10 January 2021

Could this new building in Israel be the future of offices?

Harry Kretchmer

The technology company says distinctive design features mean the building is prepared for the pandemic and beyond.

These include a ‘flexible grid’ where offices can be easily reshaped and desks can be rolled into new positions.

“Why does a person actually want to come into an office? Why do they need an office at all?”

These are the questions that Vered Gindi, Lead Architect of Microsoft’s new Herzliya campus in Israel, set out to answer four years ago when she started to design it. Her questions proved timely.

When the technology giant commissioned its new 46,000-square-metre state-of-the-art facility, it could scarcely have imagined the extent to which a global pandemic could throw into question the very idea of a physical office. Indeed, some tech firms have given employees the option of working from home forever.

As companies plan hybrid home-and-office futures, and some consider the estimated 30% that could be saved on real-estate costs by downsizing, the Herzliya campus shows one way that offices can reinvent themselves – and find new meaning.

Here are the three key design principles that have shaped the building.


1. A ‘flexible grid’
Large auditoriums are replaced by multipurpose spaces on a ‘flexible grid’.

In 2020, employers across the world worked hard to reshape office buildings to create social distancing space between desks. By contrast, the new Herzliya campus starts with flexibility engineered in, using a system called a ‘flexible grid’.

“Over your 100 square metres, you can have flexibility to organize and personalize your space,” says Oren Yerushalmi Rosenbaum, senior portfolio manager for Microsoft Real Estate & Facilities in Israel & Serbia. “Put your desks face-to-face or back-to-back, far apart or whatever is right for you. This makes social distancing easier.”

The importance of being able to create extra space easily is emphasized by COVID-19-secure office designs, such as the ‘6 Feet Office’ by global real estate company Cushman & Wakefield.

In the case of the Herzliya campus, this means acoustic partitions and shelving systems that can be added or removed, enabling teams to combine or divide as needed. Desks can be rolled around on castors and have extra long cables, so they can be relocated easily, by anyone.

Meanwhile, the auditoriums – beloved of tech giants on product-launch day – are gone, replaced by multipurpose rooms that can be reorganized, split or merged, as required.
The new building is in a region which experiences almost no rain for months.
Image: Microsoft

2. Long-term sustainability

Microsoft says lessening the campus’ long-term impact on the environment was a priority. The result is a building that is one of Israel’s most sustainable.

Around 237,000 litres of fresh water will be pulled from the air each year by atmospheric generators – vital in a region with almost no rain for seven months annually, which is likely to experience more frequent extreme weather events such as heat waves. Meanwhile, an air filtration system both cleans internal air, including elevators, and reuses the water collected to irrigate and cool the building – projected to save more than three million litres a year.

The campus is also focused on energy generation and conservation: 800 square metres of photovoltaic cells power dining facilities and exterior lighting, while a double-skin wall and automatic blinds help prevent overheating.
Spaces have been engineered to encourage intersections and encounters – in safer times.
Image: Microsoft

3. Dynamically creative

Microsoft says it wanted Herzliya to “aspire to the dynamic creativity of urban environments over the traditional grids or open-floor plans of most office spaces”. This reflects an increasing desire of companies in recent years to stimulate chance encounters and lessen silo-based working.

Certainly, for the duration of COVID-19, such dynamism may have to take a back seat while security takes priority. However, in the longer term, Microsoft aims to reboot the purpose of an office.

“A city is a place of intersection,” says Vered Gindi. “You are surrounded by people, activities and culture. You are part of something bigger than yourself. You are not just going to work; you are experiencing a lifestyle.”
The campus has playrooms to help with families’ work-life balance.
Image: Microsoft

This ‘city’ vision manifests itself in team-based ‘neighbourhoods’ and four hubs: Downtown, an industrial-style zone; Midtown, a playful area; The Garden, a green outdoor level; and Uptown, styled to feel like a boutique hotel. The areas are knitted together with boulevards.

The activities available reflect the approach: prayer rooms; a music room; a gym; a yoga room. There are also playrooms for children – likely to help attract families back to the office when homeworking has shown how remote working can help with childcare. According to the Harvard Business Review, having family-friendly benefits has helped some companies weather the storm of the pandemic.
Designers wanted to make the new campus a place for workers to unwind.
Image: Microsoft

As organizations work to overcome the challenges to work caused by the pandemic, there's hope that returning to the office might not only be possible; it could even be fun.

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