Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Architecture3s
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
This project for 
HubSpot is a transformation of a 38,000 square foot mill building space into a 
corporate headquarters.
 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
HubSpot is an 
inbound marketing company that provides a marketing  software and advice to businesses allowing them to be found on the  internet and grow their business.  In this case, Hubspot has been moving  from their their bare bones start-up space, to their new 
office space  located in a 38,000 square foot series of interconnected mill buildings  in 
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
HubSpot had three defining issues that were important to them in the  development of their new space.  First, they did not want to loose their  entrepreneurial start-up aesthetic.  They felt that would be a turn off  for those working in-house and it was important to them to still be  seen as a company on the rise because of their great technology and  intelligence rather then an “established” company.  Second, they wanted  to engage and be respectful of the post and beam mill structure  aesthetic, yet simultaneously have a contemporary palette of materials  that spoke to their avant garde place in the technology industry.   Finally, as is the case with most young entrepreneurial clients in the  earlier stages of their development, their budget was very limited. 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
Many inexpensive materials come together in a unique composition that  respects the budget, yet yields a spatially rich environment that is not  reliant on expensive materials and finishes for its success.   Strategically and judiciously using more expensive materials such as  floor to ceiling glazing and offsetting those costs with simple painted  drywall, laminate surfaces and inexpensive linear strip fluorescent  fixtures backlighting a cellular plastic panel dropped into an ordinary  suspended ceiling grid, creates a signature aesthetic.  Iconically  introducing the clients branding logo and colors into the design tailors  the space.
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
The misalignment of the floors from mill building to mill building was  seized as an opportunity to design in enhanced thresholds that informed  the user that they were moving form one building to another.  Realized  as simple painted drywall tubes, these thresholds establish a sense of  place within the design and work to celebrate the circulation through  the spaces. 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
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| Photo © Courtesy of Greg Premru Photography | 
Materials such as translucent curtains and birch stalks are used to  soften the space in juxtaposition to the more minimal and machined  surfaces.  The curtains provide an enhanced acoustic quality at the  lobby that also serves as a break out area for the adjacent  multi-purpose room and conference rooms.  As well, as curtains, they  capture light differently then other surfaces, provide a detail that is  unexpected and are a simple, inexpensive devices to allow the user to  fine tune the space to allow views into conference room spaces or make  them more private.  Birch stalks are used are used similarly and provide  a contrast that is warm, unique and beautiful to walk by or form an  edge at impromptu meeting locations off the circulation.
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| floor plan 01--drawing Courtesy of Architecture3s | 
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| floor plan 02--drawing Courtesy of Architecture3s | 
The people
Interior Designer: Architecture3s
Location: Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
MEP/FP Engineer: RDK Engineers
Contractor: Chapman Construction/Design
Project area: 38,000 sq. ft.
Project year: 2010
Photographs: Greg Premru Photography
