2025 Giants Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/2025-giants/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Tue, 08 Apr 2025 19:59:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png 2025 Giants Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/2025-giants/ 32 32 How A Multifamily Residence Honors Its Diverse Inhabitants https://interiordesign.net/projects/hollybridge-at-river-green-complex-in-canada/ Tue, 08 Apr 2025 19:59:21 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=252093 Diversity is at the core of CHIL’s design for Hollybridge at River Green, with culturally specific touches like a mah-jongg room and a tai chi garden.

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A swimming pool with a large skylight above it

How A Multifamily Residence Honors Its Diverse Inhabitants

Although Richmond, British Columbia, is located in metro Vancouver, over half its citizens identify as Chinese, and nearly 75 percent hail from somewhere in Asia. That diversity is at the core of Hollybridge at River Green, an amenity-rich multifamily residence with interiors by CHIL. Culturally specific touches like wok kitchenettes, a tai chi garden, and a mah-jongg room cater to the lifestyle of the local populace, while the overarching concept borrows from the hospitality world.

Among the many amenities is a sunlit 25-meter lap pool lined with a black-and-white mosaic that continues onto the surrounding decking, a gym, anchored by a slatted walnut-veneered canopy/divider, and a kids’ playroom, where materials such as vinyl and plastic laminate are not only colorful but also durable and cleanable. Senior interior designer Diana Ellis drew inspiration from her experience living in Macau and Hong Kong, where she first recognized the timeless beauty of traditional English interiors and their influence. Detailing throughout Hollybridge evokes that, as evidenced by the central elevator bank, where honed Calacatta and Nero Marquina marble flooring joins refined walnut millwork. Multiculturalism is the project’s strength—just like the city it’s based in.

A swimming pool with a large skylight above it
A girl is sitting on a couch in a room
A gym with a wooden ceiling and a large window
A man is walking through a hallway with a marble floor

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12 Cutting-Edge Corporate Hubs Redefining The Workplace https://interiordesign.net/projects/cutting-edge-corporate-hubs-by-2025-giants/ Fri, 04 Apr 2025 19:52:13 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=253885 From a New York office inspired by barbershops to a Seattle headquarters with cocoon-like nooks, explore these corporate spaces designed by Giants firms.

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A man walking through a blue tunnel.
Photography by Angie McMongial.

12 Cutting-Edge Corporate Hubs Redefining The Workplace

From a New York office inspired by barbershops to a Seattle headquarters with cocoon-like nooks, explore these corporate spaces designed by Interior Design‘s 2025 Top 100 and Rising Giants firms.

Be Inspired By These Next-Level Corporate Workspaces

IMC Trading by Perkins&Will

The three-phase expansion of the Dutch-owned multinational trading firm’s North American headquarters added 1 ½ floors, doubling its size to 150,000 square feet. The newly enlarged Chicago office now spans three stories in the city’s tallest building, connected by a series of open stairs that create a dynamic central hub. At the heart of the layout, Perkins&Will inserted a bustling zone with a café, two barista areas, a catering space, and an adjacent gaming room—spaces that foster spontaneous interactions and create a social core for the more than 700 employees to gather, relax, and connect. These amenities are more than just pleasant perks; they offer an ideal venue for staff meetings and philanthropic events, promoting a sense of community within IMC. Company branding is thoughtfully integrated throughout, highlighting its history, core business, and market capabilities while unfolding a cohesive narrative that emphasizes its identity and energized presence. Offering a purpose-driven environment that sets a benchmark in corporate workplace conceptualization, this project was an Interior Design Best of Year Awards honoree. —Peter Webster

Ad-tech Office by Vocon

In the Gilded Age, furriers, milliners, and dressmakers occupied a stretch of Flatiron District blocks known as the Ladies’ Mile, showcasing wares to well-heeled shoppers through ornate window displays in cast-iron storefronts. One such landmarked 1899 building now houses an ad-tech firm’s five-story office. The 147,000-square-foot vertical campus is LEED Gold–certified and, according to Vocon design director Lauren Dennison, “inspired by the rhythm of the city grid and the warmth of New York’s diverse communities.”

A pixel-effect wall of white-oak blocks greets employees and visitors in reception, where flooring is polished concrete inlaid with meandering sections of carpet tile. Nearby is the “pocket park,” a seating nook beneath a garden by John Mini Distinctive Landscapes that cascades from an LED fixture resembling a sunlit oculus. On the top floor, a flex space with plush but streamlined seating is backdropped by a wall of deco-esque patterns created by accenting curved oak panels populated by RBW’s Dimple sconces. Throughout, environmental graphics by Archigrafika celebrate New York ephemera, like the iconic plastic deli bag, nodding to the site’s retail past. —Lisa Di Venuta

BMO Centre by Populous and Stantec

With an occupancy of 33,000 visitors, this three-level convention center in Stampede Park is now the largest in Western Canada. The massive expansion project was a collaboration between Populous, Stantec, and design consultant S2 Architecture. Built in 1982, the Calgary, Canada, complex previously underwent enlargements in 2009 and 2020; this latest increase of 565,000 square feet brings the total to more than 1 million. The update included additional exhibition space, 38 more meeting rooms, two divisible ballrooms, a grand stair, and a skylit common area—called the Exchange—warmed by a triple-height faceted-metal fireplace (the largest in the country). The design teams effortlessly referenced the rugged surrounding foothills as well as the local culture. A curved, copper-colored composite-metal canopy embedded with thousands of programmable LEDs soars over the public plaza to draw visitors inside, where the handmade timber ceiling was inspired by patterned Indigenous blankets and gridded glazing creates the effect of sunlight streaming through the boards of a barn. —Stephen Treffinger

Julius Baer by HLW

The Zurich-based wealth-management group’s 30,000-square-foot London outpost occupies all seven stories of an updated 1960’s office building on a historic cobbled courtyard. Complementing the architectural envelope’s industrial materials—concrete, cinder block, brick, clay tile—the interior build-out by HLW is luxurious yet precise and efficient, reflecting the company’s Swiss identity. There’s an emphasis on hospitality, with a client-facing suite of spaces spanning the first two levels, connected by a custom steel-and-wood spiral stair. The flexible layout supports seamless transitions between formal meetings and hosted events, with integrated AV systems for presentations, while a Baer-branded electric racing car serves as a striking installation. The floors above provide a mix of indi­vidual and collaborative working areas with social spaces at their core. The timber-paneled top level takes advantage of the high ceiling and natural light, incorporating a mezzanine with a staff café above and an adaptable games room and terrace below. —Peter Webster

Whoop by Studios Architecture

The wearable fit-tech company’s Boston HQ champions its hometown and athleticism in equal measure. To start, the 120,000-square-foot office occupies 4 ½ floors of a new building boasting panoramic views of Fenway Park—playground of the Boston Red Sox. The Studios Architecture team was tasked with creating a high-performance scheme that accommodates numerous functions: In addition to producing its signature wrist device, which monitors activities ranging from heart-pumping cardio to sleep and meditation, Whoop also manufactures compatible apparel and runs a sizeable R&D department.

Formulated to encourage casual interactions, an interconnecting stair with treads of ash, a wood often used for baseball bats, and a mesh guardrail inspired by batting cages is a centerpiece of the office proper, where workstations hug window walls and coworking booths are upholstered in leather mimicking the texture of baseball gloves. More enigmatic is the dark, tunnel-like flight of black-steel stairs that lead from floor six, housing reception, down to the top-secret hardware lab on five, where prototyping occurs. Another hardworking space is the technology testing lab on floor two (which doubles as a staff gym after hours), where recessed ceiling lights that spell out “always on”—a brand tagline—are visible from the plaza below. Throughout, buzzy black-and-white graphics by branding studio Aruliden add another layer: high contrast, high energy. —Edie Cohen

The Mill by CannonDesign

This rejuvenated historic complex forges a new workplace paradigm by combining legacy elements with high-impact contemporary design. The site, along the Atlanta Beltline trail, was originally two separate but contiguous buildings: the DuPre Excelsior Mill, constructed in 1890, and a warehouse. The pair was converted into an entertainment venue in the 1970’s and later combined into one interconnected structure, the original dividing line still visible in the rustic stone walls. Today, The Mill serves as an office for a tech company, its industrial architecture an artful foil for modern details masterminded by CannonDesign in partnership with Magdalena Keck Interiors.

Various features throughout the 30,000-square-foot project draw inspiration from plantings and murals seen along the Beltline. Spaces such as the Playground solarium (a sort of hangout meets sculpture garden) and a chic flex lounge provide opportunities for gathering and collaboration. The open office, meanwhile, features clean lines and a communal library table anchoring a double-height volume—actually a cutaway providing an overlook from the floor above, a multifunctional zone flaunting the mill’s original 19th-century pulley system. —Stephen Treffinger

Fulwell Entertainment by Spectorgroup

Pro baller LeBron James is known as one of the most influential athletes of his time. He’s also cofounder of The SpringHill Company, a media and production outfit that recently merged with the U.K.’s Fulwell 73 Productions to become Fulwell Entertainment. Inspired by the company’s many creative streams—spanning film, TV, and brand strategy—the design of its New York office by Spectorgroup captures the essence of switching TV channels. The 20,000-square-foot workplace unfolds as a story across different rooms, with each area embodying a different brand. On one side of the elevator lobby, with its glossy black ceiling, lies the Shop, a room that nods to the NBA superstar’s talk show, which pays tribute to community-centered barbershop culture. Its whitewashed-brick walls, fluted glass doors, and authentic barber chairs offer a place for employees to host calls (or fit-check in one of the mirrors). The New York office proper, meanwhile, traces the building perimeter, enjoying a continuous curtain wall overlooking the Hudson River that provides daylight and views to all. At the heart of the project is the Apollo, which serves as both a screening room and a town hall–style gathering spot. This space cleverly pairs rich wood finishes with rubber flooring: an homage to both Old Hollywood glamour and sports culture. —Georgina McWhirter

Financial office by Blitz

The SoCal building a venture-capital firm selected for adaptive reuse as its new headquarters offered some obvious perks—and some clear challenges. But in the hands of Blitz, hired to oversee the 30,000-square-foot redesign, those obstacles became advantages, too. Completed in 1912, the now-landmarked structure in Santa Monica, California, had cachet; it also had narrow U-shape floor plates and low ceilings. Blitz opened things up, instating a vertical volume at the entrance, shaped to riff on the client’s logo. Original beams and brick walls were left partially exposed for character and to create a space-expanding sense of visual depth. The designers also relocated core utilities and carved out open “wings,” with views of historic balconies, that host work and collaboration spaces, a podcast studio, pitch room, and kitchen. Topping it all off was a roof deck boasting Pacific Ocean views and a protected but unusable greenhouse; it’s now the office’s penthouse bar. If you must play by the rules, you might as well play a little, too. —Jesse Dorris

Fenwick by Huntsman Architectural Group

Having already created three offices for the global law firm, Huntsman Architectural Group was tapped to envision a fourth, a 32,000-square-foot Pacific Northwest headquarters occupying a floor in Rainier Tower. Coffee bars allude to Seattle’s beverage of choice. Cocoonlike nooks beckon for quiet work. Conference rooms are tech-heavy to abet physical and virtual participation. Wellness rooms dedicated to nursing mothers or therapy sessions support inclusion. Work itself, for a staff of nearly 100, relies upon hybrid scheduling: Lawyers frequenting the office have dedicated spaces, while remote staff and visitors get unassigned workstations or offices.

Reflecting the Emerald City’s Puget Sound location is a water/wave theme, evident in the palette, linear rope LEDs, and the elevator lobby’s shapely ceiling baffles that extend into reception to form a wall accented by greenery. Art also ties to the locale and forges a strong sense of place. The monumental focal bronze, for example, is by Gerard Tsutakawa, raised in the Pacific Northwest, where his work graces a multitude of public and private venues. Similarly, David Franklin, creator of the steel piece in the elevator lobby, is an area denizen. As for that recurrent cobalt blue? Not necessarily an antidote to typically gray skies, but definitely Fenwick’s brand color. —Edie Cohen

BRP by Ædifica

In 1937, in the rural Québec town of Valcourt, Joseph-Armand Bombardier was granted a novel patent: the first vehicle capable of traveling on snow. He soon parlayed that invention into a business, L’Auto-Neige Bombardier Limitée, today named BRP, a Canadian manufacturer of snowmobiles, ATVs, and the like. It was the company founder’s outdoorsy spirit—and the same active, adventure-seeking lifestyle enjoyed by its current-day staffers—that sparked Montreal firm Ædifica’s 33,000-square-foot office for the brand, located in a building sited between two of its factories. The angular plan centers around a circular breakout zone the designers term the agora, a gathering point surrounded by greenery. Here, plants trail from ceiling-hung shelves and over the backs of banquette seating-in-the-round, mimicking wild undergrowth, and contrast with the surrounding architectural canvas of black and white, concrete and timber. Glass-enclosed rooms skim the periphery of circulation areas, a buffer between collaborative zones at the core and individual workstations near the windows. Nearby, deep green–painted booths are backdropped by a mural wallcovering depicting a misty, mountainous forest—the same sort of terrain BRP’s snowmobiles traverse daily. —Georgina McWhirter

Optiver by Gary Lee Partners

Occupying 110,000 square feet of One Prudential Plaza, a 41-story tower built in 1955, the global market–making firm’s U.S. headquarters operates 24/7, supporting constant real-time collaboration with offices and teams worldwide. Retrofitting the Chicago high-rise with dedicated backup generators and implementing rigorous, yet seemingly transparent, security protocols were critical to creating the “always open” facility, which accommodates nearly 600 employees. Round-the-clock work schedules mean lighting programs based on circadian rhythm–friendly sequences are crucial in promoting staff health and well-being. Quality of life is further enhanced by bright, open spaces featuring comfortable café and lounge amenities just steps from the trading floor, reflecting Optiver’s hardworking yet casual culture. A grand atrium—a bleacherlike central stair at one end, a double-height media wall at the other—not only connects the two floors but also serves as a community space for interoffice town hall events. It’s no surprise that the project by Gary Lee Partners was an Interior Design Best of Year honoree. —Peter Webster

Benchling by Revel Architecture & Design

This scheme for the San Francisco biotech company’s 105,000-square-foot headquarters speaks volumes without saying a word. “Revel didn’t rely on oversize graphics or catchphrases to convey our brand,” marvels Benchling’s head of workplace and real estate, TJ Cornell. Instead, the design team established a strong sense of identify through subtler means. Take the abstracted riffs on the company mascot, Jeffrey the Jellyfish: the break room’s tentacle-esque rope lighting and reception’s seascape installation by local artist Claudia Bueno, its molded-mesh forms appearing to contract and expand in the glow of ocean-blue light.

Such details—impactful but nonstructural—helped accommodate the tight project timeframe and circumvent the need to go through permitting. So did Revel’s efforts to reuse as much of the existing infrastructure as possible, including converting private offices into huddle rooms, now outfitted with midcentury modern furnishings. Primary interventions entailed new finishes and instating a series of welcoming arched elements throughout, from doorways and niches to mirrors. Pulsing with energy, the redesign fosters connection among nearly 500 hybrid workers, who, according to Cornell, “have embraced the space with pride.” —Lisa Di Venuta

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Shake It Up At This Bold Apartment Complex In The Bronx https://interiordesign.net/projects/maven-apartment-cetra-ruddy-new-york/ Fri, 04 Apr 2025 14:05:24 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251945 CetraRuddy crafts an alluring New York apartment building that stands out for its boldly canted facades, pop-art inflected collages and tribute to hip-hop.

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A yellow wall

Shake It Up At This Bold Apartment Complex In The Bronx

Set alongside the Harlem River in the Bronx, CetraRuddy’s 27-story apartment building Maven stands out for its boldly canted facades, their dynamic stance a reference to the neighborhood, Mott Haven, as the birthplace of hip-hop. Interiors are just as alluring—and just as firmly rooted in place. The open lobby has a building-length gallery wall with color-rich pieces by New York City–based creatives, including graffiti artists Cope2 and CRASH/John Matos and Libby Schoettle, her Shake it Up, a pop art–inflected collage, featuring her cool-kid alter ego PhoebeNewYork. The phrase “life is beautiful,” by Mr Brainwash, sprawls across the faceted reception desk, and the adjacent gallery engages directly with the surrounding neighborhood via the glass curtain wall opposite. Weaving biophilia into the circulation, the rear of the lobby opens to a landscaped garden courtyard, which residents pass by to access elevators. Other perks of the building include a coworking space with sound-attenuated private workstations, a chef’s kitchen with connected screening room, a roof deck with grilling stations, and a pet spa. In all, that’s more than 20,000 square feet of amenities for the 200 units, 60 of which are rent-stabilized.

A yellow wall
A red couch in a room with a painting on the wall
A dining room with a wooden table and chairs
A living room with a blue couch and a blue chair

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Industrial Chic: This Sculptural Building Marries Art And Wine https://interiordesign.net/projects/ktgy-edes-building-california/ Thu, 03 Apr 2025 17:15:46 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251873 The art gallery ideal has long been a white box, but, for the Edes Building in Morgan Hill, California, KTGY was after something different.

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A black building with a large black triangle on the front

Industrial Chic: This Sculptural Building Marries Art And Wine

The art gallery ideal has long been a white box, but, for the Edes Building in Morgan Hill, California, KTGY was after something different. The two-story, 6,800-square-foot structure, which houses both Cura Contemporary, a gallery, and Véra, a wine bar and restaurant, leverages the visual and tactile warmth of wood to enhance the experience of viewing the artworks (and dining on the eatery’s New American dishes). KTGY sought for the mass-timber framework itself to be viewed as sculpture. The carved-away volume clad in shou sugi ban Douglas fir and blackanodized aluminum fins plays with positive and negative space, partly inspired by nearby El Toro peak. The building is raised on a concrete plinth—which integrates steps, an accessible ramp, and planters—to bring it above the floodplain. Inside, in the gallery, fine white-oak millwork meets an airy layout incorporating custom displays and pivoting walls that allow rooms to be combined or separated for exhibitions, events, and workshops. Véra, meanwhile, ups the ante even further with industrial lighting and chic botanic branding based on véraison, the ripening of grapes.

A black building with a large black triangle on the front
A wooden door with a glass door opening
A menu with a picture of a man on it
A long hallway with a large painting on the wall

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Feast At This Dazzling Fine-Dining Landmark on Halifax Harbor https://interiordesign.net/projects/mystic-restaurant-halifax-canada-designagency/ Thu, 03 Apr 2025 17:08:33 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251920 Evoking the maritime terroir of Nova Scotia, DesignAgency adorns Mystic restaurant with a kinetic skin of glossy black-acrylic fins on steel cables.

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The waterfront at dusk with the city skyline in the background

Feast At This Dazzling Fine-Dining Landmark on Halifax Harbor

Mystic, a fine-dining restaurant that is part of a mixed-use complex on Halifax Harbor by MacKay-Lyons Sweetapple Architects, occupies a wedge-shaped building that juts from the land like an iceberg breaking the ocean’s surface. Fascinatingly, a towering 40-foot sculpture appears to pierce the roof: Ned Kahn’s Tidal Beacon, an armature clad in fluttering polycarbonate fins that light up in synchrony with the tide. A similar kinetic skin of glossy black-acrylic fins on steel cables adorns the 75-seat restaurant’s interior wall directly below the sculpture, neatly reiterating its texture and movement. DesignAgency’s decor otherwise evokes the maritime terroir of Nova Scotia. Pine-green banquettes curve around columns sheathed in the same metal that clads the exterior: Muntz, a copper-zinc alloy known for its resistance to corrosion from sea salt. Bouclé-covered chairs cozy up to walls paneled in stacked limestone, wraparound windows engender the sensation of dining directly on the water, and cove lights overhead draw attention to the plaster ceiling, molded into a curvature emulating the underside of a ship’s hull.

The waterfront at dusk with the city skyline in the background
A large room with a lot of green chairs
A kitchen with a marble counter top and a bar
A table with a plate of food on it

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Designing for Good: Elevating Community Service Architecture https://interiordesign.net/projects/elevating-community-service-architecture/ Wed, 02 Apr 2025 14:46:30 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251481 From an established food depository in Chicago to a Saudi Arabian rehabilitation center, these projects by top Giants firms support the public good.

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A lobby with a large chandel and a large chandel
Photography by Gerry O’Leary.

Designing for Good: Elevating Community Service Architecture

From an established food depository and a paradigm-changing healthcare facility in the U.S. to a Saudi Arabian rehabilitation center, these projects by top firms support the public good.

Building Community From The U.S. to Saudi Arabia

Nationwide Children’s Hospital Data Center + Conference + Medical Simulation Facility by Gensler

At Nationwide’s downtown campus, currently undergoing a $12 billion expansion, the pioneering 87,000-square-foot, four-story building in Columbus, Ohio, brings together a data center with enterprise-level computing power, a multipurpose conference facility, and state-of-the-art medical simulation laboratories under one roof. A first-of-its-kind hybrid prototype, it reimagines the traditionally insular data center as a vibrant, community-focused hub for AI-driven healthcare research, education, and innovation. The lower floors host dynamic learning spaces, including a 300-seat meeting room and flexible simulation areas, while the upper levels balance high-security data operations with visual porosity through a custom fritted-glass facade. Encircled by a public plaza and gardens, the building merges technology, training, and accessibility, setting a new standard for healthcare infrastructure.

Almoosa Rehabilitation Hospital by HDR


Comprising two interconnected structures—a three-story rehab center dedicated to various therapeutic programs and a 15-story tower housing inpatient rooms and specialized-care units—the 610,000-square-foot facility aims to break away from the institutional feel of traditional hospitals providing long-term rehabilitation, mental-health, neurology, and sports-medicine services. Inspired by the region of Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia’s landscape, screens adapt parametrically to shade the building, evoking the movement of desert sands. Access to nature is key to healing, so inpatient floors include personalized gardens and green spaces, ensuring this connection for everyone, irrespective of mobility. A varied palette of wood, stone, and glass—plus a two-story slide for staff—help to create an environment that bridges the gap between hospital and hospitality.

The Blake School Early Learning Center by HGA


Conceived to inspire a sense of wonder and joy in its 165 students, prekindergarteners through first-graders, this 35,000-square-foot facility in Hopkins, Minnesota, reflects the Reggio Emilia pedagogical approach, fostering children’s curiosity and creativity through active engagement with their environment. The building itself is a teaching tool, with each of its three levels representing field, forest, or treetops. Biophilic strategies—including mass-timber construction, an organic-based palette, and carefully integrated daylight—help build connections to the natural world, while every classroom has direct outside access, reinforcing indoor-outdoor learning. As Minnesota’s first all-electric, fossil fuel–free school, Blake integrates sustainable practices such as on-site stormwater management, shaping responsible global citizens through climate-conscious design.

Greater Chicago Food Depository by Partners by Design

A 38,000-square-foot expansion allows for increasing food-processing capabilities and moving from direct food donations to prepared meal production. The Chicago facility can now provide more than 30,000 meals per day for vulnerable populations, including older adults, people with disabilities, and those on medically tailored diets. The expansion also includes improved parking for trucks and staff, a hydroponic garden, and a redesigned lobby that fosters a sense of pride and reinforces the mission of the organization, founded in 1979. A focal point in the reception area is a statement fixture by K2 Lighting, inspired by the new GCFD logo, symbolizing growth and inclusivity, while environmental branding by Spark Chicago celebrates donors and the broader community.

Sunnyvale City Hall by SmithGroup

Seamlessly integrating workspaces with the natural environment, the 120,000-square-foot, four-story civic building in Sunnyvale, California, features calm, luminous interiors warmed by the extensive use of wood and brightened by abundant windows, skylights, and terraces. A mass-timber curtain wall of interlocking laminated Douglas fir replaces conventional aluminum mullions while also serving as an interior finish. Rising through all levels, the central stair is both a powerful sculptural element evoking the organic form of a tree and a catalyst for movement and interaction, promoting health and inviting exploration. Achieving this biomorphic aesthetic while meeting stringent seismic standards required innovative engineering and technological ingenuity, including laminating timber into a double-curving top rail and threading wire through the structural steel plate for the handrail light.

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Rockwell Group Reimagines W Hollywood With Theatricality https://interiordesign.net/projects/w-hollywood-hotel-transformation-by-rockwell-group/ Thu, 27 Mar 2025 15:34:21 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251975 Explore how Rockwell Group transforms W Hollywood into a showstopping spectacle with a rich layering of materiality and texture, and high-quality lighting.

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A living room with a large green rug

Rockwell Group Reimagines W Hollywood With Theatricality

Hollywood, the land of dreamers. A magnet for filmmakers, musicians, creatives, moguls, and tourists. The recently renovated W Hollywood hotel at the district’s heart attracts them all while expressing one of the first iterations of Marriott’s evolving luxury brand. Collabo­rating with W since 1998, David Rockwell and team’s latest endeavor encompasses 18,000 square feet of public space and more than 300 guest rooms. Pervasive are residential influences and the rich layering of materiality, texture, and light.

Magic begins at W Hollywood’s triple-height lobby. Frankly sexy, the cinematic lounge features lush deep-green conversation-pit seating that’s sinuously referential to nearby topography and, overhead, an artful assembly of bronze-mirror oval panels and acrylic rods. Spectacular 35-foot-tall concrete “curtains,” seemingly as fluid as fabric, bracket the fireplace. Meanwhile, a wall of bifold glass panels connects the lobby and bar to the garden patio.

Guest rooms, an intimate respite from revelry and scenesters, boast bespoke wraparound seating, wallcovering akin to Venetian plaster, and custom lighting. Ever attentive to the theatrical quality of light, Rockwell surrounded windows with a blue-glass box to pick up reflections of the Hollywood Hills.

A living room with a large green rug
A view of a patio with a table and chairs
A bed sitting next to a couch in a room
A living room with a large green rug

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Inside The Striking Redesign Of Nashville International Airport https://interiordesign.net/projects/nashville-international-airport-redesign/ Wed, 26 Mar 2025 15:00:30 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251573 Fly into Nashville International Airport’s dramatic transformation and take in its suspended sculptural installation and country homages.

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A man walking down a long hallway with colorful ceiling.

Inside The Striking Redesign Of Nashville International Airport

As one of the fastest-growing cities in the U.S., the country-music capital needed to modernize and expand its airport. Corgan developed a phase program to achieve this at Nashville International Airport, with the third stage focused on renovating the terminal lobby and constructing an international arrivals facility—a 4.4 million-square-foot project completed in collaboration with Fentress Architects. By replacing common friction points with open spaces, double-height volumes, and ample natural light, the transformed hub offers travelers a more comfortable and efficient experience. A 50-foot-high glass box creates a dramatic “front door” to the airy lobby, where a wood-slat ceiling, punctuated by narrow skylights, evokes the frets of the city of Tennessee’s trademark: the guitar. A large central oculus suggests a sound hole, completing the musical allusion while illuminating a suspended sculptural installation by Jacob Hashimoto. The cascading assemblage of 9,000 washi paper kites references local iconography, architecture, and natural features, further grounding Nashville International Airport in its regional identity.

A large christmas tree made of glass.
A man walking down a long hallway with colorful ceiling.
A large atrium with a glass ceiling and a staircase.

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Mancini Duffy Elevates Waterfront Workspaces At Hudson Collaborative https://interiordesign.net/projects/mancini-duffy-hudson-collaborative-office/ Fri, 21 Mar 2025 20:36:12 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251912 Explore how Mancini Duffy balances Jersey City’s skyline with privacy for a waterfront office, using hospitality-inspired touches.

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A woman sitting at a table in an office

Mancini Duffy Elevates Waterfront Workspaces At Hudson Collaborative

Jersey City’s spectacular view of Manhattan is a nice perk for employees in its waterfront office buildings. Yet on the 13,450-square-foot amenity floor at 3 Second Street—smack on the Hudson River—Mancini Duffy had to balance the scenery with a need for privacy for the Hudson Collaborative. The firm aimed to preserve natural light and a sense of openness while delineating separate spaces like a lounge, conference center, office suites, and a grab-and-go food shop. The team conceived a dark blue and gray palette that contrasts with the bright exterior, drawing attention to the vistas. Semitransparent partitions include an operable oak-slat wall, open-sided bookshelves, and seating niches carved into public corridors. “The space feels both expansive and intimate,” Mancini Duffy senior associate and project lead Anthony Deen says. Tenants can use it for coworking, meetings, or large events. Such hospitality-inspired details as a woven-metal chandelier, sculptural ceiling baffles, and custom millwork in rift white oak contribute to a cohesive aesthetic throughout.

A woman sitting at a table in an office
A room with a couch, chairs, and a table
A kitchen with a bar and a dining table

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DLR Group Crafts A Cutting-Edge Carbon-Neutral Hub For Swarthmore https://interiordesign.net/projects/dlr-group-swarthmore-college-building-pennsylvania/ Tue, 18 Mar 2025 18:01:09 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251864 DLR Group infuses Swarthmore College’s Dining and Community Commons with sustainability and style, using Northern pine glulam beams to sequester carbon.

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A house with a lot of windows and a lot of windows
Photography by Brad Nicols.

DLR Group Crafts A Cutting-Edge Carbon-Neutral Hub For Swarthmore

Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania is one of many institutions of higher learning that has taken on the ambitious but necessary goal of becoming carbon-neutral within the next decade—even as it expands to accommodate a fast-growing student body. That target was fundamental to the conception of the campus’s 60,000-square-foot dining and community commons building, and guided DLR Group’s choice of mass timber for the structure. The Northern pine glulam beams and CLT elements, built in collaboration with Mid-Atlantic Timberframes, have the unique ability to sequester carbon. Left exposed inside, the framework contributes to a naturalistic vibe that synchronizes with framed views of the surrounding Scott Arboretum, home to 4,000 species of trees and other plants. 

Slate-tile exteriors meet dynamic interior details—custom terrazzo flooring, white-oak booths, cascading pendant globes—to create a welcoming experience for up to 800 diners. Behind-the-scenes sustainability features include rooftop photovoltaic cells and a subterranean geo-exchange system that harnesses renewable energy for campus-wide heating and cooling. It’s a holistic approach that’s great for both student and planet.

A house with a lot of windows and a lot of windows
Photography by Brad Nicol.
A large open space with a long table and chairs
Photography by Robert Benson.
A row of tables and chairs on a patio
Photography by Robert Benson.
A large open space with a long counter and a long counter
Photography by Robert Benson.

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