Education Interiors

Interior Design for Students: A View Into Their Future

Interior Design for Students

PHOTO © JAMES STEINKAMP PHOTOGRAPHY

As the world becomes smaller with the globalization of ideas, trends and style, the divide between traditionally institutional interiors and the corporate workplace is shrinking. Today’s students no longer accept the facilities their parents once considered acceptable. Similarly, the office worker’s Dilbert-like cubicle is a thing of days gone by. Today’s learning, social and creative environments are about mobility, choice and comfort. These environments have less, but more efficient, personal space with more shared and amenity space.

Congregating Over Coffee

In modern history, the break room — either a coffee nook or a cafeteria — played an important role in the workplace. It was the place where employees could connect away from their offices or cubicles. They could share stories, gossip and have a cup of coffee before returning to their individual work. In the last two decades, however, the walk to the break room evolved into a trip down the street to the local coffee shop or restaurant. To provide employees the same kind of collaborative, creative, laid-back atmosphere of an off-site coffee shop while reducing the amount of time they spend out of the workplace, larger corporate offices began offering coffee shop-like atmospheres on site, complete with a barista, as an amenity. We see the importance of that same coffee shop environment for students today. The coffee shop becomes a meeting, social and study place.

Similarly, the office cafeteria was a place to eat one’s meal of the day quickly and return to one’s desk in 30 minutes. But for today’s workers and students, food is important throughout the day, not only at prescribed meal times. Variety in choice of cuisine and speed of service are paramount. Dining places need to double as work and study places. The sea of same tables and chairs meant for efficiency has been replaced by a variety of seating options. Traditional seating is augmented with bar-height counters for sitting or standing, booths and banquettes for a more intimate setting, long tables for a shared experience and lounge furniture providing a more relaxed setting. These spaces are used around the clock.

University interior design lounge

PHOTO © RAUL GARCIA, ASTULA INC.

Redefining Meeting Areas

For years we’ve designed meeting spaces in higher education facilities with flexibility and multi-function in mind. Conversely, the corporate conference room was formal and structured, not easily adaptable. This is changing, as corporate interiors are taking their cue from the higher education market. Meeting spaces are often designed to be easily rearranged by the users. Flip-top and mobile tables with stackable chairs are the norm for easy changes. Often these spaces include writable surfaces, which remain vital regardless of user type, as do magnetic or tackable surfaces. Technology also remains important but simple, relying on web-based applications.

Rethinking Work Areas

It’s the spaces for student and staff offices that provide some of the greatest similarities and contrasts between the higher education and corporate interiors markets. Today’s corporate offices are open and airy with energy and personality. More and more corporations are limiting personal space to a footprint of as much as half of what it was 10 years ago. This is possible for a couple of reasons. First, technology is much smaller and therefore the space it once occupied is no longer needed. But the more important reason is that by reducing the personal/owned space, each employee gets so much more. There is space for that coffee shop, for example, as well as space to work as a group in open collaboration or in a huddle room with technology and writable walls. There are places to lounge and discuss strategy or endure the conference call. The café, with its multiple seating options, becomes a change of venue to refresh.

While not true for all, another step much of the corporate world has adopted is the elimination or great reduction of private offices. Most employees — management and staff — sit equally and when privacy or a special need arises, conference rooms and private telephone or one-on-one huddle rooms are available. The openness provides for greater collaboration and understanding as well as a more relaxed work environment. Many corporations go a step further to provide only a place to store one’s personal work with no assigned desks; employees can work anywhere.

In working with student groups, such as student government and other student-led organizations, on several projects in the last decade, the design ideas described above have proven successful. By providing storage, but not assigned space to an entity, everyone gets more. Often, when we meet with student groups to review their current spaces, we’ll see only room for the few most active groups, each with an assigned desk or workstation area. By lining the walls with storage cabinets and closets, the open space can be used to provide large meeting tables, lounge areas, meeting rooms, and “plugin” technology for sharing ideas. These shared resources provide both variety of work style, but also access to many more students.

campus interior design

PHOTO © BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER

Part of the appeal for the more open, shared learning and work-space environments are the wellness and sustainability aspects. The variety of work settings allows for mobility throughout the day. Multiple height and posture choices allow for sit/stand alternatives. By not hiding the window wall with private offices, daylight and views are available to all. And often in more modern facilities, open stairs are featured to encourage exercise and social interaction.

Designing for Faculty and Staff

While the collaborative and open work spaces of the corporate world translate well for student group work and study, the transition is more challenging for faculty and staff. The private office has been so institutionalized that for many faculty and staff the office represents status. In working with faculty and staff at many institutions and discussing open collaborative work space, the responses unanimously highlight a need for privacy in talking with students or dealing with sensitive matters, as well as seclusion from students.

Taking into account the actual hours faculty members spend in their assigned offices, perhaps it makes more sense to work in a shared space, furnish the necessary rooms for privacy and meetings and give the square footage back to the student and learning places.

inside campus interior

PHOTO © JAMES STEINKAMP PHOTOGRAPHY

There are multiple methods to provide quiet and privacy within a flexible and open work space. In fact, these places are necessary for the concept to succeed. For instance, the above-mentioned telephone and huddle rooms provide the needed audible privacy. And a small huddle room provides a more comfortable and neutral setting for sensitive conversations. Further, these small meeting rooms could be located throughout the campus, allowing faculty and students to meet where most convenient for both parties. This flexibility of workplace is the hallmark of the modern office.

The Role of Furniture

Furniture goes a long way in supporting modern work spaces, allowing for flexibility and easy mobility. One of the most practical furniture pieces for open spaces is mobile room dividers. These pieces bring personality, function and a sculptural element to open spaces. Functionally the pieces often have soft surfaces to reduce noise, writable surfaces for team work and can incorporate technology for easy sharing of information.

While it’s great to have open spaces for group work and collaboration, furniture can also provide needed privacy and quiet. One way to describe these places is a “personal harbor.” These places are not meant to belong to any one person, but rather be available when needed. Often these places are as simple as a lounge chair or settee with high, surrounding upholstered walls to provide limited visual and acoustical privacy. As these pieces have continued to evolve over time, they now often contain worktables, power and lighting, creating a cocoon-like environment for heads-down work. And this small personal space has taken yet another step forward with freestanding enclosed telephone rooms and small meeting spaces complete with lighting, power and ventilation.

The Value of Branding

A final commonality often seen in today’s corporate and learning environments is a strong sense of place and brand. These environments are unique unto themselves and represent those who use them. They embody a pride of place sharing common stories and history. These work and learning places instill unity with a view to a common goal.

This article originally appeared in the issue of .

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