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Relocate or Renegotiate: A Practical Office Space Planning Guide for Leaders Who Are Scaling or Rightsizing

When a company is hiring fast or tightening costs, real estate decisions move from “nice to have” to strategic. The fastest way to reduce risk is to start with office space planning that is grounded in data, clear business needs, and realistic delivery constraints. Done well, space planning turns an office into an operating system: it supports the workflow, improves employee satisfaction, and keeps your footprint aligned with how people actually work.

Below is a practical framework for office space planning, including the questions to ask, the drawings you should request, and the space planning software that can help you test scenarios before you commit to a lease or a construction project.

  1. Relocate vs renegotiate: five questions that decide the path

Before you change addresses, check whether your existing space can be improved through space planning and targeted renovations.

  1. Is your current footprint still right
    Look at attendance patterns, peak days, and growth forecasts. If your area is consistently mismatched, office space planning will show whether you need more room, less room, or different configurations.

  2. Does the location still serve your talent and clients
    Your real estate strategy should reflect commuting patterns and regional hiring. If the office building no longer supports recruitment or client access, relocation might be justified.

  3. Are you constrained by the building’s rules
    Building codes, accessibility requirements, and base building systems can limit what’s possible. Early office space planning avoids concepts that cannot be approved.

  4. Are your work models stable enough to plan
    Hybrid work and remote work change demand for collaboration zones and quiet areas. Effective space planning starts by agreeing on work styles and policies, then designing around them.

  5. Can you execute with the time and resources you have
    Even great space design fails without coordination. Align stakeholders from HR, IT, finance, and facilities management before you lock decisions.

  1. Diagnose before you draw: the data you need

Strong office space planning begins with a short diagnostic that connects employee needs to business goals.

Measure how people work
• Occupancy by day and by team
• Space utilization for key zones (workstations, focus rooms, collaboration areas)
• Meeting patterns (larger rooms versus smaller rooms)

Map what the business truly needs
• Business needs: growth headcount, client-facing functions, compliance
• Employee needs: privacy, collaboration, focus, accessibility, storage

Document constraints
• Column grids and usable area per square foot
• Mechanical and electrical capacity
• Natural light access and glare control
• Security systems requirements for sensitive teams

This is where space planning adds immediate value: it makes tradeoffs visible and it prevents “wish list” layouts that do not fit the square footage realities of your lease.

  1. From goals to plans: what to produce and how to read them

Once you have the inputs, your team (often with interior design support) should produce a small set of floor plans that represent your main scenarios.

Typical scenario set
• Scenario A: optimize the existing space with minimal renovations
• Scenario B: moderate renovations with refreshed office interiors
• Scenario C: relocate and design a new workplace environment

What to look for in floor plans
• Clear circulation and an intuitive process flow
• Correct allocation of seats, support spaces, and storage
• Balanced mix of private offices, collaborative spaces, and focused work zones
• Good adjacency logic (who sits near whom)
• Code-compliant egress and accessibility

At this stage, office design choices should follow the plan, not lead it. Space planning sets the structure; office interiors and finishes refine the experience.

  1. Workspace strategy: zones that support modern work

Most organizations need a workspace that supports multiple work styles on the same day. Your office space planning should define zones and rules, not just furniture.

A practical zoning model
• Focus: phone-free rooms for focused work
• Collaboration: open collaboration areas for quick alignment
• Meetings: a right-sized mix of meeting rooms and conference rooms
• Support: printing, lockers, kitchen, well-being areas

Hot-desking can work, but only if office space planning accounts for peak demand, storage, and etiquette. In many hybrid work programs, a mix of assigned seats and hot-desking reduces friction.

When teams need both privacy and speed, consider a blend of private offices and team rooms, supported by small focus rooms. If you rely heavily on an open floor plan, use partitions and acoustic solutions to protect concentration and reduce distraction.

  1. Layout choices: match the typology to the team

There is no universal “best” layout. The right office layouts are the ones that match your workflow and employee needs.

Common options and where they fit
• Open floor plan: good for visibility and team energy, but needs acoustic planning
• Cubicles: can improve focus and reduce noise without building full walls
• Private offices: essential for confidential work, coaching, and sensitive roles
• Co-working style zones: great for project teams and short sprints

Office space planning should test each option against your real constraints: budgets, usable area, and the speed of change you expect over the next 12 to 36 months.

  1. Ergonomic and human factors: performance without burnout

People will judge the space by how it feels on a busy day. A good work environment supports both performance and well-being.

Key ergonomic considerations
• Ergonomic seating and adjustable surfaces for diverse bodies
• Screen placement and lighting angles to reduce strain
• Enough space per workstation to avoid crowding

If your workforce is dense, space planning needs to keep the “density invisible.” Pair an ergonomic baseline with sound control, privacy, and access to natural light. When done well, comfort becomes a measurable outcome: fewer interruptions, higher employee satisfaction, and smoother collaboration.

  1. Technology and operations: make the plan buildable

Office space planning must translate into buildable drawings and manageable operations.

Coordinate early with facilities management
• Power and data for workstations and conference rooms
• AV standards and room booking
• Security systems placement, access control, and visitor flow

Make sure interior design decisions do not compromise functionality. For example, modular furniture can improve flexibility and reduce long-term costs, but only if it fits the workflows and storage requirements of each team.

  1. Sustainability and cost control: optimize without overbuilding

Sustainability is no longer a branding add-on; it affects operating cost, talent, and asset value in real estate.

Practical moves in office interiors
• Energy-efficient lighting and controls
• Low-impact materials and reuse where possible
• Layouts that reduce future demolition during renovations

If you are pursuing LEED, plan early so you can align the design strategy, documentation, and procurement. Even without certification, effective space planning can reduce waste by limiting rework and sizing the office to actual occupancy.

  1. Tools and process: run the project with clarity

You do not need a massive program to do office space planning well, but you do need a clear process.

Recommended process

  1. Align stakeholders on goals, timeline, and budget

  2. Gather data on occupancy, employee needs, and constraints

  3. Build test-fit scenarios using space planning software

  4. Review options, select a direction, and confirm building codes

  5. Develop detailed plans, pricing, and a phased renovations schedule

Space planning software helps you simulate allocations, compare configurations, and maintain a single source of truth for revisions. For multi-site portfolios, space planning software also supports governance: you can standardize room sizes while still adapting to local needs.

  1. A decision checklist for leaders

Before you sign a lease, approve drawings, or start renovations, confirm:

• The space planning aligns with your strategic priorities and forecast headcount
• The office space planning supports your work models (hybrid work and remote work policies)
• Plans match code requirements and operational realities
• The plan protects focused work as well as collaboration
• Space utilization targets are defined and measurable
• Ergonomics standards are documented for the whole workspace
• Stakeholders agree on scope, timeline, and decision rights

Conclusion: treat space planning as a growth lever

Relocating or renegotiating is not a design preference; it is a capacity decision. With rigorous office space planning, you can optimize cost per square foot, improve functionality, and create office interiors that people want to use. The result is a work environment that supports performance and wellness today, and that can adapt through the next cycle of change.

If you are evaluating options, start with a short planning diagnostic and a small set of scenario floor plans. It is the fastest way to de-risk your real estate move and turn office space planning into a measurable advantage.