Grand Celebration
June 6, 2008
 Photo by designed by Perkins+Will | Eva Maddox Branded Environments. (Photos by Hedrich Blessing.)
Holland, Mich.—Haworth's new global headquarters in Holland, Mich.,
is now open for business in more than a strict sense thanks to
abundant glass, ample outdoor views, open floor plates, and an
emphasis on collaboration.
Designed by Perkins+Will | Eva Maddox Branded Environments, One
Haworth Center features a total renovation of 300,000 sq. ft.,
including a new 1,000-sq.-ft. façade and a three-story,
35,000-sq.-ft. glass atrium. "This opening marks a new beginning
for Haworth and for the community," said president and CEO Franco
Bianchi during a grand opening celebration on May 21 that included
a ribbon-cutting ceremony with Haworth chairman of the board Dick
Haworth, USGBC founder and president Rick Fedrizzi, assistant
secretary for manufacturing and services for the United States
Commerce Department Admiral William Sutton, architects from
Perkins+Will, and a range of industry guests. "We built this
building to practice what we preach and challenge how we do
business, and we wanted to do it in a world-class way," noted
Haworth.
Registered for LEED-NC Gold certification, One Haworth Center
features a number of sustainable initiatives. Although the
construction added 20 percent more space, energy consumption as a
whole was reduced by 30 percent. During the deconstruction phase of
the renovation process, more than 98 percent of the old building
was recycled including all but two percent of a total 3,566 yards
of waste. Concrete floors and steel beams were reused, and more
than 321 tons of steel and 12.5 tons of other metals were recycled.
Through a partnership with Aggregate Management, all window glass
from the old building (a total of 9.23 tons) and 3.25 tons of
concrete waste dust from the Haworth Kentwood manufacturing site
were reused in new concrete construction blocks, in turn creating
more than 8,000 blocks for One Haworth Center. In addition, 578,240
lbs. of carpet tiles were recycled by either donation or reuse in
other Haworth facilities.
The new façade, featuring floor-to-ceiling windows, spreads
daylight throughout the building and into the 100-ft.-deep floor
plates, and provides outdoor views for 90 percent of the 800-plus
workstations. The atrium also features a green roof that, at 45,000
sq. ft., is one of the largest modular green roofs in North
America. What's more, the atrium and abundant use of glass are not
only meant to blur the line between indoors and out, but also to
open up the space vertically. Employees at the ground-level café,
for instance, can easily see up through the atrium to third floor
balconies, and entering into the space, visitors are given a clear
view to all three floors.
In organizing the new space, Haworth researched employees'
individual and team work habits to determine how to best cluster
groups in the new floor plan. To further promote a sense of
company-wide openness, previously private offices are outfitted
with floor-to-ceiling glass, and high-level executives like Haworth
and Bianchi are front and center in the mix. Employees, which at
Haworth are dubbed "members," work in various arrangements of
Haworth product across all three floors and among them are product
showcases that allow the entire building to act as a showroom. One
Haworth also includes the first "Innovation Lab" of New York-based
Material ConneXion, featuring large-format materials samples from
Material ConneXion's library with focuses on sustainability,
illumination, processes, and functional surfaces.
While the new design has already made an impression on members and
visitors alike, Bianchi says the biggest impact lies in the
details. "The big elements create the 'wow,' but once that
disappears, the quality of the design remains," he says. "We have a
duty to challenge each other, our competitors, and the way we think
about interiors."
ChetanGrand Celebration
June 6, 2008
 Photo by designed by Perkins+Will | Eva Maddox Branded Environments. (Photos by Hedrich Blessing.)
Holland, Mich.—Haworth's new global headquarters in Holland, Mich., is now open for business in more than a strict sense thanks to abundant glass, ample outdoor views, open floor plates, and an emphasis on collaboration.
Designed by Perkins+Will | Eva Maddox Branded Environments, One Haworth Center features a total renovation of 300,000 sq. ft., including a new 1,000-sq.-ft. façade and a three-story, 35,000-sq.-ft. glass atrium. "This opening marks a new beginning for Haworth and for the community," said president and CEO Franco Bianchi during a grand opening celebration on May 21 that included a ribbon-cutting ceremony with Haworth chairman of the board Dick Haworth, USGBC founder and president Rick Fedrizzi, assistant secretary for manufacturing and services for the United States Commerce Department Admiral William Sutton, architects from Perkins+Will, and a range of industry guests. "We built this building to practice what we preach and challenge how we do business, and we wanted to do it in a world-class way," noted Haworth.
Registered for LEED-NC Gold certification, One Haworth Center features a number of sustainable initiatives. Although the construction added 20 percent more space, energy consumption as a whole was reduced by 30 percent. During the deconstruction phase of the renovation process, more than 98 percent of the old building was recycled including all but two percent of a total 3,566 yards of waste. Concrete floors and steel beams were reused, and more than 321 tons of steel and 12.5 tons of other metals were recycled. Through a partnership with Aggregate Management, all window glass from the old building (a total of 9.23 tons) and 3.25 tons of concrete waste dust from the Haworth Kentwood manufacturing site were reused in new concrete construction blocks, in turn creating more than 8,000 blocks for One Haworth Center. In addition, 578,240 lbs. of carpet tiles were recycled by either donation or reuse in other Haworth facilities.
The new façade, featuring floor-to-ceiling windows, spreads daylight throughout the building and into the 100-ft.-deep floor plates, and provides outdoor views for 90 percent of the 800-plus workstations. The atrium also features a green roof that, at 45,000 sq. ft., is one of the largest modular green roofs in North America. What's more, the atrium and abundant use of glass are not only meant to blur the line between indoors and out, but also to open up the space vertically. Employees at the ground-level café, for instance, can easily see up through the atrium to third floor balconies, and entering into the space, visitors are given a clear view to all three floors.
In organizing the new space, Haworth researched employees' individual and team work habits to determine how to best cluster groups in the new floor plan. To further promote a sense of company-wide openness, previously private offices are outfitted with floor-to-ceiling glass, and high-level executives like Haworth and Bianchi are front and center in the mix. Employees, which at Haworth are dubbed "members," work in various arrangements of Haworth product across all three floors and among them are product showcases that allow the entire building to act as a showroom. One Haworth also includes the first "Innovation Lab" of New York-based Material ConneXion, featuring large-format materials samples from Material ConneXion's library with focuses on sustainability, illumination, processes, and functional surfaces.
While the new design has already made an impression on members and visitors alike, Bianchi says the biggest impact lies in the details. "The big elements create the 'wow,' but once that disappears, the quality of the design remains," he says. "We have a duty to challenge each other, our competitors, and the way we think about interiors."
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