By: Pamela V. Rothenberg, Esq.
Happy New Year to All – Here’s hoping
that this is a healthy and prosperous year for you.
Continuing Part 2 of the story about our “law
firm office of the future,” here are a few of marquis features of the new space
we now occupy:
· We
eliminated the concept of hosting visiting attorneys and professionals in
dedicated offices (i.e., in our new space, you will not find the old economy
“visiting attorney” office). Instead we built dedicated communal “touch down”
spaces, where the frequent visitors to our office can reserve a transient work
station, dock in their laptops and get to work, sitting side by side with their
colleagues. By leveraging our VOIP telephone system, our traveling attorneys
can take their direct dial telephone numbers with them to our touch down areas,
log those numbers into the associated telephones and instantly take calls as if
they were sitting at their home office desks.
· Before
we moved, if we lined up all of our paper files side by side in domino fashion,
they would extend for about a mile. By the time of our move, we had reduced our
required paper filing space by approximately eighty percent, from 4,400 to 800
lineal feet and this translated into a commensurate reduction in real estate
required to store this paper. To achieve this stunning outcome, we had to
develop a reliable system for scanning and profiling files in our document
management system and we utilized RFID tracking technology to be able to find
and retrieve our files from their physical storage locations. Most importantly,
we simply did not build enough room to store paper files in the traditional
way. Each attorney was allocated a certain amount of file space and any paper
files that exceeded this allocation were scanned and eliminated. In total, we
discarded over 35,000 gallons of paper that we no longer pay rent to store. One
of my partners boasts that in anticipation of our move, he threw away or
shredded the equivalent of ten large commercial size garbage pails of files
(almost the size of a small condominium).
· We
eliminated vestigial space uses from the “old school” law firm world, such as
our library, and in their place, we designed numerous places for collaboration,
connection and collegiality, including a lobby coffee bar and a fabulous
community dining area.
· In
every aspect of our design, we tried to anticipate the need for future change
(change that we actually believe is more imminent than most attorneys
anticipate). For example, we used non-structural demising partitions for
windowed offices, facilitating office renovations, should they become
necessary. We installed modular systems for interior offices and administrative
staff work areas to enable us to redefine and reuse space as needed based on
future changes in staffing and models for service delivery. As our office grows
in attorney head count, this approach offers us the flexibility to increase the
number of interior professional offices within our existing office footprint,
thereby maximizing our office’s profitability by increasing office revenues
without incurring a corresponding increase in our occupancy costs.
Specifically, our administrative secretarial bays can be easily converted into
interior offices through the use of this modular furniture. And, our
accountants favor this approach since the modular furniture (and therefore,
virtually the entire core of our office) can be depreciated over seven years
instead of the more customary fifteen to thirty nine years.
· We
committed to both “living in” an office building that embraced sustainability
principles and to building environmentally-conscious office space, making LEED
certification a priority. Toward those objectives, we selected a LEED platinum
office building and our office design features water-conserving plumbing
fixtures, materials and furniture made from recycled and/or sustainably managed
products, and energy efficient lighting and controls. To provide a healthier
environment for our staff, throughout our office we used non- or low-VOC
emitting construction materials. Our office has also completed its review by the Green Building Certification Institute, and we achieved LEED Gold certification.
Designing
and building a new office is a daunting challenge. Setting the bar high – to
build the law firm office of the future – takes this challenge to an entirely
new level (especially when you are talking about lawyers). By engaging in a
thoughtful and disciplined process that was supported at every step by an
extremely talented team of professionals and welcoming and trusting colleagues,
we have not only positioned ourselves for the future but have achieved an
exceptional result. As a real estate attorney, with particular insights into
this process, I was privileged to be a central part of this project and I am
very proud of the result we, together, achieved. My new and ongoing challenge
is to develop a means by which I can share with our clients the best practices
we employed to effectuate this result and to drive greater value to them as
they undertake similar projects.