Rockfon: The Art of Human-centric Design
‘By optimising acoustic environments, we can create spaces that foster positive emotions and experiences for everyone’ explains Pascal van Dort, Rockfon’s Global Acoustics Ambassador. Find out more here ...
March 8, 2023 | 11:00 pm CUT

Rockfon are to host a debate about what it means to be human-centric when it comes to office design, and is expected to address everything from acoustic comfort to engendering community and inclusion


Creating an environment that comfortably accommodates both collaborative team work and quiet focussed work is one of the key considerations for keeping workers happy
The turn towards human-centric office design
It is giving the architects and designers of the workplace much food for thought. Reinforced by Covid confinements and the 2020 focus on health that it bred, it’s a shift in priorities that ricochets into the office environment; if management wants employees at desks together, where a team spirit and common purpose can best be nurtured, then wellbeing must be accommodated. Human-centric design is no longer a bonus; it’s a necessity.‘Sound is physical, noise is psychological’

Rockfon’s webinar is inviting experts in the field to the panel, including Anne Sarto, partner of mtre, who believes architecture can offer sensorial comfort in the workplace
Rockfon invites leading thinkers to the debate
As Rockfon deepens its understanding of how human-centric design can redefine how we feel in corporate environments, it is inviting experts in the field to reflect on the matter. ‘Workplace design has for several years focused on data – usually a lot of it, and optimisation at the expense of aesthetics and sensuousness,’ says the architect Anne Sarto, partner of mtre, a part of C.F. Møller Architects, who will be one of the panellists taking part in a webinar on the subject organised by Rockfon later this month.‘Workplace design is about creating places where people thrive and are influenced by the space they enter'

Sophie Schuller, who is currently running a ‘Living Lab’ to dive deep into the effects of our environments on mental health, will share some of her finds
Biophilia in the mix
What does this mean practically? Maximising natural light? Judicious use of colour and texture? Accommodating acoustics? Chlorophytum comosum in the corridors? It’s no doubt all of this biophilic thinking and more. ‘One of the greatest missing pieces in human-centric design, is a true appreciation of what it means to be human and how our brains, bodies and cognitions interact with our environments’ says Sophie Schuller, who is currently undertaking a PhD in ‘psychoneurophysiology and workplace design’ at the Technical University of Eindhoven in The Netherlands. Schuller is also invited to Rockfon’s virtual table to dig deeper into the ways we can improve human-centric office design. As a neuropsychological researcher, investigating the intersection between buildings, brains and human behaviour, she has spent years working with organisations to understand how workplace design and the built environment impact employee health, wellbeing and performance.
The virtual round table will present solutions and strategies for creating a workplace that nurtures well-being, and keeps employees on side

Interior Designer Justin Treacy, who co-leds the new Dublin practice of Perkins and Will, is also part of the panel discussion on 29th of March
Accommodating difference
For the past two years, Schuller has also led a ‘Living Lab’ research project at Cushman & Wakefield EMEA, looking at attentional processing, mental health, neurodiversity and indoor environmental quality. It gives insights into the importance of diversity and inclusion in design decision-making, also are key interests of Justin Treacy, Principal of Corporate Interiors at Perkins&Will who will complete the panel. The words ‘compassion’ and ‘community’, ‘people’ and ‘joy’ loom large in his company’s design manifesto. Accommodating mental health needs may be as much about embracing gender-neutral toilets as attention to biophilia.‘At Rockfon, we believe in the power of human-centric design to enhance the wellbeing of building occupants’

The debate will take the form of a live webinar and will be chaired by Pascal van Dort, Rockfon’s Global Acoustics Ambassador
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