Covid and similar extremes have created a much more flexible, changing labor market—and the pace dictated by our fast-changing world is now filtering into object culture. Mute’s latest design makes office spaces simple and quick to create, and it burst onto the design scene like a comet.
Mute, a specialist in acoustic panels, aims to find the most innovative solutions to make office spaces more sustainable and comfortable. The company’s founder, Szymon Rychlik, is constantly collaborating with Polish designers, and their products are tested and assembled in their own lab. Mute’s success is undoubted, with designs popping up in the offices of world-famous companies such as Microsoft, Netflix, and even some in Ritz hotels. This time, they created a modular room that allows for the flexible reconfiguration of office spaces.
The OmniRoom is a design for companies that are open to flexible and environmentally friendly solutions for office layouts. Its adaptability is also reflected in the fact that OmniRoom can be used in two ways—firstly, the client can choose from hundreds of configurations pre-designed by architects, including conference rooms, cubicles, or even cloakrooms, but also a customized option is available with 13 prefabricated modules that can be rearranged in countless ways.
Another unique feature of OmniRoom is that its assembly technology is quick and simple—thanks to the company’s own click-in system, modules can be easily assembled without tools. Moreover, the concept is an environmentally friendly alternative to rigid, non-movable plasterboard structures, which are still common practices in the world of modern office design. Less waste, less CO2 emission, and infinite flexibility—OmniRoom is the gateway to the future’s office.
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Sources: Design Alive, designboom