Workspace Unwired Podcast Por British Council for Offices arte de portada

Workspace Unwired

Workspace Unwired

De: British Council for Offices
Escúchala gratis

Workspace Unwired is a fresh new podcast brought to you by the BCO in which we delve into everything workspace and work places, from the people that make it happen, the places that it helps create, the planet that we need to protect as we redesign, retrofit and deliver fresh workspaces and the policies and practices that are impacting the sector today and tomorrow.British Council for Offices Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Workspace Unwired: Building Brum…the Bruntwood way
    Apr 6 2026

    In this episode of Workspace Unwired BCO chief executive Samantha McClary takes her portable studio to Birmingham and joins Bruntwood SciTech’s Moe Ali for a walking tour of the firm’s assets in the UK’s second city.

    Starting at Centre City, Bruntwood’s redevelopment of a Brutalist beast close to New Street station, the pair pound the streets of Birmingham visiting a handful of buildings from the traditional to the modern. Along the way Ali shares the Bruntwood story, unpacks the challenges and the opportunities facing Birmingham and talks candidly about the market and the firm’s own needs to pivot in times of uncertainty.

    Recorded live and on the go, this recording has background noises and will transport you from building to building with cut aways and jumps, but it is also full of the life and character of a bustling city. And, I guarantee that you won’t be able to help yourself being drawn in by Ali’s infectious passion for Birmingham and the assets he looks after in the city.

    Be bold, be Birmingham, be Bruntwood?

    Enjoy.

    Más Menos
    50 m
  • Workspace Unwired: The Ps of successful development – playful, purposeful, placemaking…and perhaps Percy Pigs
    Mar 23 2026

    In this episode of Workspace Unwired BCO chief executive Samantha McClary is talking to Doug Higgins, a director at Socius, and Emma Goodford, consultant adviser at Railpen, about not one but two major developments they are delivering together in Cambridge.

    While both Mill Yard and Botanic Place offer plenty of workspace, like all careful development today, both also focus heavily on creating place. An office development today has to offer more than just a place to work. It needs to be a place to thrive, a place to feel alive, to be inspired, and, say the pair, a place where you can – and should – have a little fun.

    The importance of the impact that places we build have on society runs deep through both Socius and Railpen. As a B Corp, how the Socius business impacts on society and the planet is written into its Articles of Association, and as a £35bn pension fund dedicated to railway workers, Railpen has to make sure that its assets can continue to create value for its 350,000 members.

    Listen in as the trio, fuelled by Percy Pigs, explore how occupier expectations are shifting, why amenity now extends far beyond the building’s walls, what it really takes to create workplaces that act as magnets not mandates, and how both Mill Yard and Botanic Place are intentionally prioritising community integration, local operators, flexibility and wellbeing to ensure they deliver successful new places within Cambridge.

    Enjoy.

    Más Menos
    46 m
  • Workspace Unwired: How urban farms may be the RTO magnet every business needs
    Mar 9 2026

    In this episode of the Workspace Unwired podcast BCO chief executive Samantha McClary is talking to Patrick Dumas, founder and CEO of Square Mile Farms, about how his company is transforming offices into hubs of urban agriculture, wellbeing, and community connection.

    Over the course of this 40 minute conversation, recorded on location in London’s Paddington, Dumas shares how what began as an attempt to establish a distributed food production network across London's rooftops has evolved into a human‑centred, experiential amenity that brings people back into workplaces—not for desks, but for shared experiences, health, and purpose.

    While the farms may have started as a way to help businesses deliver on the E of their ESG strategies, Dumas says the S has become the company’s most powerful impact area. Farms attract interaction across hierarchies, while school visits, nutrition workshops, and regular harvest donations to food banks expand businesses into the local community.

    Listen in to find out more about how the farms work, why big businesses like British Land, Vodafone and GSK are leaning and why Dumas has an ambition to become the largest farm in Europe, based entirely in London, that sells no food. And, of course, why he wants designers and developers to integrate farms as a standard amenity in our workplaces.

    Enjoy.

    Más Menos
    42 m
Todavía no hay opiniones