Williams Lea Tag Offices – Hong Kong

Drawing reference from the Wanchai district's urban typologies and symbol, the design of Williams Lea Tag's Hong Kong office is a work environment that feels as raw, diverse, and multifaceted as its context.

Firm
  • Client Williams Lea Tag,
  • size 7,200 sqft
  • Year 2019
  • Location Hong Kong, China,
  • Industry Consulting / Business Services,
  • Bean Buro were engaged by Williams Lea Tag, a global business services company, to create a defining space for their offices located in Hong Kong.

    Placed at the heart of the dynamic Wanchai district is Bean Buro’s design for marketing brand Williams Lea Tag’s new workplace in Hong Kong.

    The design brief was to create a new workplace for the international creative company to house their 80 people workforce in Hong Kong which includes fixed and flexible desks, as well as a variety of collaboration spaces.

    This 7,200sqft workplace reinforces the Williams Lea Tag’s pursuit in fostering a spirited, sociable and collaborative work environment in a way that echoes the unique spatial experience of the adjacent Lockhart Road, where networks of neon signs, Scaffolds and shopfronts superimpose public and private realms.

    Upon entry into the front of house, visitors are greeted by a series of rhythmic framing, screening and layering devices that guide the eye through the space and out into the city, stretching and distorting the boundary between interior and exterior. Two generous collaboration booths and informal seating moments are framed with blue scaffold, a language applied throughout the space to denote and invigorate flexible working spaces, offering momentum and directionality. Bespoke neon Signage seems to have been taken directly from the streets below, whilst an informal bookshelf / display area appears as a magazine stand on a street corner.

    Striking plywood framing details envelop the main architectural elements across the floor plate, emboldening shadows, generating rhythm and seemingly revealing their raw structure as a subtle industrial gesture.

    The main architectural player in the space, a sculptural plywood boardroom that functions at once as informal seating, formal meeting space, storage and viewfinder. Acting as a backdrop for nearly all front and back of house spaces, the boardroom employs a vibrant hue and grain, bringing warmth to more neutral office zones. Within the volume, a peaceful, light-filled boardroom atmosphere with excellent views both into and out of the space, completed with a large feature pendant. An emblematic black, arched portal door framed in blue acts as the threshold into the space, perpetuating a sense of understated playfulness.

    A bespoke, rounded pantry table and complimentary pendant light piece imbue the pantry space with additional vitality – moments of bold contrast and colour. Seating up to 16 people, the table becomes an opportunity for respite, rest and conversation amongst an otherwise busy front of house. A Raw pantry conceals plentiful storage for the office of 80 employees, as well as another arched door with playful porthole detail.

    In the main open plan spaces, variation and energy is explored through distinct carpet and wall treatments that generate spatial hierarchy effectively with simple colours and tones. Broad, sweeping fillets cut across the floor, denoting space allocated to key departments, whilst corresponding paint curves on vertical surfaces begin to suggest a division in the 3rd dimension. The overall effect is a multilayered open plan that feels spatial and architectural.

    Placed at the centre of the open plan in a supporting roles are a collaborative Island, 2 acoustically sealed phone booths concealed by a writeable exterior surface, an informal collaboration worktop with a vibrant scaffold detail.

    Meeting rooms with large glass partitions framed in black retain as much natural light as possible. Simple variations of back painted writeable glass, coloured wall and feature display ledges give each room a sense of personality, orienting individuals in the space.

    Design: Bean Buro
    Design Team: Lorène Faure, Kenny Kinugasa-Tsui, Lelia Ku, Jay Jordan
    Contractor: Winsmart Contracting
    Photography: courtesy of Bean Buro