Office space planning
[edit] Introduction
Many workers spend much of their time in office environments. High-quality offices can help motivate and retain staff, improve efficiency, collaboration and communication, and reduce conflict.
When moving to a new facility, or redesigning an existing office, it is important to engage with occupants through user group discussions or interviews to ensure proposals satisfy their needs and desires as well as business requirements. This can be facilitated by the use of mood boards, computer-generated images, mock-ups and samples that can help occupants visualise and compare different options.
Planning office spaces, involves a number of complex and challenging issues, including:
- Location and access to amenities.
- Corporate culture and brand.
- Building constraints.
- Spatial considerations.
- Working practices.
- Proximity relationships.
- ICT requirements.
- Furniture, fittings and equipment requirements.
- Flexibility.
- Future expansion.
- Capital and operational costs.
- Energy targets and sustainability requirements.
- Efficiency of the working environment.
- Environmental requirements, such as noise, lighting, ventilation, temperature, and so on.
- Environmental controls.
- Views and access to outside space.
- Security and privacy.
- Legislation.
When considering the office space needed, analysis should be carried out of the types of spaces required, the number of different areas, i.e. open office spaces, enclosed cubicles, private meeting facilities, conference areas etc, the number of employees (current and anticipated), recreational requirements, welfare facilities, and so on.
The legislation that guides the planning of office space is the Workplace, (Health Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 and Regulation 10 states the following with regards to room dimensions and space requirements:
'Every room where persons work shall have sufficient floor area, height and unoccupied space for purposes of health, safety and welfare.'
The associated Approved Code of Practice and Guidance states:
'Workrooms should have enough free space to allow people to get to and from workstations and to move within the room, with ease. The number of people who may work in any particular room at any one time will depend not only on the size of the room, but on the space taken up by furniture, fittings, equipment, and on the layout of the room. Workrooms, except those where people only work for short periods, should be of sufficient height (from floor to ceiling) over most of the room to enable safe access to workstations. In older buildings with obstructions such as low beams the obstruction should be clearly marked.'
Numerically, the guidance states that the total volume of a room (when empty), divided by the normal number of people who work in the room, should be at least 11 cubic metres.
For example, with a ceiling height of 2.4 m, a floor area of 4.6 sq. m (e.g. 2.0 x 2.3 m) will be needed to provide the 11 cubic metres. With a higher ceiling height of 3.0 m, a minimum floor area of 3.7 sq. m (e.g. 2.0 x 1.85 m) will be needed.
However, this minimum figure may not be sufficient if, for example, a large amount of the room is occupied by furniture, or depending on the contents and layout of the room and the type of work being undertaken.
The 11 cubic metres minimum standard is not applicable to: retail sales kiosks, attendants' shelters, machine control cabs or similar small structures, where space is necessarily limited; or rooms being used for lectures, meetings and similar purposes.
The 2013 Occupier Density study published by the British Council for Offices (BCO) found '…a mean density of one workplace per 10.9 sq. m net internal area (NIA). Of the sample properties 38% fall within the range 8-10 sq. m, while 58% fall within the wider range of 8-12 sq. m… the lowest and highest densities are in the Corporate (13.1 sq. m) and Financial & Insurance (9.7 sq. m) sectors'
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- British Council for Offices.
- CEOs predict COVID-19 workplace changes will be permanent.
- Criteria for the choice of a structural system to be included in office specification.
- Lifts for office buildings.
- Mood board.
- Office.
- Office definition.
- Office environment design ideas.
- Post Occupancy Evaluation: operational performance of a refurbished office building.
- Site office.
- Space.
- Space planning.
- Structural systems for offices.
- Workplace definition.
[edit] External references
- Approved Code of Practice and Guidance.
- Workplace, (Health Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992.
- UN Office Space Planning Guidelines 2012.
Featured articles and news
Futurebuild and UK Construction Week London Unite
Creating the UK’s Built Environment Super Event and over 25 other key partnerships.
Welsh and Scottish 2026 elections
Manifestos for the built environment for upcoming same May day elections.
Advancing BIM education with a competency framework
“We don’t need people who can just draw in 3D. We need people who can think in data.”
Guidance notes to prepare for April ERA changes
From the Electrical Contractors' Association Employee Relations team.
Significant changes to be seen from the new ERA in 2026 and 2027, starting on 6 April 2026.
First aid in the modern workplace with St John Ambulance.
Ireland's National Residential Retrofit Plan
Staged initiatives introduced step by step.
Solar panels, pitched roofs and risk of fire spread
60% increase in solar panel fires prompts tests and installation warnings.
Modernising heat networks with Heat interface unit
Why HIUs hold the key to efficiency upgrades.
Reflecting on the work of the CIOB Academy
Looking back on 2025 and where it's going next.
Procurement in construction: Knowledge hub
Brief, overview, key articles and over 1000 more covering procurement.
Sir John Betjeman’s love of Victorian church architecture.
Exchange for Change for UK deposit return scheme
The UK Deposit Management Organisation established to deliver Deposit Return Scheme unveils trading name.
A guide to integrating heat pumps
As the Future Homes Standard approaches Future Homes Hub publishes hints and tips for Architects and Architectural Technologists.
BSR as a standalone body; statements, key roles, context
Statements from key figures in key and changing roles.
Resident engagement as the key to successful retrofits
Retrofit is about people, not just buildings, from early starts to beyond handover.





















