Netlife Research
The user-experience consultancy firm Netlife Research commissioned Eriksen Skajaa Architects to rethink their offices and create new spaces for reflection and creativity.
The challenge of low headroom and deep, dark office spaces inspired the architects to choose lightness as the basis for their concepts. These included white, natural rubber floors and a white ceiling as well as large glass walls and “Light boxes” to divide the different meeting rooms. The meeting rooms hover between the ceiling and the floor, while the black hall offers depth and solidity.
As a second concept the client was given four different “gardens” to enhance their creative working methods: The monastery and the monastery garden, the park, the kitchen garden and the forest clearing; different places to relax and reflect.
In the Monastery the room partitioning is based on existing brick walls, while the outer walls is cnc-cut birch veneer that forms an enclosed box. Some of the niches are places to put plants while others are windows to maintain a visual contact with the office outside. One of the nices outside is even a bench to sit and read or just relax.