Companies create design standards for many reasons, including brand recognition and to simplify the procurement process. These standards provide explicit direction for the way the company uses art, lighting, space layouts, furniture, fabrics, security, technology and many other components of the design process.
Design standards can serve another purpose ā to help the design team understand how much of the project must āstay within the linesā and how much is subject to creative interpretation. Because this ratio is often about 70%-30%, we use the term āFind Your 30ā at Taylor Design.
This is an approximation, of course. We settled on āFind Your 30,ā but every organization carries different standards, priorities and brand-driven requirements into a design project. For some companies, the ratio is 90%-10%; for others it may be closer to 50%-50%. When we designed our new Sacramento, Los Angeles and Orange County offices, we ensured that our breakdown was 70%-30%.
What does āFind Your 30ā mean?
It is as important to identify your ideal ratio as it is to decide to create design standards in the first place. This informs the designer exactly how much freedom they have to use their skill and creativity to celebrate a unique culture from location to location.
Finding Your 30 gives each office a sense of autonomy, and it allows for bigger and broader concepts that emphasize distinctive cultural, historic or other similar attributes. While the ā70ā holds true to the companyās requirements for branding, company colors, furniture and materials, the ā30ā affords the designer ā in collaboration with the owner and their team ā the opportunity to deviate from the standards and introduce artwork, fittings, color accents and other elements that communicate a sense of community and ownership. This freer expression is often used to highlight cultural and historic aspects of the physical location, but can also reference other qualities, such as the firmās mission, history, signature work or founding partners.
Why is this important?
When a design team goes into a project fully aware of what is flexible and what is not, it saves time, which saves money. Also, when you fail to define the ratio ā to Find Your 30 ā you lose an opportunity to simultaneously illustrate brand consistency with a uniqueness of place. This is particularly true in a renovation setting, where the goal is to seamlessly marry existing finishes with newly created standards in a complementary way. This lack of direction can lead to decisions being made on the fly, often badly. It invites confusion, crushes momentum and can cast a pall over the entire project.
The challenge and opportunity
Taylor Design approached its latest office space updates with a firm commitment to allowing each office 30% choice to promote the uniqueness of their space. Like many multiple-office firms, we encountered both lease extensions and entirely new locations, which added to the challenge. As we set about creating spaces that represent the singular Taylor Design Brand, while giving each location room to design a thoughtful story, we asked ourselves a number of questions:
What do we want clients and employees to feel and think about when they are in the space? As both designers ourselves and occupants of the space, we know that the answer lies in telling a lasting narrative about who Taylor Design is, what we stand for, and how the occupants of this particular office are firmly in the Taylor Design fold, yet also representative of the characteristics of the locality. The ā30ā helps to define the entire experience.
What standards should we employ? Standards in this context offer two parallel benefits: they help accentuate the brand (e.g., values, mission) and illustrate the culture (e.g., what makes us different). The goal is to craft a meaningful story within our spaces that keeps our mission front and center ā āDesign that Empowers Peopleā ā while sharing who we are as a distinctive community of designers.
Should we concentrate the ā30ā in a single part of the office or spread it throughout? In some cases, but especially when the ratio is 90%-10%, the creative component is limited to one space ā often the lobby. We decided quickly that we wanted to weave our 30% throughout the space. One of the ways we decided to represent the uniqueness of place within the context of Taylor Design was to ask our founder, Linda Taylor, to use her remarkable artistic talent to provide paintings that are specific to each location. As a result, her artwork graces multiple locations in each office. Also, with the full 30% to work with, we had sufficient room to convey our story in multiple areas, including deep into the space to help emphasize brand identity to visitors and to our staff.
Which design elements fall in both the 70% and the 30%? Ā The theory of āFind Your 30ā doesnāt require every design component to fall within one camp or the other; it can sometimes be in both. For example, in our office renovations, employees shared their personal inspirations with Linda Taylor to help stimulate the original artwork of each location. Commissioning Linda to contribute paintings falls in the 70% standard ā each office will have a piece of her art. However, because each piece reflects the unique inspiration of the employees in the office, it also falls within the 30%. The same holds true for engaging with local community artists. Each office location worked with and commissioned an original piece of art from a community artist. As with our founderās art, the community artistās work is part of both the 70% and the 30%.
How should we get where we want to be? We held workshops featuring exercises that helped define the challenge of each space and seek solutions within the framework of Find Your 30. We used 70%-30% as an aid to determine whether a challenge or solution belonged to the rigid design standards of the former, or the freedom of expression in the latter. For example, we specified material, including natural grass and a graphic wallcovering, explicitly to illustrate to our clientsā how to introduce biophilia in sophisticated ways.
At the heart of it, Find Your 30 is about the experience of a place. Experience is defined by the culture ā itās the feeling you carry with you after you leave. It is the layering of information and how it eventually comes together as a cohesive story. It is about the things that make a space memorable. So when a design team adapts design standards appropriately and insightfully, within the context of the 70%-30% rule, the result is a space that supports and enhances your organizationās message, mission and values.
About the Author
Stephanie LāEstrange is Principal/Director of Interior Design for Taylor Design, a multidiscipline design firm with five offices in California.
Related Stories
| Jan 8, 2014
Strengthened sprinkler rules could aid push for mid-rise wood structures in Canada
Strengthened sprinkler regulations proposed for the 2015 National Building Code of Canada (NBCC) could help a movement to allow midrise wood structures.
| Jan 7, 2014
Concrete solutions: 9 innovations for a construction essential
BD+C editors offer a roundup of new products and case studies that represent the latest breakthroughs in concrete technology.
Smart Buildings | Jan 7, 2014
9 mega redevelopments poised to transform the urban landscape
Slowed by the recessionāand often by protracted negotiationsāsome big redevelopment plans are now moving ahead. Hereās a sampling of nine major mixed-use projects throughout the country.Ā
| Jan 2, 2014
Sacramento utility maintenance facility earns LEED Platinum, targets net zero
The Sacramento Municipal Utility Districtās new maintenance facility, which is targeting net zero, has received LEED Platinum certification.
| Dec 31, 2013
BD+C's top 10 stories of 2013
The world's tallest twisting tower and the rise of augmented reality technology in construction were among the 10 most popular articles posted onĀ Building Design+Construction's website, BDCnetwork.com.
| Dec 23, 2013
First Look: KPF's dual-tower design for Ziraat Bank in Istanbul
Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) is designing a new headquarters for Turkeyās largest and oldest financial institution, Ziraat Bank, in a modern, suburban district of Istanbul.Ā
| Dec 20, 2013
Can energy hogs still be considered efficient buildings? Yes, say engineers at Buro Happold
A new tool from the engineering firm Buro Happold takes into account both energy and economic performance of buildings for a true measure of efficiency.Ā
| Dec 16, 2013
Major renovation for historic Northwestern Building in Minneapolis
Minneapolisās Northwestern Building, originally built in 1914 as a glass factory, is undergoing a major renovation. The 85,000-sf, four-story building is now serves as office space for multiple tenants in Minneapolisā North Loop neighborhood.
| Dec 13, 2013
Safe and sound: 10 solutions for fire and life safety
From a dual fire-CO detector to an aspiration-sensing fire alarm, BD+C editors present a roundup of new fire and life safety products and technologies.Ā
| Dec 10, 2013
16 great solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors
From a crowd-funded smart shovel to a why-didnāt-someone-do-this-sooner scheme for managing traffic in public restrooms, these ideas are noteworthy for creative problem-solving. Here are some of the most intriguing innovations the BD+C community has brought to our attention this year.