny website called “Open Letters to People or Entities Who Are Unlikely to Respond”. DiOrio’s sarcasm-laced virtual epistle (which incorrectly named Mr. Miller as the inventor of the cubicle) prompted a reply post on the Discover blog site. “Assistant to the Assistant” Randall Braaksma took the time to dole out a measured and good humored response.

It’s a great chance to jump into the conversation about how workplace culture can impact whether cubicles are seen as a boon or a burden. Don’t forget to leave your comments here too!

Top Ergonomic Office Chairs Compared

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

You would think ergonomic office chairs are like five star restaurants the way some people rave about them. White collar workers covet them and geeks hack them. Are all these high end seating options basically the same or is there a real difference?

According to Bruce Sterling at Wired, three of the most often praised chairs (Aeron, Leap, and Freedom) are as unique as little snowflakes. His review doesn’t just list the specs and features of the chairs. He goes into detail – waxing poetic about the sensual nature of a material or the inspired design of a lumbar support. These descriptions actually give someone who hasn’t sat in one of these fine office chairs a real sense of what it might be like.

That being said, there’s no clear winner. Each chair has pros and cons. Since they are in roughly the same cost range (high but not stratospheric), the price tag won’t be the deciding factor. Instead, it makes more sense to determine which attributes are most appealing. Then, don’t forget to check at the next price point down among other brands for ergonomic office chairs that capture your favorite characteristics.

Best of NeoCon Entries for Conference Room Furniture

Monday, June 27th, 2011

This week, let’s look at items at NeoCon that are designed for everyone in your company – conference room furniture. There are a lot of traditional-looking tables among the “Best of” entries, but there’s also a distinct trend toward less structured furnishings. Here are two collections of special interest for 2011.

Jofco – Collective Motion

These lounge style pieces coupled with new modular task tables from Jofco create a very different type of conference space. If you want employees to relax and kick around creative ideas or critique the company’s latest video marketing or training materials, this setup might be perfect. The side tables that offer a place to set a laptop or notepad turn this into a versatile collaborative workspace where everyone can bring their favorite tools. Just don’t hook up cable TV with ESPN and HBO or no one will get any work done!

Alsteel – Gather Collection

Some of the new conference room components from Allsteel would mesh well with the current trend of holding meetings standing up to ensure brevity. The various lounge style furniture items in the Gather line can be separated using free-standing panels to let you create a meeting setting in either an open or closed space.

Shifts in Design Focus

It was interesting to see that conference seating was a strong contender at NeoCon. This is an indication that the idea of conferencing as a group of people gathered around a meeting table is not as universal as before. Now, there’s a lot more flexibility in how people collect to brainstorm and make decisions.

The assumption that most modern collaborative/conference areas will feature at least one large, flat screened monitor or TV is an interesting change from designs developed just a couple of decades ago. Up next, perhaps we’ll see conference room furniture arranged around a holographic imaging system like the one Angela Montenegro uses in the hit fictional forensic TV series “Bones”.

Best of NeoCon Entries – Work Tables

Friday, June 24th, 2011

You might think a work table is too basic to offer much room for innovation. It’s got 4 legs and a flat top, right? Actually, the design possibilities for task and training tables are continuing to blossom year after year. The 2011 Best of NeoCon entries prove that the options are far from played out for this piece of furniture. Here are some fun designs to peruse the next time you are looking to outfit a new office space.

MOTUS

You’ve seen flip top tables, but this is not the cafeteria style design you’re used to. Halcon’s MOTUS is a high-end conference table that would look at home in any boardroom. The leg panels flip out and the table top flips down for compact storage. Multiple tables can be ganged to create any configuration you like and cable management is handled discretely under the table surface. The MOTUS is caster mounted making it movable during use (you can lock the casters to fix the table in place). The four point leveling feature allows you to adjust the table top so no one’s fancy executive pen accidentally rolls to the floor.

Response

OK, this one can’t even really be called a “work table”. It’s a command and control center that makes your critical response employees feel like Captain Kirk (minus the uncomfortable boots). You’ve got one touch sit/stand height adjustability with this console style table. The actuated monitor arms let you electronically move the height and tilt of your bank of flat screen monitors to match your desired working position. Then, there are the environmental controls including heating, ventilation, noise control, and more. It won’t quite reach warp speed, but users will certainly work in comfort with this unit from Evans Consoles.

Risefit

This little beauty is brought to you by Okamura. It’s a multi-purpose table with only one real purpose – providing you with a flat surface exactly when and where you need it. The arm is hydraulically operated for smooth up and down adjustment. This mini-table is the perfect spot to set a laptop, clipboard, file folder, or any other item that needs a temporary support. There are several shapes and finishes, but the bean shaped table is probably the cutest.

Workers Covet Height Adjustable Workstations

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

According to Laura Casey at the Contra Costa Times, people are taking workstation ergonomics into their own hands to get some relief from the long hours of sitting required for many of today’s white collar jobs. Some are constructing their own standing desks out of whatever they have on hand. Unfortunately, going from sitting all the time to standing all the time brings a new set of physical complaints. The ideal solution is a workstation that is height adjustable to allow employees to sit and stand as needed throughout their shift.

This surge of interest in ergonomic worksurfaces isn’t just being felt at the end-user level. Employers are interested in this option as well. That’s evident in the number of “Best of NeoCon” entries in the training and work table section that are height adjustable. Almost half of the entries in that category are adjustable desks, tables, and mobile pedestals. Hopefully, the glut of designs on the market will serve consumers well by ensuring competitive pricing on ergonomic workstations.

Orange You Glad You Like Office Furniture?

Monday, June 20th, 2011

According to Neil Steinberg at the Chicago Sun Times, orange was the hot color at NeoCon 2011. This rich, vibrant hue is aligned with the energy of change in the philosophy of Feng Shui, and that’s certainly something the hard hit office furniture industry needs right now. The particular orange that’s being incorporated into laminates and upholstery is PMS 716 (according to Pantone). It’s a rich pumpkin orange that’s more fall harvest than traffic cone.

In an amusing exposé, Neil recounts how all the furniture designers slapped a different moniker on the same shade of orange to make it their own. Some were embarrassed at being seen as all showing up to the party wearing the same dress. Others were vocal about their pride in being “on trend” with the next big thing in office furniture colors. What do you think will be the color of choice at NeoCon 2012? Let us know in the comments.

Go Free Form With 3form?

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

One way to dress up an office space is with unusual materials and fluid space design. 3form offers glass and resin panels that are poured, pressed, and molded to be truly unique. You could use these pieces for many different office furnishings from worksurfaces and conference tables to reception desking. Pick your own interlayer items to sandwich between layers of translucent resin. Or, choose from existing options that incorporate anything from hand dyed capiz shells to crushed recycled glass fragments in a kaleidoscope of colors.

Whether you have an open office layout or cubicles, adding curved or wavy Varia Ecoresin panels to separate departments or designate collaborative areas would create an even more aesthetically stunning workspace. These art pieces can be incorporated in architectural walls, exterior window accents, executive office interiors and more. Just for fun, here’s one more picture:

What Do You Do about Messy Cubicles?

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

Jen over at Arnolds Furniture has collected a series of photos depicting the “5 filthiest office cubes in the world”. It’s a harrowing sight, so only click through if you have a strong stomach. Jen categorizes the behaviors evident in the disarray of each cubicle. There’s the Hoarder who can’t let go of anything – no matter how useless – and the Stacker who thinks junk alignment equals neatness. Perhaps the most disturbing is the over-decorator who covers every square inch of panel space with photos and newspaper clippings.

If you have employees who can’t seem to pull themselves out of the spiral of chaos that makes their cubicle look like a disaster zone, what can you do? You don’t want to establish a policy that would punish workers who occasionally leave a file folder lying on their desk or want to display one neatly framed photo of their child. At the same time, having one-on-one conversations with messy employees is always awkward. You feel like you’re the Mom telling a teenager to clean his room.

Tips for Controlling Mess

Decide what results you want to achieve. Then put fair and reasonable rules in place that ensure all employees meet that minimum requirement.

  • In areas of the office that are frequently seen by clients, workstations should be close to spotless at all times to make a good impression. This means no food or non-work items at the desk except for approved decorations and all files and paperwork kept in closed office storage areas instead of on the desktop. Invest in storage towers to house employees’ personal effects.
  • Keeping mess to a minimum might be about creating a well organized environment for the sake of other employees. Then, you might just have a rule that every desk top has to be cleared off at the end of each day (with the exception of one inbox and one outbox). Provide mobile storage pedestals or under-desk filing drawers for each cubicle to promote neatness.
  • If you are staging an intervention because a worker’s horrible cube habits have you a little freaked out, you might institute a CYDF (clean your desk Friday) regimen to start things off slow. Just be careful to phrase this so it doesn’t sound like you are firing the worker. Starting a conversation about cubicle cleanliness with “I want you to clear out your desk on Friday” would be a little cruel.

Try Out HON’s Voi Visualization Tool

Monday, June 13th, 2011

HON recently put together a new software tool that lets you look at different Voi desking designs instantly based on 6 different user-selected criteria. You can pick the footprint, storage capacity, and location (private office, open plan, etc.) to fit each area of your office environment. HON’s main selling point for this laminated worksurface solution is that it can be specified for all the different spaces in your office to create a cohesive look, so they want to make it easy for you to visualize this.

Since branding is also important, HON’s online tool lets you determine the aesthetic of your worksurfaces. For example, you can go warm or cool, conventional or contemporary. The basic shapes stay the same (Voi is all squares and rectangles), but the effect changes based on your preferred materials and colors. It’s not a space planning tool, but it does give you some ideas about what look you might like. For a free space planning consultation using professional design software, contact San Diego Cubicles Office Environments any time.

Best of NeoCon Entries for Task Chair Seating

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Last week, we took a look at some of the up and coming workstation designs entered for the Best of NeoCon award. Now, let’s peruse recently developed task chairs that might be paired with these state-of-the-art casegoods.

Scope Out the Scope Chair

There’s quite a global flavor to the entries this year. For example, “viasit” Bürositzmöbel from Germany is showing off the Scope and declaring that it is the future, personified. The open framed mesh back is a new twist on concepts already explored by many other designers. The numerous adjustable features are similar to those you would find in other high-end task chairs such as the Steelcase Leap. What really does set this chair apart is the “pendolo” backrest. According to the product brochure, this backrest can actually rotate slightly to the right or left – like a pendulum following the movement of the sitter’s body.

Turning Japanese

The LUCE is a Japanese design that was developed by Okamura in collaboration with OKI (a firm that specializes in robotic leg technology). The shape of the chair does look kind of like it’s designed to act as an exoskeleton rather than a normal seat. This is certainly a chair that will make you look ready to spring into action whenever your boss enters the room. The Seat Cradle Design is reportedly well suited to jobs where workers must sit, then stand, sit, then stand throughout the day. The cushioned seat mechanism catches you and absorbs the impact of your weight as you sit down. The attractive, gradated back mesh is firmer in the lumbar region for proper ergonomic support.

BioFit for a Tight Fit

The SwingSeat from BioFit Engineered Products is another example of innovation in seating. This is the chair equivalent of a pen holder with a chain (the kind they have at kiosks in a bank). The chair is firmly anchored to a wall so it can swing out for use and be tucked neatly away the rest of the time. Like with the pen-on-a-chain concept, you won’t have to worry about this seating being moved to other areas of your facility when it should be left in place. This type of chair would work well in crowded reception areas, hallways, and other spots where you need permanent seating but don’t necessarily have a lot of space.

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