This image Amy Saunders
What current or historical trend has inspired you personally in terms of office design?
Te increased value placed on sensory perception and engaging our senses in the experience of a space, I find very inspiring. Te trend for the office to become more entwined with a feeling of comfort influenced by a more ‘domestic’ feeling has been an ongoing evolution where the boundaries are becoming increasingly blurred. Exacerbated by the pandemic, the post-pandemic world has expedited and brought to the centre stage how we as human beings experience our surroundings through the senses.
At Woven Image, our terminology has also evolved from referring to office as workplace. Spaces for work are now being explored not only via function but more increasingly via experience encapsulating sensory perception.
Q&A Amy
Saunders
Head of Design, Woven Image
Has office product design become more adventurous over the past 30 years. If so, in what way? Yes, I think so. Namely through the exploration of colour, for example, and the bravery of interior designers and architects to specify more adventurous colourways and combinations of colour to influence the experience of a space. Te evolution of bringing the outside in has also been a strong trend over the last 30 years that is becoming the norm in interiors, plant and moss walls, for example, and the more recent conversations around biophilic design are increasingly relevant here.
Has manufacturing and product design moved with the times?
Yes and no – it depends on the process and product. For example, digital printing innovations have greatly moved with the times, providing almost limitless pattern repeat
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