Interior Architecture

To get more involved earlier in projects, a leading furniture dealer launches a firm for commercial interiors construction

Jan. 14, 2019
3 min read

For many nonresidential projects, decisions about what furniture to include are often the last things AEC firms and their clients think about.

Its traditional place on a project’s pecking order is what prompted One Workplace, the largest office furniture dealer in the San Francisco Bay Area, to spin off Vantis, an interior commercial facilities construction firm that specializes in producing custom interior products offsite.

“This is a resetting of the value proposition” of the company within the construction market, says Ryan Ware, One Workplace’s Vice President of Construction and Co-founder of Vantis. The spinoff, he continues, “will allow us to present Vantis primarily as a services company. What we’re focused on is becoming an asset to architects and contractors.”

This kind of vertical integration makes sense, says Ware, in a Northern California market where $6 billion in spent annually on tenant improvement. Santa Clara, Calif.-based One Workplace, with annual revenue of $400 million, has long provided space planning, design, and construction services. Vantis will complement those services as a niche business, says Mark Baker, One Workplace’s COO.

Vantis is shooting to triple its business in three years. Image: Vantis

 

Ware adds that Vantis is specifically dedicated to serving GCs and end users “who can benefit from a one-stop shop for interior construction.”

Vantis is not your typical startup, scrambling for new clients. One Workplace has assigned $33 million of its business to Vantis, whose 27-person team will support those customers’ architectural, design, construction, and account services needs. The sectors it currently focuses on are healthcare (One Workplace’s clients include Sutter Health and Kaiser Permanente), office (notably for tech companies), educational (Stanford and UC San Francisco are clients) and other “high density” facilities, although Ware thinks the spinoff will also allow the company to explore new territories.

Ware sees Vantis as a “design integrator” that is involved early in the process of tenant improvement. One Workplace is a local partner with DIRTT, the furniture and office design provider, and Vantis will send its clients’ design specifications to DIRTT’s factories for production.

“In the old days, offsite construction meant prefab construction,” observes Ware. “With today’s technology and manufacturing process, materials are fabricated on a custom basis. It’s one size fits one—the end user—versus one size fits all.”

The buildouts that Vantis designs and produces incorporate technology and electrical into walls, dividers, and other components, and will provide occupants with the flexibility they require to change fits and finishes and to reconfigure spaces as needed. “We engineer value upfront, rather than value-engineer on the back end,” says Ware

Healthcare is one of the sectors that Vantis is targeting for its design and construction services. Image: Vantis

 

Vantis is shooting to increase its annual business to $60 million in its first year of operations, and to $100 million within three years. One of Vantis’ immediate objectives, says Ware, is to forge partnerships with other offsite manufacturers/fabricators, and to find other subcontractors (particularly in the structural and electrical arenas) that favor offsite fabrication.

“We want to become a leader at bringing these partners into projects,” he says. Northern California is the company’s primary target, although Ware foresees eventual growth beyond those boundaries.

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