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French architect presents ‘joie de vivre’ offices

By Korea Herald

Published : April 14, 2013 - 19:35

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MILAN (AFP) ― French architect Jean Nouvel presented what he called “joie de vivre” offices at Milan Design Week, telling AFP in an interview that he was waging war against “cloned and alienating” work spaces.

Nouvel’s project is called “Office for Living” and is one of the highlights of the annual furniture fair.

“It’s terrible because we have the impression of working in worlds where you are just a number,” said Nouvel, 67, sitting in a space he created as the marketing office of Ducati motorbikes.

“Everyone is in the same type of space, everyone has the same furniture. It’s cloning,” said Nouvel, who won the prestigious Pritzker prize in 2008 ― considered the “Nobel” for architecture.

Nouvel complained that one of the problems of modern cities was “zoning” which creates distinct areas for residential and office space and lengthens journey times to and from work.

“In 30 or 40 years, we will be amazed to remember the unliveable conditions proposed by most offices today,” said Nouvel, whose signature projects include the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris.

Nouvel is also the designer behind Copenhagen’s Concert Hall, the Quai Branly Museum in Paris and an extension to the Queen Sofia Museum in Madrid.

Nouvel was speaking in a large loft space at the fair with undulating cloth walls, intended to demonstrate what a transformation of a hangar or an industrial warehouse could look like.

It is one of five exhibition spaces set up by Nouvel throughout the fair, including an office in a converted 19th-century apartment and an open-plan office arranged to avoid what a booklet described as “the usual totalitarian and repetitive nature of office systems.”

“We’re not all little chickens at a chicken farm. The issue is how to lighten up, how to consider the time we spend at work a pleasure too,” Nouvel said.

“We can work anywhere today and we have to work anywhere. And we can live everywhere. ... “We spend a lot longer at work than at home,” he said.