This is a container office display project,
covering the appearance of a 20 foot box with a layer of wood.
SDI, a Canadian design studio, demonstrated the WRKKIT concept to
IDS Toronto's adaptability office by using a booth that imitates giant DIY toys.
WRKKIT's flexible office system was displayed at the trade fair earlier this month,
which was packed in a container and looked like a huge parts kit.
A prototype was created based on the local SDI
design to demonstrate the potential of its modular workplace furniture,
which is designed to be highly adaptable
and easy to reconfigure for any space.
The project is a partnership with Microsoft and Giant Containers.
There are introverts and extroverts, people
who use the right or left brain, tall and short.
However, many workplaces are still designed
primarily with "one size fits all" solutions. "
To demonstrate the different configurations provided by WRKKIT,
make installation changes on IDS every three hours.
This allows visitors to see that moving parts, including folding tables, seats,
storage units, kitchen appliances, sliding partitions and other colorful parts,
are transferred around to form various settings.
They noticed that because of the flexibility of the new space,
they became more efficient in the new space.
Employees use the studio in a completely different way,
that is, a single scale solution does not work.
The team worked with Microsoft to
develop a personality test for potential WRKKIT users.
Answers to a series of questions determine one of seven possible ways of working,
which will benefit from specific configurations.
Pictures courtesy of Jane