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Interior Design Tips for a Modern and Practical Office Space

The modern interior design has changed the way office spaces are constructed. The emphasis is more on making the interior, or the space more productive and functional, not no mention motivating for the employees. We see this approach in the offices of tech giants like Google. They have monkey bars, sleeping pods, and what not to mould the workspace into something to look for every day. Combining technology and the aspects of modern design, you too can make your workspace more productive yet attractive.

We’ve compiled a few contemporary interior design tips to get you started. Follow them for a better functionality of your interior and overall vogue of it.

Mid-Century Modern Style

 

Roughly starting from the mid-1930s to mid-1960s, this timeless design is based on incorporation of indiscriminate furniture, gentle curves, and a lot of different design materials that inspire nothing but freedom. What separates this style from the rest is its clean look with reduced clusters. The lines in the geometric forms are sleek and not fussy, augmented with minimalism. Sometimes, the materials used in this style are contrasting to one another. However, with these design elements, the main emphasis is on the functionality of the interior such that the forms therein allow fluent functions.

 

Industrial Interior Design

What could explain this design perfectly is the phrase “warehouse look”. It is all about unfinished touch – a display that brings out the materials of construction to the front rather than concealing them. Thus, the colours and the materials showcase metal and wood, neutral shades, and functional objects. To say it more comprehensibly, this interior design allows minimalism but not an oversimplification to allow collaboration at its utmost level – and the unfinished metal look encourages or elicits work ethics from the employees working in the space with it.

 

Urban Style

As opposed to the industrial style, the design elements in the urban style are more subtle and softer. There’s a huge influence of this interior design in our daily lives in places such as restaurants, cafes, malls, and office interiors. The colours, shapes, and the furniture used here are meant to welcome the residents/visitors/employees of a space. It is all about giving us a feeling of living in a less strenuous place. The emphasis of this design is more on lighting and inviting the external light into the interior so that we can get a cosier feeling – something necessary to make us feel at home. And when this is incorporated in a workspace, nothing but increased productivity is achieved.

The urban industrial style is a mixture of this and the interior design we explained above.

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