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Does Design Excellence
= Workplace
Productivity?
Presented at the AIA Conference -
Form! Function! Future!
The
Expanding Dimensions of Architectural Practice
Portland, OR
15 October 2000
Introduction
In Managing in a Time of Great Change", in 1995, Peter Drucker
writes,
"It is not so very difficult to predict the future. It is only
pointless". He then goes on to say: "One cannot make decisions
for the future. Decisions are commitments to action. And actions are
always in the present, and in the present only. But actions in the present
are also the one and only way to make the future." (1)
With that sobering context, this paper will begin by noting that we are
embarking in an era of profound changes. One of those changes is the
transformation from the Information Age, which we have just begun to
understand, into the Knowledge Age, which we are just beginning to
identify. We can expect this change to be just as disrupting and
unsettling as the changes we experienced with the arrival of the computer.
The second Section of this paper will then deal with defining what is
knowledge. How is knowledge created? How do we propagate and distribute
knowledge? How do we protect the knowledge that we have acquired? We will
explore how the Knowledge Age affects the way we work. We will observe
that today's executives are just discovering the importance of knowledge
capital and are awakening to the need to manage its creation, distribution
and protection.
In Section three, we will analyze how the practice of work is evolving
during the transitions from the Industrial Age, which was characterized by
workflows into the Information Age characterized by connectivity and
Project Teams. We will advance that communities of practice and the
formation of teams of teams will characterize the Knowledge Age.
Section four will suggest how the design profession should prepare
itself to provide the workplaces able to support the Knowledge Age and its
communities of practice. We will suggest how the profession might
transform itself to meet the challenges of supporting the workplaces of
the Knowledge Age. And if the workplace can be an agent facilitating
knowledge growth, then how do we measure this growth in order to design
knowledge stimulating workplaces?
The final Section will recommend embarking on research projects aimed
at gathering the empirical evidence necessary to demonstrate the link
between the physical environment and the creation and distribution of
knowledge.
Download the entire 34 page document which was presented in Portland
Oregon to the AIA - Form! Function! Future! - The Expanding Dimensions of
Architectural Practice on October 15, 2000 in Microsoft Word
format by clicking on the link below. The article includes a bibliography of 99 references
and 23 web sites.
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