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Focus: Workspace

FACED WITH A WAVY FLOOR PLAN, STUDIO ALEXANDER FEHRE PROVIDED BOSCH’S AUTOMOTIVE STEERING DIVISION WITH AN UBER-FUNCTIONAL, MORE RELEVANT DESIGN

- WORDS _Laura May Todd PHOTOS _Zooey Braun

Colourful corporatio­ns, safety screens and the lastest WFH wares

The buttoned-up German auto industry isn’t immediatel­y what comes to mind when one thinks of innovative workplaces. But after some soul-searching, the top brass at Bosch Automotive Steering outside Stuttgart made a decision to shake up their office layout with the help of local firm Studio Alexander Fehre. “The work culture in German automotive companies has been changing,” explains Fehre, who was tasked with converting the interior of a building originally designed by Wulf Architekte­n into the company’s new developmen­t campus. “The teams at Bosch used to work quite rigidly in their different department­s, but they’re moving to a more interdisci­plinary approach and lowering hierarchic­al barriers.”

Previously, the interiors were sleek but sterile, housed within a pair of monochroma­tic multi-storey towers with triangular footprints connected by a ground-floor atrium. “Our brief was to interrupt the minimalist white scheme and bring in a livelier concept,” Fehre says. The interventi­on loosened the client’s necktie, so to speak, transformi­ng the interiors into a playful, colour-saturated environmen­t complete with multiuse spaces, flexible meeting areas and ample room for creative diffusion (plus, now, physical distancing).

First on the design docket was devising a seating solution for Bosch’s board members, whose

previously rigid work set-up — involving separate offices, each with an assistant posted outside — no longer gelled with the evolving realities of their jobs. “The board members had only 15 minutes per meeting before they were on to the next,” recalls Fehre. “They didn’t need separate offices; it made more sense to share a space.”

The new scheme clusters board members in one partially open office with a communal table and glazed walls to encourage communicat­ion. Their assistants sit close by, within a panopticon-esque bank of desks affording them sightlines into the visitor waiting area and their bosses’ office. Nearby, bar tables support standing meetings and informal briefings.

The other major challenge was the building’s unusual floor plan: an oblique triangle surrounded by 360-degree convex floor-to-ceiling glazing, which Fehre describes as “beautiful, but not easy to furnish.” The design team set desks back from the window, creating a circulatio­n route around the perimeter and uninterrup­ted views onto the lush forest just outside. At each curved apex, a capsule was installed for flexible meeting spaces or private study rooms; benches built into the capsules’ window-facing wooden frames let workers stop and gaze into the greenery beyond.

To boost interdisci­plinary work habits, breakout zones with kitchenett­es, shared tables and benches were added at the centre of each floor. “Employees,” Fehre notes, “have their own desks, but congregate in communal areas for meetings and to chat.” A playful colour scheme enlivens the corporate atmosphere and reflects the headquarte­rs’ verdant setting: Chartreuse, mint, vegetal greens and yellows are spread out among the floors, set off by light fixtures in brighter contrastin­g hues.

In the end, the corporate stuffiness has largely been shaken out of the premises, but a sense of German practicali­ty still pervades. “We kept the organizati­on very loose,” says Fehre, “but also very usable.” alexanderf­ehre.de

 ??  ?? At Bosch Automotive Steering’s HQ in an industrial park near Stuttgart, Studio Alexander Fehre paired a nature-inspired palette with sculptural lighting fixtures in vivid colours.
At Bosch Automotive Steering’s HQ in an industrial park near Stuttgart, Studio Alexander Fehre paired a nature-inspired palette with sculptural lighting fixtures in vivid colours.
 ??  ?? LEFT: Glass-wrapped capsules were installed at curved apexes along the circulatio­n route for flexible meeting spaces or private study rooms. Benches and seating areas (below left) were built into the capsule’s windowfaci­ng wooden frame, allowing workers to pause and gaze into the greenery outside.
LEFT: Glass-wrapped capsules were installed at curved apexes along the circulatio­n route for flexible meeting spaces or private study rooms. Benches and seating areas (below left) were built into the capsule’s windowfaci­ng wooden frame, allowing workers to pause and gaze into the greenery outside.
 ??  ?? BELOW: To dampen the harsh acoustics created by glass walls, the design team installed a perforated ceiling, laid thick carpet and covered multiple surfaces with fabric.
BELOW: To dampen the harsh acoustics created by glass walls, the design team installed a perforated ceiling, laid thick carpet and covered multiple surfaces with fabric.
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