Privacy

Designing With Pods

Four things you should think about when adding pods to your floorplan.

Read 5 minutes

For most of us, a typical workday involves jumping from task to task, often switching gears from group work to solo focus. In order to support these different moments and provide people and teams with the privacy they need, designers suggest offering a range of private office spaces that people can select from based on their needs. Is there an easy way to offer people choice and control without the disruption of traditional construction?

Cue: privacy pods. With sleek designs and small footprints, these stand-alone spaces can offer an escape and a place where you won’t disrupt your work neighbors.

Let’s examine four things to think about when adding pods to your workplace.

Designing with pods
Orangebox pods are reconfigurable, modular rooms that can act as a freestanding meeting room, private space, phone booth or touchdown room. High quality glass and soft acoustic paneling delivers a refined aesthetic and a high level of privacy.

1. LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION
If you brought in a plate of muffins for your team, you’d probably place it somewhere in the middle of the office, so it was easy for everyone to take one, right? Well, the same can be said for pods. By placing them in centrally located places within your workspace, it’s easier for people to pop in and use them, and it’s so much simpler to see if they’re occupied.

No more craning your neck to see if that one conference room is open or doing laps around the building to find a place to take a quick phone call. With pods front and center, you can slip in for a few moments of silence without having to step too far away from your team.

Officebricks Acoustic Pods provide high-sound insulation in an inviting atmosphere and can be assembled in under an hour. The OnAir sign indicates to workers that a unit is in use, making sure privacy is maintained.

2. POD SQUAD
In the world of pods, one size does not fit all. Especially since each workday calls for many different work modes, from quiet focus to group collaboration. By providing a range of pods in various sizes, you can accommodate a variety of user needs, including phone booths for private conversations and larger pods that give everyone in the group a comfortable seat to collaborate without interruption.

Designing with pods
Interchangeable panels allow you to refresh Orangebox pods at will, swapping, changing and refreshing colors and fabrics.

3. BALANCING ACT
Picture it: you’re trying to collaborate with a colleague, in a sea of silence. You don’t want to disrupt your hyper-focused neighbors, but it’s also really hard to be creative when you’re whispering and don’t have whiteboards or other helpful collaboration tools on hand.

Many offices today are seeking to promote creativity and collaboration while still providing places for focus and privacy. Whether you’re in a pinch for a little peace and quiet or you need a place where your group can speak freely without disrupting your neighbors, pods can help to create an ecosystem of spaces—some that support private moments and others that support collaboration.

Designing with pods
Made of laminated safety glass and the clever brick system, Officebricks Acoustic Pods provide two-way sound insulation. A low-noise ventilation system ensures a healthy climate and pleasant atmosphere without diminishing acoustics.

4. MAKE IT PERSONAL
One easy way to enhance your workspace is to give your pods a little personality. For starters, you can select the furniture that will be placed inside, depending on what you want the pod to support—rejuvenation, focus or group work.

Also, you can choose from a myriad of surface materials, including woodgrain or laminate finishes, customizable films, markerboards and acoustic panels for added privacy. This way, your pods can either stand out or beautifully blend in with your office decor.

Related Stories

Tents at Work?

Tents at Work?

Every now and again, two seemingly divergent ideas work together—like another unlikely combo: offices and tents. Tents at work? That’s

Finding Focus

Finding Focus

Turns out, finding the privacy you need at work doesn’t necessarily require closing a door. A new Steelcase study proves that when an open plan office is designed with pockets of visual privacy, it really is possible to focus and get things done. But don’t close your eyes to this additional finding: When it’s time to get creative, being in an open space with open views can help.

Escaping the Noise

Escaping the Noise

How can people easily find a little peace and quiet during the workday? Explore three ideas for any floorplan.