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Biophilia

Biophilicly Designing Your Way to a Better Home Office

Think about the lives of primordial people to design a great office today.

Biophilicly designed spaces are great places to work. They provide the sorts of environmental support that our minds need to excel, particularly when creative thinking is required.

When people are in biophilicly designed spaces, they feel comfortable in a very fundamental way, one that’s based in the experiences of the earliest humans.

Biophilicly designed spaces replicate (at least conceptually) the features of the sorts of places where our species thrived when it was taking its current form. These are spaces where:

  • Natural light is plentiful during the day, and warmer, dimmer light prevails during the night. When natural light is just not an option or needs to be supplemented, circadian lighting is installed.
  • There is an indoor plant in each view across the space (not more because of visual clutter issues; see the next point).
  • A moderate amount of visual “stuff” is happening in the space; it is not visually cluttered or stark (too little to see stresses us just as much as too much). The number of colors, shapes, and patterns in view factor into the amount of visual complexity present in a space, and so does the apparent order underlying the use of those colors, etc. For user comfort and well-being, the goal is a space with medium levels of visual complexity, like a residential interior designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
  • In temperate zones, windows can be opened to let in fresh air.
  • Curved lines (in two dimensions) and shapes (in three dimensions) prevail.
  • Natural materials, such as wood with visible grain, are in use. Materials that develop a patina (such as copper) or show gentle signs of wear (as leather can) are biophilic design staples.
  • Some water is present, either in a brook seen through a window, an aquarium, or a desktop fountain. In any case, the water needs to be “friendly”—no torrential downpours reminiscent of hurricanes, etc. A controlled fire (for example, one in a fireplace) influences what goes on in our heads just as a water feature does.
  • Nature sounds, like those found in a meadow on a lovely spring day (such as burbling brooks, gently rustling leaves and grasses, and quietly singing songbirds), are present.
  • Some seats feel secure (because, for example, there’s a tall plant behind them, so no one might sneak up from the rear) and have a view out over the nearby world.
  • Curving paths flow through the space; it’s not laid out in a grid reminiscent of military camps that would make Napoleon proud.

Suresh and colleagues (2024) confirm that people are more creative in biophilicly designed offices. They share that the “Biophilia Index has shown a significant positive correlation and a strong predictive value for creativity of employees.” Biophilic index scores are higher, for example, when natural light, curves, water (seen and/or heard), plants, and representations of nature are present than when they are not.

References

Sandra Suresh, Dharmendra Kumar-Singh, and Narshingh Kumar. 2024. “Exploring the Influence of Biophilic Workplace Design on Employee Creativity: A Comparative Study.” International Journal of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, vol. 50, https://doi.org/10.55863/ijees.2024.0166

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