‘OFFICE_B’
Team: AnyColor, 7561architects
Type: public interior
Client: Biotrade
Area: 540 m2
Project: 2024
Implementation: 2025
Photography: Todor Todorov
The interior redesign project for the Biotrade building covers three floors and combines the reorganization of the existing office spaces, the conversion of the existing storage areas, and the integration of the building’s rooftop extension.
/Floor 5/
The top floor of the building is a rooftop extension that follows the L-shaped setback of the floor below. An entrance lobby leads to a spacious common area of 50 sq m, designed as a hall for large events and operational company meetings.
The generous ceiling height, shaped by the roof slopes, serves as a key spatial feature and is emphasized by bands of acoustic panels that run across the entire room in two directions.
Two mirrored conference rooms are positioned along the lower peripheral zone of the floor. The spaces are separated by glass partition walls and solid furniture cladding. The glass screens frame a visual connection to the main hall while simultaneously exposing the building’s steel structural elements.
Each room reveals its own distinct identity, defined by its palette of materials and furnishings.
‘OFFICE_B’
Team: AnyColor, 7561architects
Type: public interior
Client: Biotrade
Area: 540 m2
Project: 2024
Implementation: 2025
Photography: Todor Todorov
The interior redesign project for the Biotrade building covers three floors and combines the reorganization of the existing office spaces, the conversion of the existing storage areas, and the integration of the building’s rooftop extension.
/Floor 5/
The top floor of the building is a rooftop extension that follows the L-shaped setback of the floor below. An entrance lobby leads to a spacious common area of 50 sq m, designed as a hall for large events and operational company meetings.
The generous ceiling height, shaped by the roof slopes, serves as a key spatial feature and is emphasized by bands of acoustic panels that run across the entire room in two directions.
Two mirrored conference rooms are positioned along the lower peripheral zone of the floor. The spaces are separated by glass partition walls and solid furniture cladding. The glass screens frame a visual connection to the main hall while simultaneously exposing the building’s steel structural elements.
Each room reveals its own distinct identity, defined by its palette of materials and furnishings.
/Floor 4/
The functional layout of the fourth floor provides for an expansion of the working areas and the enhancement of the adjacent rooftop terrace. The main workspace is organized around an island arrangement of ten workstations positioned back-to-back, together with a shared table 8 m in length. The composition of upholstered lighting fixtures above the table plays an important role in the acoustics of the space.
The floor also includes a kitchenette, an informal meeting area with soft seating, and a conference room.
The rooftop terrace is designed with decking flooring and landscaping, creating a variety of relaxation areas, while a shading biodynamic pergola is positioned in the widest southwestern section.
/Level 3/
The new floor layout connects two previously separate levels of the building into a unified office space—the former storage area and two work halls—with the newly added area positioned 1.4 m lower than the main floor level. A smooth transition between the two is achieved through a multifunctional staircase–tribune.
The staircase also marks the meeting point between the different floor finishes: the carpet finish is interrupted here and transitions into a microcement surface that continues into the floor of the lower work area.
A conference area is positioned centrally within the zone enclosed between the lower and the upper work halls. The ceiling design focuses on acoustics, combining wooden panels with a composition of suspended sound-absorbing lighting fixtures developed specifically for the project.
/Floor 4/
The functional layout of the fourth floor provides for an expansion of the working areas and the enhancement of the adjacent rooftop terrace. The main workspace is organized around an island arrangement of ten workstations positioned back-to-back, together with a shared table 8 m in length. The composition of upholstered lighting fixtures above the table plays an important role in the acoustics of the space.
The floor also includes a kitchenette, an informal meeting area with soft seating, and a conference room.
The rooftop terrace is designed with decking flooring and landscaping, creating a variety of relaxation areas, while a shading biodynamic pergola is positioned in the widest southwestern section.
/Level 3/
The new floor layout connects two previously separate levels of the building into a unified office space—the former storage area and two work halls—with the newly added area positioned 1.4 m lower than the main floor level. A smooth transition between the two is achieved through a multifunctional staircase–tribune.
The staircase also marks the meeting point between the different floor finishes: the carpet finish is interrupted here and transitions into a microcement surface that continues into the floor of the lower work area.
A conference area is positioned centrally within the zone enclosed between the lower and the upper work halls. The ceiling design focuses on acoustics, combining wooden panels with a composition of suspended sound-absorbing lighting fixtures developed specifically for the project.