The 2026 edition of Workspace Design Show has officially revealed the shortlisted projects for its newly launched Workspace Design Awards, recognising outstanding achievements across workplace design, innovation, sustainability, experience and adaptability.The shortlisted projects showcase the breadth and depth of talent shaping today’s workplaces across the UK and Europe,from smart offices and large-scale corporate headquarters to flexible co-working environments and future-focused concept designs.Winners from all categories will be announced liveat the Workspace Design Awards Ceremony & Networking Party, taking place on Wednesday 25 February 2026 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm. The evening will bring together designers, architects, occupiers, and industry leaders to celebrate the most creative projects in workplace design. The networking party is also proudly sponsored by Mute, who is the main Headline Sponsor of the awards.
Chief People Priorities for 2026 - A Biophilic Response.
At its core, Biophilic Design is not about plants or aesthetics. It is about designing the conditions in which humans function best, drawing on our innate biological responses to light, nature, materiality, rhythm, refuge, connection and sensory balance. In other words, it provides a tangible way to turn cultural intent into lived experience.
Culture as an operating system is expressed not only through policies and leadership behaviours, but through the environments people inhabit every day. Spatial hierarchy, access to daylight, acoustic control, choice and autonomy, visibility, and opportunities for connection all send powerful signals about what is valued. A workplace that offers psychological safety, dignity, and agency does not rely solely on behavioural KPIs to reinforce culture — it embeds it into the system itself.
Similarly, as leaders become the primary interface of culture, the environments they operate within either support or undermine their ability to lead well. Biophilic workplaces reduce cognitive load, stress and fatigue, enabling better judgement, emotional regulation and decision-making. This matters when leaders are being asked to hold complexity, have difficult conversations and support mental health alongside performance. Capability does not exist in isolation from context.
CPOs’ deliberate reframing of wellbeing as performance infrastructure also aligns strongly with biophilic principles. Decades of research link exposure to natural light, views of nature, sensory variability and restorative spaces with improved concentration, faster recovery from stress, reduced absenteeism and stronger engagement. This is not a trade-off between care and results; it is a performance strategy grounded in human biology. READ on
SURFACING BRANDS WITH SOUL - a report on the Surface Design Show 2024
Get your jazz hands ready and lets celebrate sustainable design. Surface - the annual design showthat takes place in London’s Design hub in Islington each February, was a vibrant showcase ofbrands - international, as well as domestic, being creative in their mission to help our planet.
As Nickie West, Managing Director of Surface Design Show explains: "The theme for 2024focuses on the ambition to design well while doing good – with a conscious effort to protect our planet by aiming for zero waste manufactures and sustainable alternatives.
The natural world remains a key influence on the design industry, inspiring new techniques andprocesses, as well as offering a wealth of material substitutes."
Surface Design Show 4- 6 February 2025, London
Pioneering Research study aims to prove The Value of Biophilic Design in the workplace.
Biophilic Design - the use of plants in providing cleaner air and connecting us with nature, coupled with natural light, certain colours, acoustics, and fragrances - has long been proven to have a positive effect on both mental and physical well-being. For over 25 years, expert horticulturalists Benholm Group have pioneered the use of plants for interiors, not only as an eye-catching focal point, but also to promote the natural health benefits that being surrounded by plants can bring.
This concept has now been brought to the forefront of a new research study led by Sustainability Lead at House of Commons + PhD Researcher, Joyce Chan-Schoof to question if we can apply a social and economic value to biophilic design.
Can biophilic design add value to the workplace - not only through improving air quality and aesthetics, but can it have a tangible impact on employee productivity, retention, absenteeism, satisfaction, engagements and up-skilling?
Preventing the £100 billion loss to the British Economy
70 million working days are lost each year due to mental ill-health, costing Britain £70-£100 billion, according to the Mental Health Foundation, with a 24% increase to the number of working days lost in the past 6 years the number of working days due to stress, depression and anxiety. How do we improve this? The solution is closer and cheaper than you think…





