The National - News

PERFECT OFFICE HAS A PLACE TO JUST SCREAM AND SHOUT

▶ The brains behind Dubai’s Our Space tell David Dunn how we should be working

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Ask most office warriors to define their dream workplace and you’re likely to get some fanciful responses.

If, however, that list includes at-desk massages, somewhere to “scream and shout” away frustratio­n and Nasa-approved plants then Our Space could be their office utopia.

Opened in May, the 22,500 square foot Dubai facility is a co-working space and business centre office mix - with a difference. What traditiona­lists might view as eccentrici­ties, it offers as near necessitie­s for progressiv­e office dwellers.

“We wanted to look at common issues with business centres around the world,” Our Space regional chief commercial officer Richard Anderton tells The National.

“Current corporate models … everyone is bound by four walls and it’s not a very attractive space to work. Most business centres, especially around the Middle East, are mundane, don’t have much soul.

“So people will rent office/ co-working space and not even use it; most business centres, although occupancy is maybe 80/90 per cent, actual hands on deck will be 15 to 20 per cent.

“People are not feeling the need and desire to actually come to the space.

“It doesn’t engage people to have active ‘collisions’, to meet like-minded people so they can branch out and collaborat­e. They aren’t effective environmen­ts to collaborat­e in.”

With co-working and freelance culture growing rapidly, alongside demand for temporary offices, Our Space is not alone in adapting to the shared-space trend.

Tryp by Wyndham Dubai, Barsha Heights, is one hotel already offering such a service.

It’s co-working environmen­t, Nest, has gained traction among the freelance and startup community. It opened late last year, lauded as one of the first fully integrated co-working spaces within an internatio­nally branded hotel.

Nest focuses on “fostering a community around entreprene­urs, freelancer­s and the creative working classes, providing the space to hatch ideas and the room they need to soar”.

Similarly, Letswork, a new community of affordable co-working spaces across Dubai launched by Hamza Khan and Omar Al Mheiri in February, partners with Rove hotels to convert unused parts of each venue into co-working spaces during off-peak hours, equipping lobby, lounge and even some restaurant areas with the USB and plug points required.

Others firms operating in the UAE include WitWork launched in May, and based on a Dh350 per month membership scheme that offers profession­als access to “dormant” spaces across Dubai.

And these examples are but a ¬handful of the many co-working solutions and providers cropping up all over the UAE.

Our Space chief executive and chairman Kevan Halliwell envisioned centres with much more than day-hire hot desks.

“We designed ours so there’s an effective flow between office space and co-working and around the heartbeat of our business centres; the cafe or restaurant,” says Mr Anderton.

“Our core pillars are connecting humans with nature and technology.”

His Dubai centre, inside the Lamborghin­i building on Sheikh Zayed Road, followed a smaller “pilot” in Marbella, Spain.

Our Space is very green, not least in an arrangemen­t with the UK’s appliance maker Dyson to test the latest “natural” lighting systems, air purifiers and hand dryers. Even plants are Nasa-approved for oxygen producing and carbon dioxide absorption effectiven­ess.

“Our design is biophilic, so it’s about bringing the outdoors, indoors,” says Mr Anderton.

“The study behind that says if you work in an oxygenated space you’re up to 40 per cent more productive. We wanted to introduce the maximum amount of wellness we can,” says Mr Anderton, who previously played badminton for South Africa and worked in health club management and for Belgium-based serviced office giant Regus.

Our Space is targeting a mix of freelancer­s and start-ups, plus establishe­d firms seeking space for its representa­tives in the local market.

“You know how difficult it is to focus at home - there’s always distractio­ns; the fridge is more interestin­g,” says operations and events manager Carlota Frere, from Portugal.

“It’s nice to have a location where you have a more profession­al appearance for your business instead of meeting at [somewhere like] Tim Horton’s. Our target is to grow with members, to give the tools to develop.”

While other UAE locations are being considered, for Open Space, the northern English city of Leeds launches next, with Miami, Manchester, Hong Kong, Singapore, Manila and Kuala Lumpur within the CEO’s “dream” to open 500 centres; 50 organicall­y in three years and 450 via acquisitio­ns, including hotel lobby collaborat­ions.

 ?? Photos Antonie Robertson / The National ?? Richard Anderton, chief commercial officer, and Carlota Frere, head of events, at Our Space ME in Dubai
Photos Antonie Robertson / The National Richard Anderton, chief commercial officer, and Carlota Frere, head of events, at Our Space ME in Dubai
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 ??  ?? Room to stretch out and verdant greenery, above and below, create a productive and relaxing environmen­t for those working at Our Space ME
Room to stretch out and verdant greenery, above and below, create a productive and relaxing environmen­t for those working at Our Space ME
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