Boston Workplace Interiors

Clario

Workplace Design at the Intersection of Virtual & Physical

Boston Workplace Interiors

Clario

Boston, MA

35,000 SF

the opportunity

Global data and technology company Clario (formerly ERT) engaged KSS to design its Boston workplace, having successfully worked together to reimagine its Philadelphia headquarters and Cleveland office. The KSS team developed design concepts derived from the specific work and/or unique local context of each office location. For the company’s Boston office, which focuses on developing software for gathering and synthesizing patient data during clinical trials, the design team found inspiration in the intersection of the virtual world, represented by Clario’s data cloud, and the physical world, embodied by Boston.

our approach

Considering the physical world at the ground plane, the design references the Emerald Necklace, a 1,100-acre chain of parks linked by parkways and waterways in Boston. A series of neighborhoods connected by paths with branded nodes spread throughout the office, bringing this concept to life. The Hill, situated with views to Boston, acts as a vibrant hub from which energy radiates. Inclusive of the reception area and visible from the elevator bank, the Hill is an outward-facing representation of Clario Boston. Conversely, the Common is an enclosed communal space, a comfortable area for socialization. The third node, the Yard, offers employees an open, relaxed environment conducive to both collaboration and solo work.

In the virtual world, data is often represented through scatter plot graphs. Inspired by this concept, the team overlaid a sample field of points onto the floor plan, using the points to draw a connecting line among the office’s three nodes (important gathering spaces). An abstracted ceiling cloud, created by a suspended hexagonal ceiling tile system, mimics the connecting line, knitting the spaces together and providing wayfinding throughout the office.

Program

Reception, conference rooms, communal areas, workstations, private offices, pantry

>
Photography

Jeffrey Totaro