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Reimagining A More Flexible Future For The Built Environment

As the built environment continues to rapidly evolve, responding to both market and generational demands, the design and architecture profession have reached a crossroads. Creating static, one-use destinations – meaning those singular residential buildings, retail malls, or office parks – is no longer a sustainable solution. The shifting demand is for more flexible, dynamic, market responsive, and experience-driven environments, those spaces that provide a foundation for multiple functionalities and add undeniable long-term value to a community. Consumer expectations have evolved from simple, large-scale buildings with one ideology, to a more authentic and meaningful revitalization, adaptive reuse, and repositioning of buildings, spaces, and experiences. Read more here.

FacilitiesNet: Creating A Social and Productive Workplace

For its new Minneapolis office, global technology company Sovos sought a workspace that would foster collaboration and connection among team members, while offering flexible solutions to accommodate individual and team work preferences as well as company expansion over time.

Read more with FacilitiesNet here.

VMSD: London Jewelers and Primark Design Debut

Portfolio: For Manhasset-based, family-owned London Jewelers, the goal in renovating was to share in that success, primarily by creating a space that offers customers a personal experience in luxurious surroundings. Managed by Nelson Worldwide (Minneapolis), the new design harkens back to the Paris of years gone by. Read more here.

 

Spring Forward: JUST AS the first tulips along Chicago’s premiere shopping streets began to cautiously emerge this spring, Primark (London) unveiled its first location in the Midwest on Chicago’s State Street. Read more here.

Office Lovin’: A Tour of Two22’s New Minneapolis Office

As visitors enter the renovated lobby, they are greeted by a spacious entryway with white marble floors and constellation lit ceilings. The presence of a distinctive security reception desk centered in the second-floor skyway lobby was paramount in the design to offer a sense of safety in the building and anchored by a branding moment featuring the newly redesigned Two22 logo inscribed on a full blue and gray marble wall. Read the full article on Office Lovin’.