The New and Only Google Engineering Center in Latin America
Latin America's only Google Engineering Center was designed with bold graphics, color, and lighting to create an inspiring workspace.
BCMF Arquitetos and Mach Arquitetos recently completed the only Google Engineering Center in Latin America, located in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. The new 50,000-square-foot office is spread across four floors inside a mixed-use complex in the Santa Efigênia neighborhood. The designers set out to incorporate the vibrancy of the city into the global company’s new engineering center using bold graphics, color, and lighting to create a sophisticated but inspiring workspace.
While most companies focus on filling their offices with traditional work areas, this one knocks it down to half with the rest being common community spaces. The leisure areas boast a warm, vibrant color palette referencing the local culture and landscape, whereas the workspaces incorporate cooler tones with glass, privacy screens, and sleek surfaces, giving nod to the brand’s digital side.
The restaurant invited Máximo Soalheiro who paid tribute to the area’s gastronomy with shelves stocked full of 2,116 spice pots with a range of 200 shades that were mixed to reference local colors.
The graphics on the glass were designed to offer both transparency and privacy for those working in the conference rooms.
Real climate data was collected to generate, through parametric design (in collaboration with SUBdV), a layer of blown up infographics ...
BCMF Arquitetos and Mach Arquitetos recently completed the only Google Engineering Center in Latin America, located in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. The new 50,000-square-foot office is spread across four floors inside a mixed-use complex in the Santa Efigênia neighborhood. The designers set out to incorporate the vibrancy of the city into the global company’s new engineering center using bold graphics, color, and lighting to create a sophisticated but inspiring workspace.
While most companies focus on filling their offices with traditional work areas, this one knocks it down to half with the rest being common community spaces. The leisure areas boast a warm, vibrant color palette referencing the local culture and landscape, whereas the workspaces incorporate cooler tones with glass, privacy screens, and sleek surfaces, giving nod to the brand’s digital side.
The restaurant invited Máximo Soalheiro who paid tribute to the area’s gastronomy with shelves stocked full of 2,116 spice pots with a range of 200 shades that were mixed to reference local colors.
The graphics on the glass were designed to offer both transparency and privacy for those working in the conference rooms.
Real climate data was collected to generate, through parametric design (in collaboration with SUBdV), a layer of blown up infographics ...
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