Back to the Office: over 50 revolutionary office buildings and how they sustained

Ruth Baumeister, Stephan Petermann, Marieke van der Heuvel

Publications: Book / Anthology / Thesis / ReportBookResearch

Abstract

Able to work anywhere – and in unpredictable times, often forced to – we have a tortured relationship with the office today. Desperate to work again in physically shared spaces, we are also now questioning whether offices – and the demanding, alienating rhythms they impose on us – are needed at all.

Offices themselves labour under intolerable forces too: twenty-first-century building regulations suggest redesigning them every seven-to-ten years, managerial strategies typically shift every five years, and employees churn every two. As a result, offices are torn down, stripped out, rethought and renewed with alarming frequency.

With the future of our workspaces so uncertain, Back to the Office works overtime inside the revolutionary offices of the twentieth century, and asks what endured from their architecture, their materials, and the ideologies of work they embodied.

Using before-and-after photography, archival documents, contemporary interviews and critical essays, this book engages corporations, architects, workers, building managers, regulators and others – all in search of the lessons we need to learn from a very recent time when there was an unambivalent enthusiasm for office life.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationRotterdam
Publishernai010 publishers
Volume1
Edition1
Number of pages520
ISBN (Print)978-94-6208-652-4
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2022

Keywords

  • sustainability
  • office buildings
  • architecture history

Artistic research

  • No

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