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Food Logistics: How Architects Can Shape the Next Generation of Food and Beverage Cold Storage Facilities

As demand for food and beverage cold storage continues to surge, supply is falling short, with over 78% of facilities over 42 years old. Industrial Leaders Adam Bortz and David Shull provide their expertise on how NELSON Worldwide addresses this market challenge by designing modern, efficient, and scalable cold storage facilities. Their approach helps developers overcome hesitancy, ensuring these facilities meet growing demand while balancing cost-effectiveness, sustainability, and future scalability. By leveraging NELSON’s specialized knowledge, developers can unlock opportunities in this high-demand, low-supply sector.

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Archello: New Relic offices in Atlanta

With over ten successful years under their belt, San Francisco-based technology company New Relic continues to grow its footprint with the addition of an East Coast headquarters. Since its inception in 2008, New Relic has established offices worldwide, including Oregon, Arizona, and now Atlanta, Georgia. The opening of a new office brings significant opportunities for its business relationships, employees, and culture. New Relic sought the design expertise of global architecture, design, and strategy firm NELSON Worldwide to breathe life into a new workplace.

 

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The office is evolving, and workplace functionality will continue to change to meet employee needs. When JLL was looking for a new, transformational office for its growing team, it enlisted NELSON Worldwide with full architectural design services for its workspace in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The space was designed based on the concept of “Disruptive Innovation” to exhibit a consistent aesthetic with broad yet clearly defined parameters.

Read more with Archello here.

Retail Today: Human-Centric Design in a Digital World

The barrage of digital screens that inhabit our “always connected” world today have forever transformed the way we communicate, bringing us closer together in many ways but also marginalizing some who feel isolated, unseen, or unheard. At the end of the day, humans need humans to feel human.

Read more with Retail Today here.