Life of Work: What Office Design Can Learn From the World Around Us sets
out to make the twenty-first century workplace a more dynamic, engaging,
colourful, flexible and inclusive place. Jeremy Myerson and Imogen
Privett, from the Royal College of Art in London, looked in some
unlikely places for ideas and inspiration?the academic library, theatre
design, pop up events in the city and intensive team environments in air
traffic control, emergency medical departments and the newsroom. Working
from the position that, whilst the design of most contemporary offices
satisfies physical and functional requirements, it seldom supports the
psychological comfort and individual needs of the people who use them
every working day, Life of Work offers an agenda for change that has
significant implications for every level of workplace design and
implementation. Based on a major research project between the Helen
Hamlyn Centre for Design at the Royal College of Art and two global
industry partners, Haworth and Philips Lighting, Life of Work will be of
value to anyone who has an interest in architecture or interior design,
the politics and management of the working environment, space design and
urban planning, as well as furniture design.