Victorian Auditor General’s Office
Baumgart Clarke Architects
Above — Spotted gum and cedar are used in the reception area, including a signature circular pattern perforated across standout panels of the gum.
Baumgart Clark Architects has created an office environment in Melbourne that exudes gravitas and dignity, but also prioritizes wireless and paperless technology.
Above — A sweeping staircase, in spotted gum and polished brass, connects the different levels of the office.
State government auditing is a serious affair: the Victorian Auditor-general’s Office (VAGO) is committed to the public, and as such, its orientation is outward. Its focus is not on the spaces in which it works. Fortunately, this concern belongs to Baumgart Clark Architects, the team behind the office’s highly responsive fitout, which has embedded the principles of dignity, professionalism and public service into its design. A key aspect to the brief – in addition to a very tight turnaround of seven months – was to communicate the function and ethos of VAGO without corporatizing its space. This is something that public sector workplace design has often failed at. There are no generic white walls, transparent glass meeting rooms and boxy partitions here.
Instead, the very contemporary design references the aesthetics of creative workspaces, both historic and current, creating an interesting meld of materials and tones. Beautiful spotted gum and cedar are used throughout threshold and gathering areas, including a signature circular pattern perforated across standout panels of the gum. Internal windows and glass doors are framed, warehouse-style, with dark powdercoated aluminium, giving a subtly industrial look to the space. The more retro dimensions are picked out in the use of brass railing and decorative panels, against the wood and richly coloured upholstery and soft furnishings. Rarely used cathedral glass, a material much more common in the 1930s and 1940s, is an elegant addition and is deployed in lieu of film to create opacity for privacy and seclusion on key internal windows and panel dividers. Reportedly the glazier was thrilled by the request to source it.
The design is highly attuned to current work culture preferences for activity-based working, work practice-responsive design and flexible spaces that can be easily modified. Different kinds of environments are made available to VAGO staff, from casual breakout areas that are woven throughout the office, to meeting pods, private meeting rooms, private workspaces and integrated workstations. Retractable walls and moveable furniture, including the fabric-covered pods, are instrumental in this flexibility. Importantly, while staff are mobile, often working out of the office at locations across the state, everyone is accounted for in the number of desks or workstations. There is no strict hierarchy of workspaces here. Offices are only allocated where sensitive work is required. Additionally, the brief prioritized a shift from a paper intensive to a near paperless workspace – quite a change for an auditor’s office – as well as a move “from wires to wireless.” Both have been successfully delivered, with the remaining wires hidden within decorative conduits that run from desk to ceiling.
Such accountable and inclusive practices are indicative of the totality of the design, which signals its democratic ethos in small and large ways. Incorporated into the design is a prayer room and a parents’ room, the latter complete
“A key aspect to the brief ... was to communicate the function and ethos of VAGO without corporatizing its space. This is something that public sector workplace design has often failed at. There are no generic white walls, transparent glass meeting rooms and boxy partitions here.”
with a workstation if needed. A sweeping staircase, in spotted gum and polished brass, connects the 1.5 levels that the VAGO occupies, signalling the importance of connection and flow between staff. At the base of the staircase sits the auditor-general’s office, its aluminium-framed glass walls indicating the transparency required by the role, but also its centrality to the work of the organization. Because of this, all staff symbolically maintain visual access to the office, and the sense of openness throughout is maintained. In a similar gesture of inclusion, the main entrance to VAGO’S reception area – complete with one of the best views enabled by the floor plan – is open to the public. This befits the nature of the office, as one that is fully accountable to the people of Victoria. The state-based, and diverse, constituency of VAGO figures in other ways, notably in the colour palette deployed across the fitout, which references different regions of Victoria in tones that are drawn from these environments. The Pink Lakes of the Murray-sunset National Park and the burgundy-reds of the Yarra Valley’s vineyards, for instance, register their presence here. But the staff are never rendered second to who they serve beyond the office. And it is for staff that another fabulous view has been reserved in a common area – the kitchen. This is another thoughtfully designed space, capturing northern sun and complemented with customized joinery by Nexus Designs (which contributed customized pieces throughout, as well as selected furniture and colours) and ample on-trend tables and chairs. Large, open and relaxing, complete with a soothing wall of potted plants on one side and a panorama of Melbourne’s CBD on another, this kitchen reiterates the open and horizontal nature of this workplace and its resident. This is an office that is for the people, and – to the achievement of Baumgart Clark – it is now made for them, too.