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Too Much Information: Noise and Communication in an Open Office

Author(s):
Medium: journal article
Language(s): English
Published in: Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, , n. 4, v. 82
Page(s): 449-466
DOI: 10.1525/jsah.2023.82.4.449
Abstract:

Noise was among the most contested issues in the large open offices that proliferated after World War II in Europe and North America. The “landscape” offices that developed out of the German Bürolandschaft movement were known for large floor plates filled with misaligned desks. They were meant to improve employees’ communication, but their acoustic design prompted worker anxieties about distraction and diminishing privacy. While early remediation efforts sought to quiet offices, in the 1960s designers began adding random, unintelligible noise to mask distractions and arranging employees according to their expected sound levels. This shift from eliminating noise to embracing it as a space-defining element reflected a powerful new acoustic paradigm. The Bürolandschaft movement waned in the 1970s, but the judicious spatial deployment of noise remains an invaluable technique as designers consider how architecture can help or hinder communication and collective intellectual activity.

Structurae cannot make the full text of this publication available at this time. The full text can be accessed through the publisher via the DOI: 10.1525/jsah.2023.82.4.449.
  • About this
    data sheet
  • Reference-ID
    10748514
  • Published on:
    14/01/2024
  • Last updated on:
    14/01/2024
 
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