Many designers, facility managers, and
dealers have expressed to us the need for ways to create multi-use
rooms that are both functional and beautiful. In this article,
we outline some key design considerations and strategies that will
help create that perfect solution.
What Does Your Client Mean by the Term ‘Multi-Use’?
With real estate prices where they are, many clients will be interested
in exploring multi-use room solutions. “One of the best places
to start is to help the client to define the term 'multi-use,’” says
designer Yvonne Charbonneau. “If an organization comes to me
asking for a multi-use room design, I ask all parties involved what
they mean by the term. At first, it seems obvious what a multi-use
room is, but in practice everyone means something different from
the term. Just what ‘uses’ and for whom? How will it
be used, and will a multi-purpose room accommodate those needs?” “A
room can’t be all things to all people, so the client organization
needs to prioritize and make tough decisions about what it will be
used for.” Often, clients think that a multi-use room will
solve all their space (and sometimes political) issues—but
a designer runs the risk of an unhappy client after the design is
implemented if the difficult questions aren’t answered.
Is a Multi-Use Room the Right Solution?
A Fortune 500 client comes to Charbonneau with a problem: they are
running out of large meeting room space for groups of up to eight
people. They are looking for a multi-use room solution to handle
the extra load. After looking into the issue more closely, however,
Charbonneau finds out that employees are booking the existing larger
rooms when a small one would do, for reasons such as “it has
windows,” or “it’s there, might as well use it.” The
solution isn’t a newly designed multi-use room it is an improved
room booking system.
Asking the Right Questions/Helping the Client Define Their Needs
Stephen CameronSmith, a facilities manager hired on contract to
the law firm Fraser Milner Casgrain, says, “organizations waste
a lot of money designing solutions that don't work—not because
the designers aren't talented, but because the client has not fully
defined what it is they need. 80% of the work is in the design scope
specification, 20% in the follow-through.” It’s important,
therefore, to ask the right questions before designing a multi-use
room.
- Clarify the problem. Why are you coming to me
for a multi-use room? What is not being supported currently by
your room configuration? What’s the problem that needs solving?
- Gather information.
How do you use your rooms? Do you know the frequency of meetings,
meeting sizes, type of activities that need to be supported (like
AV, lunches, training)? What is the average length of meetings,
or other sessions (longer sessions need furniture designed for
comfort)?
- Talk
about the long-term. When talking about multi-use rooms,
many clients are excited about what it will be able to do, but
they don’t
think about maintenance. Without proper maintenance, however, a multi-use
room will quickly lose its usefulness, leading to an under-utilized
space. So it's important to discuss long-term maintenance at the
outset of a project, and build that into the design. On average,
you need to allow an hour to setup and takedown a multi-use room.
Do you have the staff to manage multi-use room switchovers? How will
the organization support multi-use down the road—will you
provide training in room switchovers and the particular technology
that is being used in each solution? Do you have the storage available,
and is it easy to get the furniture in and out?
Keeping it light
Like conversation at the in-laws, it's good to
keep it light. Portable tables should be easily manipulated by people
of average physical capability.
Storage without damage
A multi-use
room solution won't function if the furniture loses functionality
or is
diminished in appearance. In general, multi-use room furniture
gets damaged more quickly so it's good to use durable materials and
finishes. Many portable table solutions are easily damaged going
in and out of storage. Flip-tops (see below) are often the best at
protecting themselves from damage during regular moves.
Portable power & communication
These days, whenever
possible, it's good to provide power and communication capability
at the table top, even with a mobile solution. Voice over data Voice
over data technology means that people can shift rooms instantly
without dealing with maintenance staff. All they have to do is take
their phone set with them, plug it anywhere in the office, and their
extension will work.
Quality matters
Quality is often overlooked
by clients and designers who want a multi-use room. About quality,
Charbonneau says, “the product has to compensate for human
error. You can never really predict how people will treat it. The
initial design may satisfy the client but the room no longer works
due to human error. It’s good to go with a supplier who will
support the products in the future.”
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