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Designing for Present and Future Needs
A
Well-Planned Office Building Raises the Profile of an Exeter Investment
Firm
Gary
Bean was faced with many of the same decisions that confront new home
buyers when he began planning the design of his new office building in
Exeter. His challenge lay in assessing his current needs and also planning
for offices that would allow his company to expand.
Bean,
who is president of Gary Bean Securities Inc., says a key element of the
design centred on incorporating areas that could be transformed into
offices as his staff grew. One challenge lay in determining the position
of office furniture which, in turn, had a bearing on where the electrical
and data connections would be located.
“When
you’re planning for offices that don’t exist, it’s harder still,” Bean
notes.
Functional space was at the top of his list of priorities, particularly
since the company had been located for 19 years in a smaller renovated
house on Exeter’s main street. While the existing rooms of the house had
been adapted to the company’s needs, there was a lack of privacy for
clients meeting with their advisers and a need for more functional
workspace for employees.
Bean
particularly wanted clients to feel comfortable coming to the office. It
was also important to him that the new building fit into its small-town
surroundings.
“It’s
hard to take an investment office that would be suitable for the city of
London or Toronto – it would not necessarily fit here in Exeter,” he says.
Bean
consulted several designers before settling on Oke Woodsmith Building
Systems of Hensall. Brad Oke, a partner in the family-owned company,
created a square two-storey building, faced with stone and stucco, that
imparts a sense of agelessness. Enormous cambered windows soften the
building’s linear lines.
Although Bean wanted a rugged exterior for his building, he relied on Oke
to interpret his vision. He particularly wanted a simple design with
high-quality materials.
“I
found it was very easy to work with Brad,” Bean observes.
The
5,900-square-foot building features a steel tiled roof that reflects
Bean’s preference for a maintenance-free exterior. The building is
constructed of Insulated Concrete Forms (ICF), which maximize energy
efficiency and eliminate road noise.
“The
ICF is 300 per cent quieter,” Oke says.
Bean
decided to heat the building with radiant in-floor heating for comfort and
the fact dust is virtually eliminated. With its even floor-to-ceiling
temperature, the heat system has reduced employee illness, says Suzanne
Mathers, company controller.
“I
think people are healthier and I think people are happier coming here –
they’re able to work in an area that is their own instead of a transient
workspace,” she adds.
Inside,
Oke borrowed many features from heritage financial institutions, including
an impressive ash staircase that sweeps, on two sides, from the two-storey
reception area up to the second floor. Flanked on each side by curved
railings, the staircase leads to an open reading area with great expanses
of gleaming hickory engineered floors. The reading area is tastefully
decorated with leather furnishings and fitted with built-in bookcases.
Light
throughout the second floor is cleverly conveyed through the strategic
positioning of windows. A staff lunchroom and a large conference room face
each other across the staircase with an enormous fixed window in each room
that provides a view of the front foyer.
At one
end of the building, an area that is now used for storage will be divided
into two offices – each with its own window – for future staff members.
At the
opposite end, Bean’s office combines several functions, including a
comfortable work station and a client conference area. The office also
incorporates a private two-piece washroom and a recessed balcony with
tempered glass railings that overlooks a park-like setting below. The
earth tones that form the interior colour scheme carry through to Bean’s
office where a combination of slate blue and linen-coloured walls form a
subtle backdrop to rich cherry furnishings.
Downstairs, directly behind the front foyer, a mailing area with storage
for office supplies connects the front of the building to individual
offices, workstations and a boardroom. Throughout the building, tray
ceilings, crown mouldings and heavily grained ash trim create a tailored
interior, paired with comfortable leather furnishings and an abundance of
tropical plants.
The
design process lasted a year and the building was completed in April 2006
at a cost of $1.25 million, which also included the purchase price of the
property and the landscaping. Unexpected costs arose, including doubling
the cost of the parking lot to install a circular driveway, which saved a
stand of walnut trees.
The
trees now form a tranquil park with a curving centre walkway that bissects
a dry bed of riverstone studded with pink and mauve hydrangeas, hostas and
purple sandcherry bushes. It’s a theme that’s repeated in the deep
flowerbeds that border the building.
Bean
says planning is pivotal in designing an office building, particularly if
it’s going to be functional for years to come.
“Take
your time in doing it and have excellent people to work with,” he advises.
“There are a lot of steps in the planning process prior to moving into the
building. You’ve got to have someone you’re comfortable working with to
accomplish that.”
The new
building is successful in several ways, Bean believes. “It’s a very, very
solid building and it’s very energy-efficient. It’s a benefit to everybody
who works here; it also raises our level of visibility within the
community and that, overall, has been good for business.”
written by Judy Liebner
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