Submission deadline:

April 20, 2023

Workshop: Perspectives on Uses and Users in the History of Office Buildings

November 30-December 1, 2023
Luxembourg
Luxembourg

In 1984, the German literature scholar Hannes Schwenger wrote that “it cannot take long before the first museum on offices opens its doors – probably before the turn of the millennium”. Schwenger drew a parallel with 19 th -century factory complexes, which were (by the mid-1980s) gradually becoming museum-worthy due to the ongoing deindustrialization in Western countries. “Over the course of the 20 th century,” Schwenger continued, “large offices have appeared alongside factories as the ‘other side’ of the modern world of work – and in them, too, one can discover a piece of cultural history worth documenting”. Even though the prediction concerning the heritage dimension of the modern office has not proven accurate, Schwenger’s observations remain relevant for their emphasis on the historicity of both office buildings and office work. At first sight, the modern office appears as a relatively static phenomenon, characterised by seemingly indestructible concepts such as open plan layouts and managerial efficiency. Yet, these concepts themselves were embedded in broader “office cultures”, whose essence evolved throughout time and space.

At the two-day workshop Perspectives on Uses and Users in the History of Office Buildings, which will take place at the Belval campus of the University of Luxembourg (Esch-sur- Alzette) on 30 November and 1 December 2023, we aim to deconstruct the managerial and architectural determinants of the 20th-century office building. The analytical focus lies on the dialectic relationship between planning and usage. Concretely, we seek to investigate how clients, architects, and interior designers interacted with users of office buildings, and how they subsequently modified their conceptions (or failed to do so). Conversely, we are interested in the bottom-up perspective: how did office workers voice their opinion on the buildings in which they were housed?

Concrete research questions might include:

● Which analytical methods can be used to investigate historical uses and users of office buildings? What can (architectural) historians learn from other disciplines (anthropology, sociology,…)?
● How did architects and office planners alter pre-war, Taylorism-influenced ideologies of efficiency in the period between 1945 and the proliferation of the office landscape model?
● How did normative concepts (e.g. managerial and architectural notions such as “efficiency”, “comfort”, “luxury”, “hierarchy”, “democracy” and “standing”) evolve as a result of user feedback?
● How did users resist norms or deviate from them, and how did they voice their opinions? Which roles did gender and class play? Which conflicts could ensue in this context?
● Did the notion of planning, so central to the mindset of modernist architects, lose influence over the course of the 1960s and 1970s due to criticisms of technocratic thinking (cfr. Fontenot 2021)?
● Did ideas originating in the environmental movement of the 1960s influence office design and usage (e.g. the idea that workers should be provided with a view on a “natural” landscape)?
● How did expert knowledge on user experiences travel across disciplines and countries, and how did experts create authority in the first place?

For the workshop, the organisers welcome proposals for 20-minute presentations. A 500-word abstract and a brief cv should be sent to jens.vandemaele@uni.lu by 20 April 2023 at the latest. Selected presenters must send their final full paper (7000-8000 words) to the organisers by 10 November at the latest, in order to enable fruitful discussions. All presentations will take place on-site and will be in English. We intend to publish a selection of presented papers in a theme issue of an academic journal (title choice pending) over the course of 2024-2025.

Travel and accommodation costs will be partially covered by the organisers.

Schedule:
● March 2023: Launch CfP
20 April 2023: Deadline for abstract submission
● 30 April 2023: Results of CfP communicated to the contributors
● 10 November 2023: Deadline for full paper submission
● 30 November – 1 December 2023: Workshop
● 2014-2015: Publication of a theme issue

The conference Perspectives on Uses and Users in the History of Office Buildings is organised by the BUREU team at the Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C²DH, University of Luxembourg) and the Research Group Modernity and Society 1800-2000 (MoSa, University of Leuven). BUREU is a transnational research project funded by the FNR (Luxembourg) and The Research Foundation – Flanders (Belgium). Its team members investigate the design choices that were made in relation to the interiors of EU office buildings in Luxembourg and Brussels, and this for the period between the early 1950s and
the early 2000s. More concretely, BUREU seeks to analyse which managerial ideas were at the root of these office interior designs (for more information, please visit this link).

For any questions on the workshop, please contact Dr. Jens van de Maele: jens.vandemaele@uni.lu. The full call for papers can be found here.

Share this post

News from the field

On the Traces of Misery

“Miserabilia” investigates spaces and spectres of misery in the imagination and reality of the contemporary Italian urban context. The main objective is the definition of tools for the recognition and investigation of the tangible and intangible manifestations of...