flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Megatrends shaping commercial building design

Architects

Megatrends shaping commercial building design

Gensler’s 2015 Design Forecast focuses on how changes in demographics, workplace preferences, and technology are affecting how and why structures get built.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 21, 2015
27 mega trends shaping commercial building design

Future law offices will be smaller, adaptable, more collaborative, and technology-rich, as evidenced in “Redesign Law,” Gensler’s exhibit for the 2014 Association of Legal Administrators Conference. For more, visit: www.redesign-law.com. Pictured: Morrison Foerster law office, New York, courtesy Gensler

This year marks Gensler’s 50th anniversary. As it looks toward the future, the planet’s largest architectural design firm sees a world “on the cusp of breakthroughs made possible by innovation, urbanization, and global connectivity,” write co-CEOs David Gensler and Andy Cohen, FAIA, IIDA; and Diane Hoskins, FAIA, in Gensler’s just-released Design Forecast 2015.

Some of the topics Gensler addresses in its 73-page forecast—such as the role of design in increasingly citified environments, where generational demarcations are not always clear and where technological advances proceed unabated—might sound familiar to anyone who’s been keeping up with current events within the nonresidential construction universe.

However, many other AEC firms are probably thinking about how they should respond to the same megatrends that Gensler identifies as shaping design:

• Workplaces are rethinking the nature of work itself as social media and business networks mesh.

• As more people move into cities, innovation will be the key to pragmatic and affordable approaches to planning.

• If technology is raising the stakes on just about everything, where does the human dimension come in?

• In tackling problems revolving around infrastructure resilience, societies are leaning toward holistic solutions, active management, and stewardship.

• As density becomes the abiding development strategy, developers and owners are attracting the best tenants with rich amenities and transit-served destinations.

• Good data and strong analytics are crucial for keeping up with generational cohorts that are “moving targets.”

Gensler’s Forecast also cites 27 trends that are directly impacting the firm’s three primary practices: Workplace, Community, and Lifestyle. Here’s a sampling:

Commercial office buildings “are less of a stand-alone real estate product and more a part of mixed use.” That use, more often than not, is a combination that goes beyond towers to provide “different scales, and … promote[s] the kind of informal interaction that generates higher retail traffic and evening and weekend activity.”

An organizational imperative for an energy sector that must stay flexible and adaptable in a volatile world “is to align: one brand, mission, purpose, and workforce.”

 

Corporate campuses are shedding their stodgy image as disconnected, disparate buildings. By consolidating operations “under one roof,” companies maximize interactions, foster collaboration and innovation, and promote a sense of community. Photo: Hyundai Motor America, Fountain Valley, Calif. / courtesy Gensler

 

Technology “disrupts, so tech companies are questioning how buildings work. That means rethinking their performance and exploring innovations like untethered power.”

A burgeoning media sector, despite its equipment-heavy context, is still a creative industry that favors workspaces that are “open, amenity-filled, flexible in relation to new technologies, and capable of being scaled up fast for growth.”

Mass customization will drive product design, as large cities serve as micro-markets for products and innovation hubs that influence broader consumer tastes. 

Life sciences companies are replacing traditional labs with technically complex workplaces that support the latest scientific advances, and allow researchers to form interdisciplinary teams for collaboration.

Next-generation aircraft provides a growth opportunity for large, non-hub airports to offer direct international service, city to city, bypassing existing gateway hubs. Global mega-hubs will grow and evolve as leisure destinations with more space dedicated to retail and dining. “Primed by smart devices, the passenger experience will take cues from retail centers and hotels.”

Consolidation, demographic shifts, and new competition are causing “massive” changes in the healthcare sector. Consumers want more choices. Work-based wellness is entering into the healthcare space. And the rise in specialty care centers reflects the movement toward personalized medicine that integrates clinical innovations with tailored care delivery.

What’s differentiating retail centers in an age of online shopping is their engagement with customers and communities. “As retailers’ real and digital worlds converge, the browse/buy function is evolving.” And word of mouth, so important to sales, “is part of the smartphone data that give retailers the bigger picture.”

In a digital era, when an experience that can’t be shared in real time “didn’t happen,” the goal of entertainment projects needs to be to connect with audiences before, during and after the event “so people are engaged and the ROI is higher.” 

The hospitality sector is working overtime to be informal and welcoming, by integrating local culture and letting the larger community in whenever they can. 

Countries in the Middle East and Asia are competing for which can build the tallest building. But the success of these “vertical cities” will ultimately be measured “by how well they attract and support tenants, and how well they fit with and enliven the city at their feet.”

Gensler foresees tomorrow’s mixed-use towers as anchors for diverse, walkable and transit-served districts.

Read the Gensler’s Design Forecast 2015.

Tags

Related Stories

| Mar 29, 2012

Construction completed on Las Vegas’ newest performing arts center

The Smith Center will be the first major multi-purpose performance center in the U.S. to earn Silver LEED certification.

| Mar 29, 2012

Apartments provide permanent housing for California homeless

Gonzalez Goodale Architects designed complex to embrace community and engender sense of pride among residents.

| Mar 28, 2012

40 Under 40, the Class of 2012

Chosen from 223 applicants, these 40 young AEC professionals represent the Class of 2012 in Building Design+Construction’s “40 UNDER 40” competition.

| Mar 28, 2012

Milestone reached for LEED-certified buildings?

Total number of major global green buildings now stands at 12,000.

| Mar 28, 2012

Holden Cancer Center opens at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

The new cancer clinic provides a significant increase in patient space from the prior facility, which was located in an adjacent building.

| Mar 28, 2012

Meridian Design Build Begins work on 38 acre redevelopment project

The project includes construction of a new 150,585-sf cross dock facility that will include full service truck maintenance and repair bays, a truck wash, and approximately 20,000-sf of corporate office space.

| Mar 28, 2012

Tsoi/Kobis & Associates developing master plan for UT Southwestern Medical Center

Firm will spearhead strategies for transforming existing in-patient hospital into state-of-the-art ambulatory care facility.

| Mar 28, 2012

Ideas and input drive stories in online community, noraXchange

Community designed to help building and design professionals address challenges they face in their jobs. 

| Mar 27, 2012

Bank of America Plaza becomes Atlanta's priciest repo

Repo will help reset market prices for real estate, and the eventual new owner will likely set rental rates at a new or near the bottom and improve the facilities to lure tenants.

| Mar 27, 2012

Skanska hires aviation construction expert Bob Postma

Postma will manage Skanska’s nationwide in-house team of airport construction experts who lead the industry in building and renovating airport facilities and their essential features.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021