Takeda

Takeda Oncology Research and Development Headquarters

Boston, Massachusetts
The Power of Collaboration

According to Japanese legend, a person who folds 1,000 origami cranes will be granted one wish–a tradition embraced by Takeda as an expression of its aspiration to cure cancer.  Sharing Takeda’s hope, our team felt a responsibility to create an R&D headquarters that would support the collaboration required to solve some of the world’s biggest health problems.

The “lab-centric” layout and open office and laboratory environment encourages interactions between employees while promoting engagement across scientific disciplines.  Transparency throughout the facility provides scientists with more visual connections between their benches and desks, and celebrates the work taking place inside the lab.  The physical expression of the cranes can be seen in the folded glass planes of the innovative robotics lab and the abstract diagonal lines that articulate the back walls of the informal coffee areas.

What it is
State-of-the-art research and development environment for a global pharmaceutical company.
Literal transparency aligns with corporate and scientific philosophy
Science on Display

We don’t always think about the passive benefit of our modern workplace letting us see what’s going on.  Most offices celebrate idea exchanges through marker-boards, digital monitors, and other communication tools to build community and foster innovation. The equivalent for labs is to display research and technologies for visitors – to show off special equipment or activities which can be quite compelling. At Takeda, we implemented a Science on Display area — showcasing robotics behind glass walls similar to a museum, allowing visitors a clear view of the innovation happening within the lab environment.

Adaptability

If the bench in a lab is equivalent to a desk in an office, then adaptability stems from the ability to reconfigure. We designed a grid of overhead utilities that allows benches and free-standing equipment to be arranged not just in parallel rows, but also in various orientations. Within this space, benches can be rotated into functional clusters, replaced with equipment, or tethered together for conventional relationships.

Takeda
Lab layout and utilities translate to easy adaptation over time
Amenity spaces promote well-being and offer alternative workspaces
What makes it cool
Designed for opportunities where people can run into one another by chance, and encouraging of engagement across disciplines.
Central kitchen and conference hubs bring people together on each floor

Project Team

People
Jeannine Campbell
People
William Harris
People
Cheryl Wolfe