A common problem for multi-faceted creative advertising agencies is that staff and workgroups can easily become isolated into workplace islands of specialization. This problem increases when the organization occupies multiple floors in a single building. In this case, the agency grew by acquiring adjacent buildings that became available over the last eight years. Spatial integration between existing and new buildings and through multiple floors to make the workplace feel as one and encourage collaboration is truly a three-dimensional problem.

This project involves the renovation of a two-story, 12,400 SF building and addition of a three-story, 9,200 SF building that then interconnects with three-story and one-story buildings. To address the visual interconnection between floors, a shaft of space runs diagonally from the first level gathering space to a large light monitor at the third level, framing a view of the sky and visually uniting the three-level workspace as one. Between the new and existing buildings and within the new building itself, circulation loops functionally tie common spaces together. 

Axial, oblique, and diagonal sightlines, some that coincide with circulation pathways, help weave space, light, and movement together, creating constant awareness of spaces beyond the space one occupies. This simultaneity lends the project a palpable rhythm of space and activity, where larger, scheduled meetings and impromptu discussions occur at once within the workplace visual field without compromising privacy and workgroup activity.

CATEGORY
INFORMATION
Project Type
Adaptive Reuse, Creative Workplace, Urban Infill
Location
Historic District, Pasadena, CA
Status
January, 2017 Completion
Size
9,200 sq. feet new; 12,400 renovated
Awards
2017 AIA | LA DESIGN AWARD