Yelp Offices – Chicago

Firm
  • Client Yelp,
  • size 50,000 sqft
  • Year 2016
  • Location Chicago, Illinois, United States,
  • Industry Technology,
  • Valerio Dewalt Train has completed the third phase of a new office design for review and recommendation site Yelp located in Chicago’s historic Merchandise Mart.

    Yelp, the top ranked user driven review and recommendation website and app, was drawn to locating their growing Midwest offices in a part of Chicago that is surrounded by the raw energy of urban life – the elevated train line, the resurgent river, an eclectic neighborhood of offices, restaurants, shops and residences. Their new office occupies a significant corner of the majestic Merchandise Mart overlooking the nexus of the three branches of the Chicago River below. The Mart, itself a small city with a daily population of 15,000, was originally built as a vast edifice for showrooms of goods. Today, after a recent transformation, the building has become a hub of tech companies looking for an authentic urban environment with floors large enough to accommodate growth and expansion.

    Their new office occupies a significant corner of the majestic Merchandise Mart, overlooking the junction of the Chicago River’s branches. Originally built as a vast showroom for goods, theMart itself functions as a small city with a daily population of 15,000. But today, the building is a hub for tech companies looking for an authentic urban environment with floors large enough to accommodate future expansion.

    At its core, Yelp’s business is fueled by the candid, varied opinions of the masses. These consumer reviews expose and reveal their unvarnished personal experiences of commerce. Yelp’s offices embrace a similar exposed honesty in the design of the workspace.

    Layers of past finishes were stripped from the columns and ceilings to reveal the bare structure. Mechanical systems are purposefully left uncovered to feature their messy vitality. New finishes were selected to complement this raw and vibrant expression of the urban condition: rough clay tile, hefty timber planks, and bolted steel beams evoke an urban aesthetic. It is as if portions of the space were built with materials found beneath the ‘L’ tracks or in some back-of-the-house service area.

    In contrast with that “below-ground” aesthetic, new room enclosures are simple, bold, and utilitarian, like the refined structures that line Chicago’s streets. Community spaces are detailed to recall bridges and transit framework. A central corridor, connecting auxiliary paths through the office, features pops of red accent color recalling Yelp’s iconic burst logo. This exposed and raw environment is the perfect stage for Yelp’s workforce to inhabit and make their
    own – just as the users of their website express themselves to whomever is interested in listening.

    The first phase of offices occupies 50,000 square feet of space for 375 employees of Yelp’s growing presence in Chicago. In addition to conferencing and teaming areas and 100-seat training room, the offices feature a 180-seat break area with full-time barista staffed coffee bar, post-work beer bar, and game room.

    The second phase of design, features an expansion into the fifth floor of theMart, adding an extra 15,000 square feet to their offices. As Yelp expands into multiple floors, this presented the unique opportunity to break through theMart’s floor plates. The stair is encased within a steel frame, another feature reminiscent of city transit. On its adjacent wall, a grid of wooden panels— custom routed to abstractly express the Chicago map. Its diagonal lines are subtle cues toward North Lincoln and North Clybourn Avenues.

    The completed project presents a unique experience for Yelp’s Chicago-based employees. The vibrance of the city is reflected in the design of the office space, ensuring a welcoming environment reflective of the growing company.

    Design: Valerio Dewalt Train Associates
    Contractor: JC Anderson
    Environmental Graphics: Media-Objectives
    Photography: Tom Harris