flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

OFFICE SECTOR GIANTS: Today’s workplace design must appeal to Millennials’ ‘activity-based’ lifestyle

Giants 400

OFFICE SECTOR GIANTS: Today’s workplace design must appeal to Millennials’ ‘activity-based’ lifestyle

Office market AEC Giants discuss the latest trends workplace design, and the state of the office construction sector.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 5, 2015
GIANTS 300 REPORT: Today’s workplace design must appeal to Millennials’ ‘activity-based’ lifestyle

Lifestyle micro kitchen at Motorola Mobility’s headquarters, Chicago. The Building Team: CBRE (owner’s rep); Gensler (architect); Klein and Hoffman (SE); Environmental Systems Design (MEP); CD+M Lighting Design Group; Wiss, Janney, Elstner (historical engineer); and Skender Construction (GC). Photo: @Eric Laignel

In April, HOK was selected to design the three-story, 80,000-sf corporate headquarters for Consumers Credit Union in Kalamazoo, Mich.

In describing the design for this Class A building, HOK’s Principal-in-charge, Dan Sullivan, AIA, used words like “flexibility,” “interactivity,” “environmental stewardship,” and “employee engagement.” The design also accommodates potential future expansion of up to 300,000 sf.

Those buzzwords are likely to resonate with property owners whose office spaces are meant to appeal to Millennials, those 18- to 34-year-olds who account for more than half of America’s workforce.

TOP OFFICE SECTOR ARCHITECTURE FIRMS

1. Gensler $512,720,000
2. HOK $140,688,000
3. Perkins+Will $113,700,000
4. Stantec $76,427,618
5. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill $70,962,348

SEE FULL LIST

 

TOP OFFICE SECTOR ENGINEERING FIRMS

1. AECOM $947,497,000
2. Jacobs $512,160,000
3. Burns & McDonnell $69,727,005
4. Thornton Tomasetti $65,486,893
5. WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff $54,344,358

SEE FULL LIST

 

TOP OFFICE SECTOR CONSTRUCTION FIRMS

1. Turner Construction $2,332,439,971
2. Structure Tone  $1,979,004,000
3. Gilbane Building Co. $1,522,232,308
4. Skanska USA $1,492,297,413
5. Balfour Beatty US $1,205,407,428

SEE FULL LIST

 

 

OFFICE GIANTS SPONSORED BY:

 

 

In a recent post on Area Development Online’s website (http://bit.ly/1FegDPY), Josh Kuriloff, Executive Vice Chairman at mega-developer Cushman & Wakefield, observed that Millennials aren’t keen on conventional private offices. They prefer layouts that are amenable to “activity-based working.”

“Design today is intended to trigger innovation, fresh ideas, and a sense of community,” said Kuriloff. “Good design is a catalyst that fosters conversation—and unanticipated epiphanies. Even cubicles, once intended to preserve privacy, now promote collaboration with lowered partitions and improved ergonomics.”

Clients are asking for designs that will help them recruit and retain younger talent. The workplace needs to act as a communications tool that “aids in celebrating individual or team contributions, broadcasting organization goals or objectives, and providing spaces for effective collaboration,” says Isilay Civan, PhD, LEED AP, a Research and Innovation Specialist at HOK.

A recent Gensler project, the 600,000-sf Motorola Mobility headquarters, in Chicago, includes open, collaborative offices, an outdoor terrace, lab benching, production-line equipment, food service, conference rooms, and a customer service center.

“When competing against many otherwise similar properties, a strong branding strategy can deliver a unique and memorable hook or visual style that truly creates differentiation,” says Beth Novitsky, Gensler’s Global Brands Design Practice Leader. “We are creating spaces that communicate a lifestyle and an experience.”

In its Design Forecast 2015, Gensler said office designs that give clients an edge with Millennials place a premium on sustainability, wellness, loftlike spaces, and locations that are active, transit-friendly, and walkable. Workspaces must promote wellness, and must integrate smart technology to increase occupant performance.

OFFICE CONSTRUCTION SPENDING coming BACK

Market watchers are in general agreement that office construction is finally getting back on track. Even though office starts were off by 6%, to 20.8 million sf through Q1/2015, there were 8.7 million sf of office completions, a 102% increase over the same period in 2014, according to JLL’s First Quarter 2015 U.S. Office Outlook. Office construction spending in that quarter rose 13.5% to $48.9 billion.

CoStar estimates that 108 million sf of office space was under construction in the first quarter, a 17% gain over the same period a year earlier. Construction levels in Q1/2015 were above historic norms in a third of the largest U.S. metros.

For the year, there will be 104 million sf of net absorptions and 56 million sf of office space delivered, says real estate services firm Marcus & Millichap. The bulk of new supply (81%) and half the demand (50%) will be confined to 15 metros.

In its National Office Report 2015, Marcus & Millichap ranks San Francisco tops on its National Office Property Index, followed by San Jose, Seattle–Tacoma, New York, and Orange County, Calif. The index is based on such factors as employment growth, vacancy, and rents.

The research firm’s Developer Confidence Index, which highlights markets with the highest increase in speculative office space as a percentage of overall inventory, was led by Dallas–Fort Worth, followed by Los Angeles, Austin, Seattle–Tacoma, and San Jose.

Marcus & Millichap states that office-based businesses, which historically account for more than a third of the country’s job creation, are hiring aggressively—to the point where “office-using jobs will continue to recover well ahead of total nonfarm employment.”


Office market highlights from Marcus & Millichap

• Dallas–Fort Worth: Developers will deliver 6 million sf of office space this year, versus 3.7 million sf in 2014. Deliveries in Houston are expected to rise 42% to 11.1 million sf.
• Chicago: Nearly one-quarter of the 4.6 million sf of office space under construction is scheduled to come online this year.
• Denver: The 1144 Fifteenth development, a 640,000-sf speculative office building that broke ground last month, will be the largest office tower built in the Mile High City in nearly three decades.
• Los Angeles: As of Q1/2015, more than 1.5 million sf of the 2.4 million sf of office space that should be completed this year had no pre-leasing commitments.
• New York City: Completions are expected to drop 28%, to 2.8 million sf, this year.
• Phoenix: Deliveries will more than double to 2.5 million sf in 2015, from 1.1 million sf in 2014. Major projects include the $125 million, 410,000-sf expansion of Wells Fargo’s campus in Chandler, Ariz.
• San Jose: Pre-leasing is robust. Completions this year are expected to hit 3.5 million sf, versus 950,000 sf in 2014.
• Washington, D.C.: Developers continue to build, despite projections that 20% of the metro’s office space will sit empty this year.
Source: Marcus & Millichap, National Office Report 2015

 

RETURN TO THE GIANTS 300 LANDING PAGE

Related Stories

Giants 400 | Oct 30, 2023

Top 170 K-12 School Architecture Firms for 2023

PBK Architects, Huckabee, DLR Group, VLK Architects, and Stantec top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest K-12 school building architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Oct 30, 2023

Top 100 K-12 School Construction Firms for 2023

CORE Construction, Gilbane, Balfour Beatty, Skanska USA, and Adolfson & Peterson top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest K-12 school building contractors and construction management (CM) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Oct 30, 2023

Top 80 K-12 School Engineering Firms for 2023

AECOM, CMTA, Jacobs, WSP, and IMEG head BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest K-12 school building engineering and engineering/architecture (EA) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report. 

MFPRO+ Special Reports | Oct 27, 2023

Download the 2023 Multifamily Annual Report

Welcome to Building Design+Construction and Multifamily Pro+’s first Multifamily Annual Report. This 76-page special report is our first-ever “state of the state” update on the $110 billion multifamily housing construction sector.

Giants 400 | Oct 23, 2023

Top 190 Multifamily Architecture Firms for 2023

Humphreys and Partners, Gensler, Solomon Cordwell Buenz, Niles Bolton Associates, and AO top the ranking of the nation's largest multifamily housing sector architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report. Note: This ranking factors revenue for all multifamily buildings work, including apartments, condominiums, student housing facilities, and senior living facilities. 

Affordable Housing | Oct 20, 2023

Cracking the code of affordable housing

Perkins Eastman's affordable housing projects show how designers can help to advance the conversation of affordable housing.

Senior Living Design | Oct 19, 2023

Senior living construction poised for steady recovery

Senior housing demand, as measured by the change in occupied units, continued to outpace new supply in the third quarter, according to NIC MAP Vision. It was the ninth consecutive quarter of growth with a net absorption gain. On the supply side, construction starts continued to be limited compared with pre-pandemic levels. 

Warehouses | Oct 19, 2023

JLL report outlines 'tremendous potential' for multi-story warehouses

A new category of buildings, multi-story warehouses, is beginning to take hold in the U.S. and their potential is strong. A handful of such facilities, also called “urban logistics buildings” have been built over the past five years, notes a new report by JLL.

Building Materials | Oct 19, 2023

New white papers offer best choices in drywall, flooring, and insulation for embodied carbon and health impacts

“Embodied Carbon and Material Health in Insulation” and “Embodied Carbon and Material Health in Gypsum Drywall and Flooring,” by architecture and design firm Perkins&Will in partnership with the Healthy Building Network, advise on how to select the best low-carbon products with the least impact on human health.

Contractors | Oct 19, 2023

Crane Index indicates slowing private-sector construction

Private-sector construction in major North American cities is slowing, according to the latest RLB Crane Index. The number of tower cranes in use declined 10% since the first quarter of 2023. The index, compiled by consulting firm Rider Levett Bucknall (RLB), found that only two of 14 cities—Boston and Toronto—saw increased crane counts.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Healthcare Facilities

Watch on-demand: Key Trends in the Healthcare Facilities Market for 2024-2025

Join the Building Design+Construction editorial team for this on-demand webinar on key trends, innovations, and opportunities in the $65 billion U.S. healthcare buildings market. A panel of healthcare design and construction experts present their latest projects, trends, innovations, opportunities, and data/research on key healthcare facilities sub-sectors. A 2024-2025 U.S. healthcare facilities market outlook is also presented.




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