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Why Your Office is Beginning to Look Like a Forest and Other Industry News

Why your office is starting to look like a forest, a Dutch co-working space created out of shipping containers, the death of the cubicle, and more industry news!

Wellness Programs Average a 6:1 ROI

How can the workplace support the well-being of its occupants? Jennifer Walton, principal at H. Hendy Associates, provides seven common-sense wellness strategies that boost can the overall health of employees.

Building on Workplace Well-Being

Joelle Jach, Workplace Strategist at CallisonRTKL explores how organizations can use WELL building standards as a guideline for understanding the impacts of the built environment on human health and well-being.

Being Green Has its Benefits, but Can it Also Boost Productivity?

Creating a greener workplace may be good for the planet and reducing energy costs, but it’s not always a win for employees. Consider this:...

5 Ways to Enhance Workplace Experience with Graphics

An experiential graphic design pro shares tips for enhancing your space with wayfinding and environmental graphics.

How to Create a More Energizing Workplace

Get the scoop from James Stawniczy, a senior wellness consultant for HOK.

NeoCon 2016 in Review

Flex. Now watch me work.

How Does an Office Dress for Success?

The physical manifestation of company culture in workplace design is a critical part of employee engagement.

How to Design an Innovative Workplace

Four ways to design an innovative and interactive work environment.

The Future of Neuro-Architecture Has Arrived. Here’s What It Means for the Workplace

For one thing, we now know our disdain for seas of cubicles may have deep evolutionary roots.

Behind the Curtain: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers HQ

Providing a case study in bold 21st Century workplace and biophilic design strategies is Federal Center South, a new 209,000 SF district headquarters in Seattle for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).

Living Walls

A living wall can be as small as 5 sq. ft. or as large as an entire atrium. The smaller versions are easily mounted on existing wall surfaces and usually take the form of a box system, i.e. modules of plant boxes arranged next to each other in a row.

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