POP-UP Office installation is
a concept space which attempts to answer the question “how do you work?”
displayed as part of Toronto 's
Interior Design Show 2013. The exhibit is presented by steel space, a
container-based event design company. Four studios were each given a shipping
container to realize an idea for a workspace. Dubbeldam responded with 'pop-up
office' a cubicle comprised of wooden modules made out of discarded shipping
palettes that can be rearranged according to the user's needs. the modules are broadly
divided by the concepts 'focus', 'collaborate', 'lounge' and 'refuel.' the
project's aim was to create a working environment for a global culture, defined
by dynamism and mobility; it's only requirements a work surface and a place to
plug in. the interiors of the space function like a continuous skin that folds
to provide seating and storage. [1]
Built out of reclaimed wood
pallet boards and their frames, separate modules collectively form the modern
work place facilitating both individual work and collaboration – a workspace,
collaborative space, lounge area and refueling station. In sinuous forms, the
reclaimed boards morph from the wall and floor into furniture elements, sanded
where the human body comes in contact with the wood and left rough where it
does not. The modules are comprised of separate planes (floor, wall, ceiling)
and furniture elements that are assembled in different configurations. Modular
shelves can be inserted into slots between wall boards, creating adjustable
display and storage areas. Smaller ledges slide into gaps between the wood
slats. [2]
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