知末案例   /   公共空间   /   艺术馆   /   Pei-Ru Keh

谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图

2020/12/12 19:28:23
查看完整案例
微信扫一扫
收藏
下载
翻译
Designed by Office of Things for Google’s Bay Area headquarters, the bunker-inspired meditation chambers combine technology, light and sound to create a meditative effect
One of five rooms created by Office of Things for Google’s Bay Area offices, known as Amoeba, featuring a mirrored ceiling. Photography by Tom Harris
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-2
Although returning to the office may still be varying widely across the board, a newly unveiled internal project at Google, known as the Immersive Spaces Series, is offering a roadmap on how to create restorative spaces in the workplace when the time does come. A work in progress since 2017, Google has been working with the American design practice, Office of Things, to design and construct five meditation chambers in the Youtube and Google offices in the Bay Area, adapted from an area of research which the practice has been investigating on its own. Conceived and designed pre-pandemic, the rooms’ philosophy of offering employees a place to acknowledge and restore their mental health could not come at a more relevant time.
The Immersive Spaces Series
Each room in the Immersive Spaces Series has been designed to be used by a single occupant at a time. Inspired by the architecture and protective aspects of bunkers, the experience within each chamber is enhanced by augmented light and sound sequences which create a meditative effect that both grounds and cleanses on the haptic and psychic fronts. Each room is divided into three components: an entry, which focuses on helping the occupant leave behind the literal and figurative noise of the office and the outside world, the Ground; a spacious landscape of rounded edges, dark colours and soft textures, where occupants are invited to rest on the floor, against a wall or on a reclining bench, and finally the Sky, an ephemeral space that hovers above that allows the mind to relax and wander.
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-6
Looking up to the ceiling in one of Google’s meditation rooms. Photography: Tom Harris
‘The first version of this room was for a temporary art gallery in Toronto that we built ourselves. It was a thoughtful learning experiment to help us understand how materials can come together, and what experience is created. Since then, as the spaces become more complex and refined, we’ve tried to evolve the designs accordingly,’ says Lane Rick, a principal at Office of Things, who led the project design. ‘These spaces are a crystallization of [our] exploration of the intersection of material tactility and the volumetric, ephemeral parts of placemaking; a grounded, soft texture to sit in, and an airy ceiling to look at. As the series evolved into an ensemble of spaces for meditation, the relationship between the elements has become more apparent to us.’
A ‘User First’ Approach
It was through seeing this early version of the meditation chamber that prompted Ryan Trinidade, a project executive at Google’s San Francisco office, to pursue a collaboration with Office of Things.
‘Wellness and inclusivity has been a priority for the company since its founding; it’s one of the reasons we serve food. We’ve had meditation and prayer spaces well before I joined, but about five or six years ago I started a discussion with Office of Things about rethinking our meditation spaces,’ he shares. ‘Taking a "User First" approach, there were several pain points we sought to fix; acoustics, lack of ritual, privacy, and joy. The goal of the original meditation spaces and our current iteration, remains the same; to provide a break from meetings and screens, to take a moment for yourself.’
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-12
One of the relaxation spaces designed by Office of Things for Google. Photography: J. Arnold, Impart Photography
For the Youtube and Google offices, the studio studied the design and material qualities of anechoic chambers and sensory deprivation rooms. ‘We also adapted aspects of mindfulness meditation techniques to the experience of sitting and laying in the rooms, especially through the careful composition of the experiences for body and mind,’ adds Rick.
From the compressed entryway, which Rick says ‘resets the sensorial reverberations in the body’, to the way the ceiling has been designed ‘to maximize the effects according to the dimensions of the space [so] it is focused on creating a space of transformation and escape’, the rooms couldn’t be more conducive for getting away from the hubbub and reality of life. Acoustically padded walls, subtle changes in the lighting sequence and sounds emanating from the floor wash over the senses in a way that makes time feel slower.
‘At its core, the Immersive Spaces are physical environments that are augmented with technology,’ she concludes. ‘ The technology is hidden from eyesight, but introduces an element of change over time. For us, this experience is transformative and sublime; the small room gives way to a perceived immensity.’ §
The entrance to the Horizon room, one of five spaces created by Office of Things for Google’s Bay Area offices. Photography by Tom Harris
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-18
Also in the Horizon room, a play of pink-hued lights. Photography by Tom Harris
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-20
A niche featuring soft-cushioned seating. Photography by Tom Harris.
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-22
The entrance to the Arches room, featuring a curved ceiling motif enhanced by dramatic lighting. Photography by Tom Harris.
谷歌总部冥想室 | 打造办公室身心健康蓝图-24
南京喵熊网络科技有限公司 苏ICP备18050492号-4知末 © 2018—2020 . All photos and trademark graphics are copyrighted by their owners.增值电信业务经营许可证(ICP)苏B2-20201444苏公网安备 32011302321234号