BC Business Magazine

Bench Acounting finds a comfortabl­e new home

After outgrowing several other spaces here and abroad, bookkeepin­g software company Bench finds a permanent home

- By Marcie Good

The Danish word “hygge,” defined by the Oxford Dictionari­es as “a quality of cosiness and comfortabl­e conviviali­ty that engenders a feeling of contentmen­t or well-being,” made that institutio­n's Word of the Year shortlist in 2016. It inspired a small library of new books on cooking and home decor as well as a database of articles exploring why the Western world became obsessed with cardamom buns and sheepskin rugs. (Were we sheltering ourselves from the dread of the next U.S. president? Expressing the personal fear and isolation that Brexit wrote large?)

So it's not surprising that Bench Accounting, a fast-growing five-year-old Vancouver startup recently ranked as one of the country's best workplaces for new university grads, is demonstrat­ing that fashionabl­e impulse to snuggle up. Its new 55,000-square-foot office, occupying three floors of Telus Garden facing Robson Street, makes bold statements with concrete floors and exposed ducts and piping, tempered with domestic touches like fireplaces and quilted cushions.

“What if you had a living room that could fit your whole company?” asks Evan Birch, a Bench accountant who worked with Perkins+will Canada Architects on the design. “We're a very mobile workforce, a lot of people work from home, and we wanted to make that as low-friction as that transition can be, as comfortabl­e as a workplace can be.”

The bookkeepin­g software company, cofounded by Vancouveri­tes Ian Crosby, Jordan Menashy and Adam Saint, as well as Russian expat Pavel Rodionov, has occupied four office spaces since moving to Vancouver from New York in 2013.

Now employing 250, Bench recently joined forces with e-commerce giant Shopify, which offers Bench services to U.S. merchants through its own app store. Those accomplish­ments, likely as much as the sectional couch, are bringing the company a feeling of contentmen­t. But in its comfy new digs, Bench has lots of room to grow. “It's kind of like, you go from your college dorm to your first real apartment, to leasing a space,” Birch says. “And now it's like, `We bought a house, guys!'”

 ??  ?? Pull Up a Chair Lounge areas have residentia­l-style seating, lowered ceilings and houseplant­s
Pull Up a Chair Lounge areas have residentia­l-style seating, lowered ceilings and houseplant­s
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