The Upgrade

The Office of the Future — Brought to You by Microsoft

An interview with director of office envisioning Anton Andrews

Lance Ulanoff
OneZero
Published in
7 min readMar 7, 2019

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A space that’s equally suited for work and quiet reflection. All photos courtesy of Microsoft unless noted.

RRemember your high school gymnasium? Chances are it was a large hardwood space with the floor markings for half a dozen sports, all sealed under 14 layers of polyurethane. The bleachers were folded flat up against the wall for PE time and rolled out from all sides for the big game. Ropes hung from the ceiling and hoops folded up out of the way to accommodate volleyball.

The modern workplace is a little like that. Cubicles, offices, and meeting rooms are built not for one purpose, but for every imaginable office task. The problem is that offices don’t transform like the old gymnasium. Instead, you have to make do with the desk where it is, or that mahogany conference table in the middle of your meeting space, or the whiteboard that sits like a challenge at the head of the room.

Offices were built for work — not for workers. But Microsoft’s director of office envisioning, Anton Andrews, wants to flip that equation by answering what he calls his core question: “How do you get people to lean in and do their best work together and collaborate?”

It’s a question that Microsoft has been asking itself for years. The company focused on…

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Lance Ulanoff
OneZero

Tech expert, journalist, social media commentator, amateur cartoonist and robotics fan.