It’s designed to stimulate, calm or simply be an area available to an employee given their task or taste preference in any given moment, on any given day. ![]() “We developed a sensory score card for each space,” said creative director Louis Schump. What he means by that is one space could be highly visual, another auditory and another kinetic. Different sorts of areas that is, depending on what they were working on and how they were feeling. The design team wanted to make darn sure every conceivable space was made available for this unique collection of employees who didn’t necessarily spend their days in workstations or offices but rather, wandering around looking for ‘areas’ to work. In this case it was between San Francisco architectural firm Rapt Studio, New York’s AvroKo and Dropbox in-house team Glara Ahn and Claire Pederson. A job this size takes some collaboration. ![]() ![]() This is the first time Dropbox employees have all been under the same roof. Part art installation, part theatre set, Dropbox, the digital file hosting and sharing company, have set up their HQ in San Francisco.
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