![]() The company recently inked a deal for another 85,000-square-foot location in London and plans to open an outpost in Los Angeles, according to The Evening Standard. ![]() Soho Works launched the first Soho House in 2015 with a 16,000-square-foot coworking space in London, The Evening Standard reported. JLL’s Michael Higgins handled it for the tenant. Howard Hersch, Sam Seiler and Brett Harvey of JLL (JLL) represented the landlord along with Glacier’s Yaniv Blumenfeld. Asking rents in the building, owned by Triangle Assets and Glacial Global Partners, range up to $100 per square foot and are among the priciest for offices in the borough, as Commercial Observer previously reported. The company took parts of the ground floor along with the entire second and fifth floors of the building for its first location in New York City, and second in the country, according to a source with knowledge of the deal. “This just tells you how some companies are more progressive in the way they try to cater to Gen X, Millennials and Gen Z.SEE ALSO: PJ Fitzpatrick Enters Maryland Market With Lease at Melford Town Center “This company did have a desire to bring that to its table for its staff,” said Skidds. ![]() Skidds said that the landlord, Silverstein Properties, wanted the builders to go to the Department of Buildings and get special permission to build out the gender-neutral restrooms. While the bathroom area is mostly white, one wall features a black-and-white drawing of a dog in a fire hydrant, staring at a smiling poop emoji. Rounding out the lounge is a blue wall of framed dog portraits and a small bar with high-top seats.Īnother unusual aspect of Bark’s office are the gender-neutral bathrooms, which feature several floor-to-ceiling stalls arranged around an open sink area with round mirrors suspended from the ceiling. The bookshelves can also open to reveal a small, cat-themed room (technically a mother’s room) with floral wallpaper, green armchairs and cat-themed parody paintings, including Mona Lisa as a big orange tabby. The wall sconces look like bulldogs holding lightbulbs. ![]() There’s a fake fireplace with a black mantel, black rounded armchairs, a low wooden coffee table and a pen-and-ink portrait of a dog on the wall. Next to the kitchen is another unusual room with blue wooden walls and open blue shelves full of books. And the Pigs in a Blanket Room next door has pink felt walls, pink lighting, yellow chairs and a neon sign meant to look like the company’s viral “ big honkin’ pigs in a blanket” toy. The 420 Burrito Room - a nod to weed-themed dog toys - includes green felt walls, green lighting, green armchairs and a smiling neon pot leaf on the wall. Two small conference rooms were designed with offbeat themes. There are also large wall nooks - carved in the shape of a rectangle with a sloping top line - outfitted with blue upholstery and cushions, where dogs and people can sit, relax and work. Most of this space is painted gray or white, with blue accent walls. The main work area is a standard open office with high-top tables for group meetings and long, open benches for desk setups. The dog platform also features three small, built-in sinks, two of which are low enough to be used as dog water bowls. A black-and-white houndstooth-patterned seat suspended from the ceiling offers seating for people. In areas of the office that had open ceilings, the designers sprayed sound-dampening foam on the ceiling to reduce noise.ĭog-friendly touches include a “dog park” section of the office, with a custom-built white stair platform where dogs can lie down or play, round holes for shy dogs to hide in, and a large wooden ball pit for dogs made to look like one of the company’s subscription boxes. To mitigate the noise we had to bring in absorbing soft materials such as these lamps and introduce them on the ceiling, not the floor.” With these tech-like spaces where there’s lots of hard surfaces, noise becomes an issue. “The choice of materials had to be cleanable, wipe-able, dog-friendly. “In this specific project it was about wellness for the dogs as well,” explained Edin Rudic, an interior designer at MKDA. To the left is a cafe with blue leather booth seats, a kitchen outfitted in light woods, and round tables with armchairs. The 52,000-square-foot spot at 120 Broadway welcomes visitors with whiteboards that they can doodle on next to the elevators and a three-dimensional BARK logo filled with dog toys. SEE ALSO: Fisher Brothers Exec Steven Fisher Dies at 63
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