5th Floor Office Revamp, 125 m² Delivered in 1 Month

5/8/20241 min read

National Broadcasting Headquarters — Modern Lobby & Corridor Transformation

Redefining Simplicity in Motion

A 125 m² lobby and corridor transformation completed within one month demonstrates how transitional spaces can be elevated into refined architectural statements. What was once a purely functional passage is now a structured, welcoming environment defined by clarity and proportion.

The Context

Situated on the 5th floor of a national broadcasting headquarters, this lobby and corridor function as primary circulation routes for staff and visitors. The objective was to reshape these high-traffic areas into spaces that communicate professionalism and spatial coherence.

The approach focused on turning movement into experience—without visual excess.

Design Concept: Modern Elegance with Functional Harmony

The design language follows modern contemporary principles. Clean lines, controlled symmetry, and layered lighting establish spatial order.

White wall finishes enhance brightness and openness. Geometric wall panels introduce depth without overwhelming the composition. Wood-textured flooring provides warmth, grounding the space against crisp ceiling lines and recessed lighting systems.

The corridor emphasizes continuity and directional clarity, guiding movement naturally while maintaining a calm visual rhythm. Material selection prioritizes durability, precision detailing, and long-term performance.

Execution: Structured and Time-Efficient

Delivered within a one-month timeline, the project reflects disciplined coordination from planning to installation. Custom panel fabrication, lighting integration, and finishing alignment were executed under a tightly managed workflow.

Every junction, shadow line, and surface transition was carefully controlled to preserve design integrity under time constraints.

Outcome: A Refined Institutional Identity

The completed lobby and corridor now function as a composed architectural threshold—quietly confident, structured, and aligned with institutional credibility.

Even transitional spaces carry identity. When designed with clarity and executed with precision, they shape perception as strongly as primary rooms.