1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of High-Performance Workplaces

Edited By Christhina Candido, Iva Durakovic, Samin Marzban Copyright 2024
    320 Pages 77 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This timely book focuses on an overview of the fundamentals behind high-performance workplaces underpinning occupants’ satisfaction, health, and productivity. To this end, it covers human, environmental, and organisational aspects proven to be of great relevance to the design of high-performance workplaces. Perhaps most significantly it looks at these characteristics both before and after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

    From the exodus from private offices to the rise of open-plan workplaces, where, how and when people work was changing rapidly pre-COVID. Post-COVID, pandemic-imposed restrictions banished workers from offices into their homes fast, leaving organisation scrambling to keep workers functioning away from HQ. After the immediate shockwaves set by the pandemic, workers and organisations have had the time to learn about positives and negative aspects of remote working with the vast majority now questioning the need to go back to HQ and the purpose of offices. In this book, the contributors share and discuss lessons learned from research conducted in workplaces pre- and post-2020 with a view of providing a clear picture about what high-performance workplaces are about, including the key drivers behind workers’ satisfaction, health, and productivity. This handbook builds on a programme of applied research conducted in workplaces led by the editors over the last decade which is aimed at understanding the synergies between the design, performance, and experience of spaces. It examines ergonomics, biophilic design, acoustics, indoor air quality, thermal comfort, diversity, leadership, psychological safety, culture, and much more.  

    Research findings are presented side-by-side with case studies selected from the research database led by the editors. Industry experts add to the academic voice, reinforcing the authenticity of this book and its relevance to other stakeholders found outside the academic arena, including the property and design industry, students, government, and the community in general.

    About the Transdisciplinary Workplace Research and Management Series

    Rianne Apple-Meulenbroek and Vitalija Danivska

     

    About the editors 

    Angela Loder and Jack Noonan 

     

    Introduction 

    About this Book

    Christhina Candido, Iva Durakovic and  Samin Marzban 

    About Ways of Working 
    Leena Thomas and Kirsten Brown 

    PART I 

    Physical Environment Considerations

    Office Design 
    Christhina Candido, Behnaz Avazpour, and Iva Durakovic 

    Universal Design 
    Imogen Howe and Andrew Martel 

    Active Design 
    Lina Engelen 

    Ergonomic Design 
    Martin Mackey 

    Biophilic Design 
    Niranjika Wijesooriya and Arianna Brambilla 

    Thermal Comfort 
    Wei Wang, Yaolin Lin and Dorsa Fatourehchi

    Indoor Air Quality 
    Arianna Brambilla, Ozgur Gocer and  Christhina Candido

    Visual Comfort 
    Wenye Hu 

    Acoustic Privacy 
    Manuj Yadav and Densil Cabrera 

    Collaborative Technology 
    Dian Tjondronegoro and Christhina Candido 

     

    PART II 

    Human Factors 

    Gender and Age 
    Fan Zhang and Maryam Khoshbakht 

    Personality 
    Samin Marzban and Christhina Candido

    Neurodiversity 
    Kirsten Day and Andrew Martel 

     

     

    PART III 

    Organisational environment Considerations

    Leadership and Culture 
    Peter Gahan 

    Diversity and Participation 
    Victor Sojo 

    Sense of belonging and professional identity 
    Iva Durakovic and Laurie Aznavoorian 

    PART IV 

    Case Studies 

    Case Study: Arup - Melbourne, Australia
    Evodia Alaterou

    Case Study: Universal Store - Brisbane, Australia  
    Annabel Khoo and Christian Pistauer 

    Case Study: City of Casey - Melbourne, Australia 
    Eoin Higgins and Ivy Li 

    Case Study: Officeworks - Melbourne, Australia
    Laurie Aznavoorian  

    Case Study: Mirvac - Sydney, Australia
    Lisa Munao 

    Conclusion 

    Christhina Candido, Iva Durakovic and  Samin Marzban 

     

    Biography

    Christhina Candido  directs the SHE (Sustainable and Healthy Environments) Lab at the University of Melbourne Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning. She leads a program of applied and interdisciplinary research aimed at advancing knowledge about the design, performance, and experience of the built environment. She has led Post-Occupancy Evaluation surveys in 250 workplaces located in five continents. Findings from her work in workspaces have been used to inform changes in design and operational practices around the world. She is member of expert advisory groups with the International WELL Building Institute (IWBI), WELL Faculty, the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA), and the National Australian Building Rating System (NABERS).

    Iva Durakovic is a lecturer and interior designer with over 10 years’ experience working on high-profile, award-winning workplace design projects. She holds a Bachelor of Interior Architecture Hons from the University of New South Wales. Her research focuses on behavioural impacts and phenomenology of high-performance workplaces, evaluating the environments and their cultures to understand the human factors at play across individual, physical and organisational levels, particularly within emergent post 2020 workplace contexts. Her projects blend research, industry and work-integrated learning to foster knowledge exchange between leading practitioners, academics, and next-generation designers.

    Samin Marzban is a lecturer with the School of Civil, Mining and Environmental Engineering at the University of Wollongong, Australia. She is an architect by training and holds a PhD in Built Environment from The University of New South Wales, Sydney. Her research focuses on Indoor Environmental Quality, with a particular focus on Post-Occupancy Evaluation and workspace well-being. She is also interested and skilled in multi-disciplinary building-related research including performance-based design, optimisation, and energy efficiency.