Sumit Singhal Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.
Regus Business Center in Tel Aviv, Israel by Orly Dekter and Sharon Finn Interior Designer
July 25th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Orly Dekter and Sharon Finn Interior Designer
An Israeli Branch of the international office-leasing company Regus, The company has spread in 3,000 sites, 900 cities in 120 countries worldwide . The Tel Aviv branch is the company’s ninth branch in Israel, but the first that combines private offices and Co-working area, and is considered the company’s flag project in Israel which offers private furnished offices and co-working desk spaces and un-formal working areas.
Floor office area is 1,400 square meters , 250 square meters allocated for the benefit of a shared work space includes a reception, meeting room centers, desktops, three work cells( boots), loung , kitchen and bar.
Design Concept: An interplay between hidden and revealed elements creates a sense of intimacy and privacy, even in an open exposed area. The use of lightweight elements, such as partitions allows visibility and preserves openness and flow in the space to meet the needs of customers who wish to keep private, but also be part of a community.
The space was divided using modern partitions made of thin metal surface, precise laser cutting with unique pattern. These semi-transparent partitions are floor to ceiling and dividing the different zones in the entry area and also two bilateral libraries attached to the massive concrete pillars and separate the working areas of the space.
The three shared desktops in the center adjoining glass cube that serves as a meeting room, and on the other hand boots- three acoustic cubes slightly higher, located on a small stage, covered steel skeleton covered with black painted wood outside, and lined with gray Curved lines inside and produce a soft padding surrounding to the work space, despite being open.
Technically complex lighting – immersed or ceiling mounted, with the exception of two lighting fixtures: one above the reception desk, made and designed for the project, and the second one is a floating Vibia light in the conference room.
The choice of materials reinforces the theme of duality, combining cool components like concrete, iron and glass with wood and woven textiles, which radiate warmth.
Designers Vision: “Translating the working environment into a café experience, where people can create informal privacy but the entire space is accessible to them.”
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