Here to Stay

A holistic office concept that combines New Work principles with local relevance and Cradle to Cradle design

Many companies are grappling with a crucial question: what brings employees back to the office in the post-pandemic era, now that remote work has become the norm? The Cologne office of management consulting firm Drees & Sommer, which specializes in construction and real estate, offers a compelling answer: "Here to Stay." The holistic office concept realized at their long-standing headquarters in Westgate am Rudolfplatz creates a powerful draw for employees while serving as a showcase for the firm's vision of innovative office spaces in an evolving work environment.

An internal, cross-disciplinary team of project managers and planners spent eleven months reimagining the space—all while keeping operations running. They began with a critical question: how many workstations do we actually need? Surveying 260 employees about their work patterns and mobility habits, they arrived at a surprising answer: 130 desks. Half of the redesigned office was dedicated to collaboration.The design philosophy drew inspiration from urban planning itself: everything for everyone. "Like a city with neighborhoods where chance encounters happen alongside planned meetings, our workspace divides into four distinct zones," explains Daniela Schulze, New Work strategist and site director. The "Marketplace," "City Garden," "Kiosk," and "Cathedral" aren't just names—they're functional definitions. The Marketplace buzzes with energy; the Cathedral offers quiet focus. Guest areas and client meeting spaces inhabit the City Garden, with generous layouts for exchange and several flexible meeting rooms overlooking the treetops of Habsburgerring. The central kitchen sits on the Marketplace, surrounded by lounges and seating nooks—with views toward Cologne Cathedral—ideal for breaks and informal connections.The interior design embraced a principle of restraint: "minimal demolition, maximum reuse." Unused furniture from other offices found new purpose. Every material choice followed the Cradle-to-Cradle principle, ensuring recyclability, non-toxicity, and straightforward disassembly when the building eventually reaches the end of its life. Furniture, walls, and flooring can all be recovered at high quality or returned to biological cycles.

www.dreso.com

Photography:
Peter Neusser
www.peterneusser.de

(Featured in CUBE Cologne Bonn 03|24)

Nothing found.

Living space through change

Amazing metamorphosis – from a "discreet house" to a multi-storey residential building

Sustainable with consistency

A climate company focuses on flexibility and reusable materials

Hanseatic identity in fired clay

The renaissance of clinker architecture

Nothing found.

Elegant maisonette in a heritage building

A historic residential building in Cologne's old town receives a thoughtful restoration.

31-Lejsek-House-Exterior-Garden_15_700px

Minimalism Meets the Sun

A single-family home can deliver impressive efficiency and quality of life without breaking the budget.

Marianne-Andreas-Weg_MG_5258_D_panorama_ausschnitt_19_700pixel

Clear and Welcoming

Two Residential Buildings in Wesseling Unite Affordable Living with Architectural Excellence

jw1536-0005_willebrandt_19_700px

Material Purity and Reduction

Ehrenfeld's Long Hall reimagined as loft offices at Kontrastwerk

Turning the Corner

Design Around the Corner

A multi-family residence that reinterprets the design language of its historic neighbors

Aussen1_15_700pixeln3mgPFYVSVv5j

Industrial heritage reimagined

In the New Railway Town, a historic railway structure has been given new life as a modern office building.

1_b_15_700pixel

A Vision for Tomorrow

A defining feature is the continuous band in exposed concrete, running as a wall and ceiling element from ground level to roof…

Sculptural Joining

Affordability and architectural excellence prove compatible at this Sülz residential development