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Autodesk Offices in Griffintown

Apr 25, 2020

Autodesk

Design: ACDF Architecture

Location: Griffintown, Montréal, Québec, Canada

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

ACDF Architecture, a firm renowned for its use of anamorphic patterns and unusual juxtapositions of materials, is proud to unveil the new offices of Autodesk, situated in the trendy district of Griffintown, bordering downtown Montreal. The 40,360 sf project, comprising two floors of an existing office building, houses 200 Autodesk employees and features a series of offices, meeting rooms, breakout spaces, a game room, a media gallery, and multifunctional event spaces.

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

Tasked with creating a more branded space for the Montreal operations of the globally-renowned company, ACDF drew from within to bring 3D objects from Autodesk’s software programs to life, ensuring maximal workspace efficiency and capturing the essence of the company’s products and people.

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

“It’s always challenging to design with strict spatial requirements within an existing framework,” notes Veronica Lalli, Architect and Project Manager at ACDF. “We were able to meet all of the needs through the strategic placement of objects, using contrasts in colour and form.”

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

A sustainable approach
In approaching the Autodesk project, ACDF focused on being as sustainable as possible in terms of preserving as many of the space’s existing structural elements as they could. The space was scanned in 3D and, using Autodesk’s powerful Revit program, the team conducted in-depth studies of every existing room. By identifying spaces with compatible qualities, ACDF was able to minimize the demolition process. The firm endeavored to preserve partitions that still offered value, while leveraging portions of existing polished concrete floors and white ceilings as a base for their material palette.

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

“We made some of the existing spaces work for them, and then we designed some new spaces that are the heart and soul of the project,” explains Ms. Lalli. “For instance, we were able to preserve a large portion of the enclosed rooms on the main floor, which now serves as their services block, addressing their needs in the space.”

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

Autodesk wanted its services block to be the central anchor of the office’s public space, with numerous informal lounges, whiteboard walls, presentation spaces, and entertainment facilities designed for hosting events surrounding it. In order to create separation between the level’s public spaces and private offices, ACDF added layers of film and branding patterns to the existing window glaze of the latter, ensuring privacy without severing the flow of diffused natural light.

Conceived from within
Conceptually, ACDF’s notion of using of forms and colours was inspired by the core of Autodesk itself. Returning to the company’s flagship product, AutoCad, and the computer-aided design system, they embraced the concept of generating architectural shapes, and then morphing them to create volumes using control points and Autodesk ‘digital modifying commands’. That concept unfolds immediately upon arrival on the 3rd floor of the new offices, where the elevator door serves as a gateway into the reception zone, delineated by black glass finishes, shiny epoxy flooring, a branded backlit screen, and a life-size display screen.

The black ‘scenographic spine’ frames a contrasting white corridor, flanked to the left by a wall of Autodesk working images, and to the right by the frosted glass of the public conference room. The short corridor leads into a gaping purple star, developed through Autodesk software, fitted through edge modifications and control point adjustments, and then built to be larger than life.

Each delineated space has a particular function, with the purple star housing a media gallery to display a wide array of Autodesk’s work, while also serving as a passageway to a multifunctional presentation zone featuring bleachers and a projection screen. In the bleacher zone, an integrated kitchenette and bar enhance the facilities for hosting public events, while a more formal kitchen provides access to an outdoor terrace. While the main kitchen area already existed, ACDF extended it with a hyper-acoustic new game room defined by its abundant natural light and its filleted geometry, creating colourful geometric seating and rounded blue walls and ceiling.

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

Colourful geometric efficiency
Each corridor leads to a different object and colour scheme, with six colour zones in total spread across the two floors.

“The idea was to create a flowing space where, in any corridor, you can turn to objects and colours to reference where you are,” explains Ms. Lalli. “We didn’t want people to find themselves in an unrecognizable spot on the floor plan, not being able to situate themselves, which is something that often happens in open layout offices.”

On the second level, ACDF’s focus shifted to operational efficiency for the bulk of the company’s day-to-day operations. Functionally, Autodesk employees work in small groups and require lots of breakout zones. The firm once again played with geometrical shapes and forms to develop a series of pods that would break up the wide-open space. The strategically placed pods define a series of intimate zones, while maintaining the concept of an open space. Each zone is like an individual neighbourhood, identified uniquely by a shape and colour, and deriving its name from the object that defines it. Carpeting provides a sort of rippling effect, as if each unique object was dropped into the space, with colour patterns that denote transitions from one zone to the next as a wayfinding principle.

To complete the functional separation of each space from its adjacent neighbourhood, and from the surrounding enclosed offices, finishing touches include acoustic natural wool felt wrapped around each geometric pod, resulting in snug casual meeting nooks around the pods. ACDF was able to further isolate the sound of each zone through the preservation of some existing acoustic ceiling tiles, and with the addition of carpeting.

“We were able to create a series of multifunctional spaces that address the client’s needs, while wrapping them in the embrace of a larger branded space,” concludes Veronica Lalli. “Collectively, the spaces capture the essence of what Autodesk is all about.”

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

Autodesk Offices, Griffintown – Building Information

Design: ACDF Architecture

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

About ACDF Architecture
Montreal-based and globally focused, ACDF is one of Canada’s most energetic and exuberant young architecture firms. Over the past nine years, the studio has enjoyed a bold ascent and continues to complete even more ambitious, design-savvy projects on every scale, including commercial, residential, hospitality, interiors and master planning projects. Under the direction of Maxime-Alexis Frappier, Joan Renaud and Etienne Laplante Courchesne, the studio’s work is timeless and highly tailored, with trim lines and intelligent planning. Clever touches add levity – such as anamorphic patterns or unusual juxtapositions of materials that instill a sense of spirit.

The quality of ACDF’s projects has been acknowledged through the recognition of 30 awards and accolades, including a 2010 Canadian Governor General’s Award. Most recently, the ACDF team was granted the prestigious title of Architect of the Year in Canada (40 years and under), awarded by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada. ACDF’s work has also been published worldwide.

Autodesk Offices Griffintown Montreal

Photographer: Adrien Williams

Autodesk Offices in Griffintown, Montréal information / images received 280420 from v2com newswire

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