Alhad gore of beyond design architects takes to the art of storytelling with this innovative interior design for the company globant, which provides technological services. beyond design architects were fast to answer to the challenge of designing for a firm that delivers ground-breaking customer experiences. They created interactive interiors for globant’s enormous office space in pune, India, which is 75,000 square feet in size. In order to be considerate of the collaborative processes of working while still protecting workers’ privacy and the very important autonomous role-play that they engage in, the mostly open-plan work areas have been designed as isolated pockets of storytelling. Because of this, each of the two levels of the 40,000 square foot program houses 600 numbers of 1200 workstations in a broad classification of four quadrants. Each quadrant has a distinctive set of meeting rooms, collaborative spaces, phone booths, and designated fire exits that are iterative of an environment of camaraderie and interactivity. While the lounge-like greeting area is circular, meeting rooms come in box or bean-shaped avatars; the notion of dissimilarity extends to the partitioning of spaces as well as the furnishings. Geometry plays a role in this setting since no two areas are alike. cushioned and plush, bare and virtually neutral, the atmosphere of a bar stool, the attraction of a school bench, the seclusion of a street-side phone booth, the ambiance of a rustic metal enclosure, the finery of fine dining, the charm of informal chat… Each location forces its occupants to deal with a unique set of circumstances, which together create their own unique story inside the employee psyche. In addition to this, a few aspects, such as the ceiling, are handled in a unique manner: The architect refers to this design as the “no-ceiling” idea, and it has a pipe rail that acts as a deconstructive element. This rail serves as a path-guiding tool, and it may also be used to hang swings, acoustical panels, bus handles, space separators, etc. the ingeniously designed writable areas on existing columns clad with writable film or even meeting room surfaces finished with black painted glass; the challenge of acoustical phone booths ideal for one to two members equipped with technological paraphernalia and adequate air-flow; the ‘learning tree’ scenario, in which a frp tree is acclimatized with acoustical panels and light fittings complete with acrylic origami birds hanging from the ceiling; the ⌠Maintain the environment such that it is active and always changing. The human resources department is located smack dab in the middle of the office, complete with individualized interview rooms. This allows prospective employees to get a sense of the company’s overall mission and values before they commit to working there. However, the idea that takes home the most praise in this modern office setting is the positioning of the HR department. This creative amalgamation is the work of an architect that blurs the lines between the physical world and the emotional responses it elicits by using color and shape as the primary building blocks. Please go to indiaartndesign.com to have a look at the pictures of this incredible modern workplace.