Sea of cubicles
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sea of cubicles is a derisive vernacular term for featureless, modern open office designs which consist of seemingly endless rows of identical office cubicles.
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[edit] History
The exact origin of the term has been lost. However, modern experiments in open office design date to the 1950s when the Quickborner team (Germany) developed office landscape. It was quickly replaced by systems furniture (a.k.a. cubicles). Robert Propst of the Herman Miller company is usually credited (or discredited) as the inventor of the modern systems furniture cubicle. However, in fairness to Propst, his original concepts were far removed from the sea of cubicles. In fact, early designs using systems furniture often reflected the irregular geometry and organic circulation patterns of office landscape.
[edit] Links to examples of the term in use
Fast Company, "Time (Zone) Travelers"
Adrift Among the Cubicles
[edit] See also
Office landscape
Silicon Valley Tarot
[edit] External links
Who Invented Cubicles?
CNN/Fortune - Cubicles: The great mistake
Cube Farm Animated Video