The Office Group’s 210 Euston Road hails the post-pandemic workspace

The Office Group (TOG) celebrates the landmark opening of its 40th location in London, TOG 210 Euston Road

Lobby area featuring grey sofas back-to-back with a table inbetween; a large front reception desk with large in-door plant pots in the room's corners. A wave squiggle illuminated light hangs from above.
(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

The Office Group's latest venue, 210 Euston Road, not only marks the opening of a fresh, modern new workspace for London, one that elegantly combines style, functionality and craft, it also flags the landmark 40th location for the flexible office architecture specialist, which has grown tremendously and gained a loyal following since its inception in 2004. Designed by Universal Design Studio, the building is the first launch from The Office Group (TOG) since the Covid pandemic started and hails a new era for co-working. 

Spanning 69,000sq ft, the seven-floor building is one of TOG’s largest venues. It takes up the building from the Aga Khan Foundation (after the latter's move to King’s Cross), and Universal Design Studio’s redesign emphasises contemporary working habits and patterns. There are some 150 seats for individual workstations; smaller office units for teams; as well as larger workspaces that companies can take over and adapt to their needs. Flexibility is the name of the game here, as TOG tackles hybrid working trends and the workforce's post-pandemic needs. 

Exterior balcony section of a building featuring outdoor tables and chairs. Co-working space in London

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Opening its doors to the public, 210 Euston Road is in good company. UCL and the Wellcome Trust are just two of the major hubs of learning nearby, while Google and Facebook are also in this part of London – making TOG part of the vibrant area’s established Knowledge Quarter. The design took its cues from its environment. 

‘We studied the architecture of the buildings in the Knowledge Quarter (the British Museum, Royal College of Physicians and UCL) and tried to disseminate some of these learnings into our design. We wanted the design to reference an institution, without being institutional. One of the hero points of the design references the traditional reading room. To echo this, we created a hidden co-working lounge – a space that cannot be seen from the outside – and its hidden nature lends the feeling [that it is a] privilege to be there. Similarly, institutions of this kind have ample space for public interaction. At 210 Euston Road, everyone has access to the front half of the building, which hosts a café, a large reception and a residency space. These ideas embody a contemporary institute, providing a space to exchange knowledge and ideas while naturally fostering collaboration,' says Universal Design Studio’s associate directory Carly Sweeney.

The designers aimed for a ‘timeless' interior, and combined oak wood, fine detailing, strategic use of colour and plenty of planting to ensure the space feels comfortable, functional and welcoming – a place users will look forward to returning to.

Meeting room with round table and chairs.

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Kitchen with curtains

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Large wood table with stools and various indoor pot plants. Stairwell rises above the area.

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Exterior of euston Road with large trees in-front.

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Co working space interior in london with workstations and private booths

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Seating in flexible office space with yellow chairs

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Interior of Euston Road looking through the glass windows to a multi-desk seating area.

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Meeting room behind white curtain

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Table with wood chair; notepad, pen and two glasses of water on the table. Pot plant also on the table.

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Breakout area-style mysterious seating scene with someone sat in one bay.

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

Workspace in Euston Road

(Image credit: Simon Bevan)

INFORMATION
universaldesignstudio.com (opens in new tab)
theofficegroup.com (opens in new tab)

Ellie Stathaki is the Architecture Editor at Wallpaper*. She trained as an architect at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece and studied architectural history at the Bartlett in London. Now an established journalist, she has been a member of the Wallpaper* team since 2006, visiting buildings across the globe and interviewing leading architects such as Tadao Ando and Rem Koolhaas. Ellie has also taken part in judging panels, moderated events, curated shows and contributed in books, such as The Contemporary House (Thames & Hudson, 2018) and Glenn Sestig Architecture Diary (2020).

With contributions from