Saskatoon StarPhoenix

FEELS LIKE HOME

Designers get in tune with new work landscape

- REBECCA KEILLOR

Furniture makers are responding to changes in where and how people are working, says EQ3 creative director Thom Fougere, with offices increasing­ly being designed to feel more like home — relaxed, comfortabl­e and open.

“The landscape of how we work, and even what kind of work, generally, we do is changing,” says Fougere. “And I think a lot of people are seeing that change as well, so yeah, there’s a lot more working from home, and the home is kind of turning into an office, and the office is somewhat turning into a bit more residentia­l home, with those similar comforts.”

Ultimately, Fougere says, people need the same things, no matter where they are.

“They need beauty, they need organizati­on, they need light, they need natural air,” he says.

EQ3 launched its Home Work collection at IDS Toronto in January in an effort to begin the conversati­on about what the new work environmen­t looks like, with one of the pieces being a re-imagined version of its Novah desk, he adds.

“It’s a very understate­d desk system,” Fougere says, “and it’s adaptable. It can fit in both a residentia­l and an office environmen­t. It’s modular, it can expand to larger offices and it can also fit one to two in a new startup in a smaller office.”

Like a lot of EQ3’s pieces, the Novah desk is made to order in its Winnipeg factory, says Fougere, so customers can choose between a more hard-wearing laminated bamboo or melamine, both suited for commercial spaces, or a residentia­l grade walnut finish, better suited for home environmen­ts.

“The bamboo really does warm up an office, with its presence,” Fougere says. “And the walnut just really easily adapts itself to residentia­l.”

Also included in EQ3’s Home Work collection is an updated version of its iconic Replay sofa, first released in 2001, Fougere says.

“Most of our business is upholstery. And we’re adapting some of our upholstery line for more commercial use, commercial contexts,” he says. “(For) the Replay sofa, which we debuted at IDS (and will be available in stores in a few weeks), we have two versions: one is a home version, it has a deeper seat, some loose throw cushions; and then we have a more shallow version without the throws, which offers a bit more of a commercial seating experience, and can kind of withstand whatever might be thrown at it in a commercial environmen­t.”

The way we work and how workplaces function has changed dramatical­ly over the last decade, adds Maureen Welton, vice-president of creative and design at online home furnishing­s company Article.

“The modern workspace is more flexible than ever before and office furniture needs to reflect that,” she says. “There is a convergenc­e between work and life; home work spaces need to be functional and productive and physical office spaces need to feel livable.”

At Article’s headquarte­rs in Vancouver, the company outfitted its breakout spaces with “sofas, and living room furniture to enable easy conversion, and meeting rooms with dining room furniture that mimics home,” Welton says, adding that finding that these elements creates a “more collaborat­ive environmen­t and community feeling within a space.”

“Working from home is commonplac­e today, and we’ve expanded our office collection to accommodat­e that need, and help customers create a livable office space at home,” she says.

One example, says Welton, is Article’s Madera desk, created by one of its in-house industrial designers.

“We decided to offer the desk to customers so they could create a functional workspace at home,” she says. “The Madera desk has a warm patina, and a moderni-ndustrial esthetic. It’ll stand up to heavy use, and it also features a cable management box that hides away all those cords that litter desktops.”

 ??  ?? As homes grow to include office spaces and workplaces become more comfortabl­e, furniture companies, like Vancouver’s Article, are reimaginin­g these spaces. ARTICLE
As homes grow to include office spaces and workplaces become more comfortabl­e, furniture companies, like Vancouver’s Article, are reimaginin­g these spaces. ARTICLE
 ??  ?? Article’s office furniture blurs the line between home and work. “The modern workspace is more flexible than ever before and office furniture needs to reflect that,” says its vice-president of creative and design. ARTICLE
Article’s office furniture blurs the line between home and work. “The modern workspace is more flexible than ever before and office furniture needs to reflect that,” says its vice-president of creative and design. ARTICLE
 ??  ?? EQ3’s Novah desks are made to order, giving customers the chance to choose versions better suited to either home or commercial offices. EQ3
EQ3’s Novah desks are made to order, giving customers the chance to choose versions better suited to either home or commercial offices. EQ3

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