Work Culture
Identity|September 2017

Pallavi Dean rethinks the contemporary work space with her chic design for Edelman’s Abu Dhabi headquarters.

Joanne Molina
Work Culture

While others debate the virtue of open office spaces, Dubai-based interior designer Pallavi Dean has forged her own innovative path with Edelman’s Abu Dhabi office. Vibrant and distinctive, its design is alive with a choreography that fuses individual impact and community cohesion.

Dean’s design concept was modelled on the idea of ‘cultural villages’, the distinct little neighbourhoods that help make up great cities – such as Soho and the Upper West Side in NYC. Each neighbourhood has its own unique personality, people and purpose – yet they’re all linked by a common thread.

This created a framework in which Dean could create a bold, nuanced space and speak to the ethos and practical needs of her client, a firm that also consists of a series of distinct units such as public relations, digital and experiential – each with their own unique characteristics, yet integrated into a greater whole.

There are many details the casual observer might overlook. “It’s the underlying narrative of the design – the concept of cultural villages that create distinct work zones. Although the work zones have their own identity they are threaded together by one sweeping architectural statement – the sculptural wooden ribbon that runs through the entire floor plate. The office is peppered with local context, including the palm stools in the one-on-one meeting areas, which are by Emirati designer Khalid Shafar; and the arabesque pattern in the lights and the carpet, designed by Cecilia Setterdahl, a local studio in d3,” explains Dean.

The design’s most prominent feature was also its challenge: linearity. The designers solved this problem by drawing on research from environmental psychology.

This story is from the September 2017 edition of Identity.

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This story is from the September 2017 edition of Identity.

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