Friday, 9 May 2014

Creating the Perfect Picture Wall

Creating a montage of photos can be a bit tricky to figure out where to start and then how to balance the sizes and layout. We do it a lot for our clients and find the below guides are really effective. These creative ideas are a great resource to use to give you a starting point.  Once you get arranging, expand or tweak the layout to fit the photos you have.


Tips to create a photo display wall

- The centre of your photo display wall should be at eye level (between 60″ – 66″)
- Use similar frames or matting, or display all colour or all black & white photos
- Vary the frame sizes
- Introduce a focal point
- Mix it up – display photos as well as signs and other unique wall decor
- Before putting nails into the wall, layout all your pictures on the floor and move things around until your arrangement is exactly how you want it!  Then hang them one by one onto the wall

Friday, 4 April 2014

Is Your Open Office Noisy? Here are 7 fun noise-reducing ideas

Open offices have proved a beneficial strategy to improve collaboration and innovation and are unlikely to disappear. But the effectiveness of an open office is not absolute for every employee. Rather than designing to the lowest common denominator, tweaks in office furniture and design can turn any space into an employee’s comfort zone.

Noise distractions are one of the biggest drains on productivity in today’s open office. However, reducing office noise doesn’t have to mean quashing the creative open-office vibe by throwing up walls and separating people.



The furniture manufacturers who first invented the open office – creating a new world order for both introverts and extroverts – have responded to the noise issue with a variety of furniture solutions. Keilhauer Talk and BuzziHub offer semi-private lounge groupings without the cost of building hard walls.
Want to work alone? Vitra’s Workbay is like an old-fashioned study carrel made from thick polyester fleece. And although it may look like the hair-dryer chair your grandmother used at her salon, the privacy of the Massaud Lounge with canopy is worth the retro look. The canopy’s design helps reduce visual and audible distractions, and it comes with LED lighting and can even host mobile devices.



What happens in the open office when you need to make that private phone call? There are several stand-up phone booth options like Era’s Nautilus. This freestanding unit with striking, large horizontal stripes can be easily placed anywhere.



OFS makes a more architectural statement with its Jux Group Refuge. This giant wooden box creates a private enclave with different options for individual or collaborative work.



Offecct makes several acoustical products, including sound absorbent wall panels in a variety of patterns and colors (even hot pink). They can be mounted directly to a wall to make bold visual patterns and textures, and there’s even a wall planter insert. Or try hanging acoustical baffles such as Sound Silencer or thick industrial felt panels from the ceiling to create a sculptural element.



Want to reduce noise and divide a room? BuzziBlind looks like giant freestanding vertical blinds, and Offecct makes a couple simple freestanding screens like Soundwaver.

While most of these strategies concentrate on sound-attenuation and individualized space, on the other end of spectrum is music. Believe it or not, allowing employees to be the DJ through overhead music sound systems helps establish a company culture. Sure, people may not like every song that is played, but creating an eclectic and employee-driven playlist establishes an energy that can build camaraderie and drive productivity. It can also break the deafening silence that more sterile spaces produce. 

Try setting some general music category suggestions, like classical or acoustic in the morning and mid-tempo music in the afternoon — then let them loose after 4 p.m.

Admittedly, not every office will have the personality to pull off some of these ideas. If not, managers can still bring some control to the open space by investing in good sound-maskingtechnology. 

Also called white noise, sound masking is actually quite effective at reducing ambient noise by emitting a sound spectrum that covers noise over 15-20 feet away. Unlike noise produced by mechanical systems that produce an uneven sound spectrum, sound-masking systems can be automated to adjust to changing noise levels and designed to respond to specific acoustical qualities of a space.

Thursday, 13 February 2014

10 Bizarre Objects Found in 'Cool' Offices

As we continue to work with an ever growing range of clients we are excited that we are being asked to design more creative and imaginative offices. Companies, particularly in the creative or tech industries, are desiring offices that look more like adult playgrounds than a place of work, in the hope that it will make their employees more creative.

It's a trend that started in the US, with basketball hoops and jelly bean machines cropping up in creative offices. Having a fun environment, they believe, will help spark conversations and collaboration, encourage people to be playful and, crucially, generate great ideas. It will also impress clients and help with talent retention and recruitment.

Google recently released early design plans for its new UK headquarters in King's Cross that included a climbing wall between floors, a swimming pool and a running track on the roof. It withdrew the plans shortly after, saying it wanted to challenge itself to be even more ambitious.

With that in mind here are our top 10 ‘cool’ design ideas from the UK.

Woodland retreat (BBA AVIATION)


BBA Aviation’s head quarters situated on Wigmore Street London provide specialist on-airport support services to the owners and operators of business and commercial aircraft. When Hi Design created the new offices the goal was to create a woodland breakout oasis in the middle central London. With the clever use of graphic wallpaper, wood finishes and glass paneling Suki Shocker of Hi Design provided staff a place to relax with nature and feel refreshed after a not so inner city lunch break.

A slide (Ticketmaster)



Earlier this year, US firm Ticketmaster opened the doors to its new overseas head office in London. The ticket sales company designed the office to prioritise socialising. Its standout feature is a metal slide that staff can take to reach the bar area, where table football, a jukebox and pinball machines await.

Playfulness is a vital part of creativity, says Matt Kingdon, co-founder of an innovation consultancy that styles itself ?What If! and author of The Science of Serendipity. But he adds "the way to trigger this is not an indoor slide. It is much better to create a space or opportunities that encourage colleagues and different teams to bump into each other. This is more likely to trigger thinking that challenges the status quo."

But Bridges says the impact of a playful environment can be helpful: "If a space gives you permission to have fun and enjoy yourself, that is more likely to make you creative than a stiff formal situation."

Disco tunnel (Karmarama)


Coming into work through a "disco tunnel" might be calculated to dissipate Monday morning blues. Advertising agency Karmarama also has a collection of strange objects inside its offices including a huge red Buddha, a VW camper van and a life-sized plastic llama.

A recent study at the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota suggests that these wacky offices could help people be creative as researchers. It found that people working in orderly environments were more likely to conform to expected behaviours.

One of the report's authors, assistant professor of marketing Joe Redden, says, "Our work supports the notion that funky offices aid creativity. The key idea is that a non-conventional office supports non-conventional thinking. One of the challenges in being creative is to break out beyond the typical way of thinking... A less organised office helps people do this."
There is a scientific excuse for a messy desk after all.

Grass floor not a glass ceiling (Innocent Drinks)


The entire office floor at Innocent is made of fake grass, even under the desks. The main kitchen area is filled with natural light, bunting and benches for people to sit together. There is also a cosy reading corner with a selection of books.

Innocent's environment manager Charlie Heavey says that while there are tea stations on every floor, "there is only one kitchen area so everyone has the opportunity to mix with everyone else - we were very particular about the layout of the building because we wanted to encourage interaction".

Picnic benches - Duke Studios


Like Innocent Drinks, Leeds-based Duke Studios has an outdoors feel to its interior. The co-working space was founded by a photographer and interior designer who disliked other office spaces offered in the city. Inspired by Google and Pixar, they created their dream office last year, which now houses 42 small creative businesses. The pair made the office open-plan to ensure people spoke to each other, and have a strict application process to maintain its open culture.

"The benefit of talking to other people is that you are exposed to ideas you wouldn't otherwise have come across," says co-founder James Abbott-Donnelly. "Networking with other people requires extra effort, and that doesn't come naturally to most people. We have engineered a space where people will meet each other in an informal way without the need for name badges and handshakes."

An indoor sky (Virgin Money)


Virgin Money's Edinburgh operation centre has an eye-catching sky painted on its ceiling. The new layout secured an award from the British Council for Offices.

The theory is that staring up at the clouds is likely to have a beneficial effect on creativity. Bridges says that to be really creative, a person needs to use their unconscious mind to work on a problem.

A wooden treehouse (Mind Candy)


Mind Candy, the company behind children's game Moshi Monsters, has an office that encourages employees to think like its customers. It is based at the Silicon Roundabout at London's Old Street and has a wooden treehouse and gingerbread house as meeting rooms, a colouring-in wall and quiet areas that look like hobbit holes.

Thinking like a child can aid creativity because it means people question the norm, says Now Go Create's founder Claire Bridges, who advises companies like Pret A Manger on how to be more creative. "Much of creativity is about risk-taking and pushing boundaries. A child will always ask 'why' and this mindset can be helpful when coming up with original ideas," she says.

A padded cell (Wieden + Kennedy)


 Ever felt so frustrated at work that you want to scream? Employees at advertising agency Wieden + Kennedy have a green leather padded cell at their disposal. MD Neil Christie says the cell was installed after someone told his creative director Tony Davidson, "The way you carry on, you should be in a padded cell." Workers there suggest that as well as being an offbeat fixture, it also turned out to have great acoustics for conference calls.

One huge desk (Mother London)


There are no teacher's pets at advertising agency Mother. Every member of the agency sits at the same huge concrete desk that spreads throughout its space in Shoreditch's Tea Building.
This helps staff to talk to each other and removes hierarchies.

Kingdon says that being exposed to unusual or unanticipated thoughts can help increase creativity, particularly ideas that might not initially sound particularly sensible. "Bumping into someone that you haven't seen for a while is one of the best ways of colliding different strands of thinking," he says.

Beach huts (Man Bites Dog)


PR agency Man Bites Dog has been inspired by its Brighton location. Its office has a full-length indoor pier, its meeting rooms are beach huts and one of them is decorated to look like a forest.


Managing director Claire Mason says it would be easy to dismiss the decor as a gimmick, but argues: "If we look at hard performance measures such as staff retention, engagement, productivity, quality of work and team satisfaction with their workplace, then it's a clear winner."

Friday, 24 January 2014

Designing the Perfect Casino




As we have just ventured out into the world of casino interior design we thought we would share our findings on what makes a casino not only great but profitable and a successful business. It seems there is more than meets the eye to the world of gambling finishes.

Here are our top 5 design considerations.



1.  What Time Is It Mr. Wolf?
There is always a distinct lack of clocks….and windows.  So you have no clue what time it is, whether it’s day or night outside, what the weather is like or if there is something more interesting happening outside.  It is a cocoon in which the concept of time becomes irrelevant.  At hotels & casinos like The Venetian and Paris in Las Vegas they take things a stage further by manipulating the lighting to represent different times of day.  At The Venetian they literally reversed the time of day i.e. in the mornings the indoor painted sky and street lights had an evening feel whilst in the evenings it looked like mid morning.  It’s amazing how strong an effect it has, and clients really do lose the sense of time.



2. Show Me The Way To Go Home
Signage is purposefully poor.  Access to most areas of a casino involves walking through the gambling areas.  They just don’t want you to retire or have a rest in an area that doesn’t involve spending money.  With this in mind most casinos are completely devoid of casual seating for just relaxing.  There are plenty of comfy seats at slot machines, games tables, bars and restaurants…..but hardly any ‘free seating’. There is literally no rest for the wicked!



3. The Sweet Smell Of Success
Research shows that people spend 50% more time playing slot machines when a casino is perfumed with a floral aroma than if it just smells like a regular casino.  And the stronger the scent, the longer people gamble. Floral aromas are calming and people should feel relaxed and what to stay in the environment even if they are not on a winning streak.



4. Totally Floored
The layouts used in casinos are rarely ‘open’.  Firstly this helps to disguise if the casino isn’t very busy as this sends negative messages to potential gamblers. Also if you could see the whole casino from the entrances then you wouldn’t feel the same need to explore what the casino has to offer…you’d be able to see everything without stepping foot on the swirly-whirly carpets.  Smaller, more intimate clusters of gambling areas probably make people feel safer and less ‘on show’ and no doubt this sense of privacy encourages gamblers to take bigger risks or gamble for longer.  Plus if a casino was open plan with an obvious walkway right through the middle then basic psychology predicts that people wouldn’t step off the designation path to casually explore the gambling areas. This technique is also used in department stores.. see for yourself next time you are in John Lewis or Selfridges.

Flooring plays an integral role in the management of traffic and behavior in casinos.  Studies show that the carpets are purposely designed to be very ‘busy’ and a strain to the eyes and brain in order to force you to look up towards the slots machines and games tables, which is where they really want your attention to be focused!  Some research claims that curvaceous/rounded designs are more relaxing for gamblers than angular geometrics and there are even claims that carpets with rainbows in the design make gamblers feel lucky!



5. Music To My Ears
Casinos are noisy places,  the slot machines are constantly making their electronic plinky-plonk sounds effects, gamblers cheer with delight and groan with disappointment, casino chips are stacked and swept away and music drifts through all areas. The noisiness serves several purposes…it keeps gamblers stimulated and alert which combats tiredness. The cheery noises from the slot machines suggest that someone somewhere is winning and by inference that you could win big too!  The atmospheric music that is piped everywhere is often on a loop and after a while it becomes reassuringly familiar. 

So it seems when it comes to the design of a casino there is not just the ascetics to be considered but the psychological desires of wanting to stay, play and be in a place of enjoyment. We can't wait to show you our designs..  so watch this space!



Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Art - More than a Framed Picture




We firmly believe that creativity breeds creativity, and when it comes to the working environment, people are affected by their workspace far more than they may realise. As most of us spend more waking hours in the workplace than anywhere else, we should be making our office spaces as inviting as possible.

It seems daft then that so many offices are boring, drab environments, matching grey with grey. If employers want their workers to remain motivated and productive, surely they should be creating working spaces to reflect that?



For many, changing the physical layout of the office just isn't an option, cost being a major restriction. But there is a simple way to instantly lift the atmosphere of a space and that is art. Art that looks great, that is interesting and stimulating, around your office is a great way to inspire creativity within a workspace.

The environment around us fundamentally influences how we perform and how we spend our time. The happier people are in the workplace, the more likely they are to stay there. People appreciate their employers caring about their wellbeing. Investing time in creating a stimulating environment, of which art can be a significant element, is important for employer and employee.
And this isn't just opinion; research has also shown that staff work 15% more efficiently in an office decorated with art and plants and when staff decorated their own office space, productivity increased by 30%.



Bringing art that reflects your company's brand and culture is a great way to subtly tell that story to everyone who visits your office. It can be a handy ice breaker in meetings. It can also add character to companies who perhaps aren't traditionally viewed as 'fun' industries by bringing the office to life. We like to add art that has relevance to the buildings and surroundings, which may draw from local historic landmarks, produce or the local sporting teams.



Colour is also important in creating the desired feel within a space. If chosen purposefully it can help to influence mood and behaviour. A piece of art is a way to even more powerfully encourage a specific emotional state. Art shouldn't be something that is confined to a gallery it should be something that we welcome into our daily lives to inspire creativity. What better time to come into contact with art than when we are trying to be productive and come up with new ideas at work.


As well as designing new offices we are increasingly being asked to freshen up uninspiring workplaces. With in-house artists and photographers Hi design are more than experienced to help you achieve a stimulating office environment. Get in touch to see if we can help you.

Monday, 28 October 2013

Creating a Productive Home Office

Over the last 24 hours Briton has seen its biggest storm in recent years forcing many workers to work from home due to transport difficulties. Working from home is common in the new digital world - we can access all of our files from anywhere in the world but are we creating the right working environment in our homes.  Here is our guide on how to create the perfect & productive home office.




1. Good lighting is one of the most important aspects of good work space design. If you have good natural sunlight, fantastic, but make sure you don’t have a glare on your computer screen. Choose a statement desktop lamp to reduce eye-strain. A lack of natural light can have effects on your health, leading to a diminished immune system, diabetes and premature ageing. 

2. Make sure you have the right chair and your computer is at the correct height. Hours spent bent over a coffee table or in an uncomfortable chair can lead to serious health issues. 

3. Blue is often used to decorate home offices because research has shown that people are more productive in blue rooms. Break it up with solid wood and a splash of red if you are a creative or neutrals if you are a strategist. 

4. Limited space in the work environment is often an issue so de-clutter yourdesk. Remove unnecessary paperwork, catalogues, files and other office paraphernalia. A clear desk can make us feel much better about our accomplishments. In particular, think ‘Feng Shui Friday’ and clear up before the weekend so you can start your Monday afresh — this works for the inbox too! 

5. Floors in your work space also need to be considered carefully. Although the look is important, your floors also need to be practical. Not only do wooden floors look great they can be ideal if you have a wheelie chair. However a rug can break the space if you’re trying to encourage different thinking in different zones.

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Office Design that Boosts Productivity

If you have ever tried to work in a messy, disorganised space, you will appreciate the importance of order and design in the office.

“Work space setup and decoration is directly connected to employee productivity,” said Susan Whittle, Director or Hi Design“I’m aware that hiring a professional interior designer is sometimes beyond the budget of many small companies, but there are steps these companies can take in trying to optimise workplace productivity."



Here is Susan’s top tips that is simple and effective.

  • Allow the shape, size and operational demands of your office to dictate what you do to the design.. not the other way round.
  • Allow employees to collaborate when making design decisions in the workplace. Happy, comfortable employees will be more productive than frustrated and uncomfortable employees.
  • Companies do not need to make big changes, because even small elements such as sound control and lighting can make a big difference to work space design and employee productivity.
  • When it comes to lighting, try to keep it as close to natural light as possible by using compact fluorescent bulbs, LED lighting or natural lighting fixtures.
  • Pay attention to ergonomics. At the end of a long day, employees’ backs and necks can ache. Investing in desks and computer screens at appropriate heights is a simple way to eliminate this, as are good chairs.
  • Design work spaces around the way work is performed in those spaces. Open office spaces can work great but make sure you have enough spaces for quieter or private meetings.
  • Be aware that colour plays an important role. Green makes people feel refreshed so we use it often in brakeouts. Red and blue are considered to have motivational qualities. Reds and oranges increase energy levels and yellows will induce happiness. In general, bright colours will boost both morale and productivity.


Productive interiors can be achieved in many working environments on varying budgets. We have helped many companies achieve a more productive environment that appeals to both their staff and clients. If you need help creating your perfect interior we would love to help!