“The Connection” in Gross Hall’s Social Science Research Institute includes a cafe with free coffee and afternoon cookies, study tables and sofa chairs, and writable glass walls and whiteboards.
glass walls and whiteboards, which allow people to “linger in the space and exchange ideas,” Nechyba said. The nearby Gross Hall atrium pulls in natural light from big ceiling windows, and chairs and tables are situated around rectangular space for studying and meetings. “It has fundamentally changed the organization,” Nechyba said.
vision for an open workspace; Duke Facilities Management responded with a large-scale demolition, and the drywall partitions were pulled out of the Erwin Mill space to create a large room. Today, natural light filters in from original textile mill windows onto a small kitchen and a modern purple couch facing a flatscreen TV. Computer workstations flank a white rectangular worktable, and the space is covered with commissioned artwork depicting interpretations of behavioral economics topics. “You don’t feel like you’re bothering anyone when you just walk up to their desk,” said lab manager Aline Grüneisen. “There’s no pressure to constantly be at your desk.”
Design elements honor historic Duke Most days, Holly D’Addurno will prop open the double glass doors of the Duke Cancer Center’s Resource Center, allowing beautiful piano music played by volunteers to reach her ears. On the ground floor of the Cancer Center, D’Addurno, director of Cancer Patient Education, helps patients research diagnoses and treatments.
Removing the cube farm The home of the Center for Advanced Hindsight is part playroom, part art exhibit, part living room and lab space, where about 25 researchers spend odd hours studying human behaviors. As the center uses the power of hindsight to explain the present, from dissecting healthcare issues to studying dating behaviors, hindsight was also used to plan its current workspace. The play-art-living-lab room in Bay C of the Erwin Mill building was designed in 2011 with bright color and open space in mind to encourage researchers to share project information with each other. “We have lots of people who do things that are related, but not exactly, on the same project, and imagine multiple people running studies,” said Duke professor Dan Ariely, director of the Center for Advanced Hindsight. “How do you help them see if there are opportunities to do things at the same time that would benefit everybody?” The center moved from the basement of Duke’s Fuqua School of Business four years ago, when the researchers worked in cubicles that didn’t accommodate group brainstorm sessions. Ariely led the
Duke’s Center for Advanced Hindsight uses its modern living room space for team meetings.
The lobby of Duke Cancer Center was designed to resemble more of an upscale hotel than a medical building.
Employees and patients enjoy the Cancer Center’s open ground floor lobby, from the atrium’s natural light to the café. The Cancer Center, which opened in 2012, incorporates design elements that honor historic Duke, such as floor patterns modeled after Duke Chapel’s stained glass windows and the atrium’s feature wall hinting at the Chapel arches. Even with historic ties, patients describe the lobby as a modern, upscale hotel. Adjacent to the front help desk is a fireplace and area rugs spotted with living room furniture. “There’s so much more interaction with people, with people at the front desk and transporters and security,” D’Addurno said. Greg Warwick, Duke University’s Medical Center architect, said the open, high-traffic areas are strategically planned to give patients, families and employees a place to comfortably meet or relax. “If the route to a destination can be made useful and pleasant, we are making quality environments in an economical way,” Warwick said. “We get more value out of the space we built.” n By April Dudash
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