Two Saatchi & Saatchi employees stroll down the meandering path of the 80,000 SF Los Angeles office. They pass breathtaking interior architecture that establishes buildings within a building. Plants and wooden furniture add warmth to the vast space.

Cultivate the idea.

Great ideas, like beautiful flowers, require the safety of a germination process before sprouting and blooming. The design for the new Southern California office for Saatchi & Saatchi protects and celebrates ideas through their development in a metaphorical garden of diverse spaces connected via a meandering path.

As we dove into Saatchi & Saatchi’s world and learned about how their teams developed projects it became clear that the creatives needed a safe space to build and break and re-build ideas and concepts before formally pitching to their project leads. The “idea” became its own constituent in the project - something to be considered spatially and solved for specifically. Whenever a design decision needed to be made, we returned to the question: “what is in the best service to protect the idea?”.

Our primary Client shared a desire to create a new home for the agency that supported exploration and fostered curiosity. The meandering path provides views across open “fields” (neighborhoods) and links up a series of protective seed pods (project areas / rooms) for safe and hidden idea generation; and garden walls to define the crops and showcase / pin-up the harvest. Apertures and strategic wayfinding allow the project to unfold rather than revealing itself all at once.

SAATCHI & SAATCHI

LOCATION
El Segundo, California

SIZE
80,000 SF

SCOPE
Architecture
Interior Design
Furniture Design
Lighting Design
Environmental Graphics
Interior Landscape Design

PHOTOGRAPHY
Bruce Damonte

This interior shot depicts the astounding architecture within the space. Dangling light bulbs hang from the ceiling providing a whimsical ambiance. Stools are stationed at the island table of a small pantry.
Four concept images of purple flowers span the width of the webpage. The pictures show the flower’s response to darkness. Their petals open during the day and close during nightfall.

Nyctinasty is the circadian rhythmic nastic movement of higher plants in response to darkness. The plant sleeps. 

The warehouse shell provided its own inspiration. Originally developed in 1966 and designed by LA- based designer Craig Ellwood, the building features steel trusses at an industrial-scale. As a single level, 80,000 SF space with meandering circulation we knew we needed to ground the design with bold architecture that would act as orienting reference points throughout the journey. The creation of curated pods – the buildings within the building – in a range of scales, locations and orientations establishes the path through the space.

These spaces provide the settings for this community of creatives to meet, discuss, collaborate and advance the content that drives Saatchi and their clients’ business. The team also wanted to ensure that the sense of safety extended beyond idea creation and into the workforce. With a beautifully diverse population it was important that the project reflected Saatchi’s strong culture and values of inclusivity.

It’s rare for a project team to be led by women representing the Client, the Architect and the Contractor. This unique collaboration fostered a distinctly human response to space, with an emphasis on warmth, comfort and moments of sparkle and delight. The architectural language was divined as a ‘love letter to LA’, mixing clean modern boxes and a dose of mid-century modern. The completed design is simultaneously current and timeless.

Saatchi’s prior office served them for over 30 years and we hope this project will have a similar lifespan. Built to withstand the test of time and promote a healthy work environment, Saatchi’s new LA office is an inspirational space that fosters the creativity and collaboration needed to produce world-class work. While no one really knows what a post-COVID office will entail, what we do know is human connection will still be central to Saatchi’s creative process and company culture. Their space has the flexibility to embrace the future needs of a modern workforce and remain supportive of its individuality, productivity and, most importantly, wellness.

The trees frame the entrance to Saatchi's front doorway with leaves, while a potted plant sits atop the granite side of the front desk. A record player rests on the side table.
Picture frames of various shapes and sizes hang on the library wall, showcasing Saatchi employee pets. Books occupy the wooden shelves, while the art and furniture in the room add coziness. A Game of Thrones POP figurine lay whimsically on a shelf.
An interior shot of Saatchi’s all-hands space is displayed. The room is furnished with couches and chairs in different shades of gray alongside posh throw pillows and cushions. Some employees mingle, while others work independently.
A Saatchi employee passes a row of desks, chairs, and a west coast themed mural on his journey down the office’s meandering path. The mural is on the sidewall of one of the buildings within a building.
Square skylights illuminate the coral booth and yellow chairs beneath them. Black light fixtures hang horizontally, arching over the black circular tables. A wooden table and stools are positioned in front of a wide window.
A concept graphic displays the elevation of auditorium sightlines.
The wooden bleacher-like seating of the cafe reveals itself. A wall with a trapezoid outline atop its green textured tiles acts as a partition between the cafe and the coffee bar. Ropes are threaded stylishly throughout the shape.
The auditorium is filled with chairs adherent to Saatchi’s brand colors, while numerous whiteboards hang on the walls for creative collaboration. Thin lines of brilliant light shine from the recessed fixtures in the ceiling.
 

Orient your place. Get in touch.

 

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