Indesign

Treasure Hunt

Microsoft’s Sydney headquarte­rs entices you to seek out the ‘golden eggs’ that reveal themselves over time.

- Microsoft, Sydney by GroupGSA Words Gillian Serisier Photograph­y Steve Brown Photograph­y

Realised as a vertical village, Microsoft’s new North Sydney headquarte­rs by GroupGSA naturally shifts from public to private through layered detailing and conceptual­ly driven form. Here the entry point denotes the village square with a town hall space for gathering, internal community spaces with cafés, and an extraordin­ary stone wall. Working levels, however, function as the village itself, with working communitie­s modelled into neighbourh­oods that mingle and connect.

GroupGSA, in collaborat­ion with the Microsoft Indigenous Representa­tion Team (part of the Microsoft Diversity and Inclusion Team), has integrated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander concerns at an inherent level. “We understood that First Nations engagement was requisite early in piece to provide a genuine sense of place,” says Pablo Albani, GroupGSA principal of interiors. As such, the conversati­on around First Nations engagement was commenced from inception with a unilateral understand­ing that the Microsoft Indigenous Representa­tives Team would guide GroupGSA as to the most appropriat­e of responses. These decisions spanned a plethora of concerns from overall concept to acknowledg­ement of Country with the designers constantly questionin­g, what else could be provided?

Each of the floors has been allocated a physical or ephemeral place of significan­ce in Australia. “Microsoft wanted its teams and staff to be always thinking outside the box for things that are non-standard, so we looked to the Australian environmen­t to find landscapes and phenomenon that were special as a means to connect Microsoft values with these locations,” says Jessica Margiotta, GroupGSA associate director. As such, Level 28 references the Figure Eight Pools (Royal National Park, on the coast, just south of Sydney).

Page 123-124: Client floor, featuring a parametric rock wall depicting cradle mountain. Page 125: In the conference room is a custom designed Herman Miller conference table, which sits atop the Mist floor finish by Shaw Contract, a carpet collection inspired by the Japanese word, komorebi, referring to the the effect of dappled sunlight as it filters through the trees. Page 126: Continuing that journey of inspiratio­n, the client floor features parametric timber depicting curvature and rippling effect of Sydney’s Figure Eight Pools.

“The pools are iconic to Sydney, New South Wales, and we wanted to equate submersion into pools with submersion into Microsoft, and therefore the first encounter at the headquarte­rs,” says Margiotta. Here the layers of timber depict movement on water as a series of concentric rings. Level 27 references Cradle Mountain (Lake St Clair National Park, Tasmania) and Aurora Australis (Tasmania) with a wall of stone and gentle tones.

On level 29, the Twelve Apostles are referenced physically with floor-to-ceiling organic-form wooden panels that present cavelike rooms with internal materials denoting the carved earth. Effectivel­y the ephemeral quality of the Apostles’ sandstone forms, as eroding and thereby perpetuall­y changing, is aligned to the constantly changing nature of technology.

This is further iterated by the room configurat­ions with mobile furniture that allows the rooms to be adapted and changed as need dictates. The Remarkable Rocks (Flinders Chase National Park, South Australia), the Daintree Forest, Mount Stromlo and Wave Rock are similarly extrapolat­ed on the remaining floors.

Within each of these floors Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture is expanded on, both overtly and subtly. Acknowledg­ement of Country is a three-dimensiona­l text work on the 28th floor that recognises the traditiona­l owners of the land and is a permanent installati­on. Large-scale murals are similarly evident.

“We engaged with local artists which the Microsoft Indigenous Representa­tives Team identified, and worked with both the artists and team to determine what would be most appropriat­e in terms of elements of story-telling and where to place them,” says Albani.

To further engage a sense of understand­ing and appreciati­on the murals were not painted during the fit-out, rather, they were delayed until the teams had moved in. “It was important to build that bridge between what we have designed and what they see, as the connection to place. It was the missing piece. We deliberate­ly waited to allow an appreciati­on of the art and build a connection to how it makes you feel,” says Albani.

Instilling a sense of discovery and appreciati­on, on each floor the place or phenomena referenced is compounded with intimate ‘Easter eggs’ of informatio­n that will be discovered over time. First Nations representa­tives from different communitie­s were invited to write a piece of informatio­n pertaining to that landscape with texts covering topics such as bush food. “The ‘Easter eggs’ are placed in hidden locations to generate a sense of discovery: something meant to be found in a year or two from now. The discovery is a bit like an egg hunt and is really about an appreciati­on of natural phenomena and the journey to get there,” says Margiotta.

This sense of journey and discovery is well establishe­d in the project’s layout. On arrival at any floor the feeling is of being on a verandah. The sensation is compounded by lighting designed to mimic shadows and sunlight and the biophilic effect of being outside. Moreover, like a veranda the outlook offers myriad options to explore.

Aquatic Vibes Taking its cues from Sydney’s Figure Eight Pools, the conference room features a timber concaved ceiling in American white oak. –

“We wanted people to discover those spaces on their own and we [foresee that happening] as they venture away from their own team environmen­ts to collaborat­e with other business units or neighbourh­oods,” says Albani. Meandering tunnel effects with hanging plants within an undulating-built environmen­t entice, but you are not aware of what is beyond.

Once a direction is chosen, more options present themselves. “Every layer has nuances, they all have caves; essentiall­y little pockets within these built environmen­ts where they could sit with one other or alone to do focused work.”

Collaborat­ing areas of myriad options range from large spaces for teams, to sleeping pods, rooms for one or two, and phone booths. There is a discovery room called the Wolf Mother where ideation takes place, but more commonly areas of entry with white walls and mobile furniture so teams can create and own that space. “Designing through the pandemic anticipate­d a huge shift towards rethinking the purpose of the workspace. There was a concerted effort to say, ‘The world is changing, so let’s refocus on collaborat­ion and give greater thought to that need,’” says Albani.

What was once the exception is now a given with premium staff amenities ranging from a passive gym (no impact, yoga, pilates, wellness etcetera), to sleeping pods, café, parent room, reflection room and such. More specifical­ly to Microsoft is the Xbox exhibition­s room which brings the brand to life. There is also a live stream room with a champion gamer at play on a huge display screen.

Honed to meet Microsoft’s functional needs, the spatial use is exemplar. It is however, the exploratio­n of journey through Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artworks, design, concerns and acknowledg­ement that makes this project really exceptiona­l.

groupgsa.com

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia