Is it enough for a workspace to just accommodate more people as a business grows? We believe that there is more to future-ready workspaces than scalability. Interior design can contribute positively and significantly to being pro-environment and improving the health and safety quotient of a workspace.

The future is green.

SUSTAINABILITY

At Interspace, everything from adhesives to paints used are carefully selected to ensure low VOC emission. When possible, we choose locally sourced materials which are rapidly renewable (from plants which are harvested within 10 years or less) as well as building components with recycled content. Energy efficient lighting with CFC-free air conditioning and fire suppressing systems are non negotiable choices. We regularly train our people towards a risk-free, accident-free work environment.

Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) is an internationally recognized green building certification system, providing third-party verification that a building or community was designed and built using strategies aimed at improving performance across all the metrics that matter most: energy savings, water efficiency, CO2 emissions reduction, improved indoor environmental quality, and stewardship of resources and sensitivity to their impacts.

Art in the everyday
is something we care
about deeply.

ART AND PUBLIC SPACES

A city needs art. Public art has the potential to get deeply embedded in the identity of a city, bringing people from different walks of life together. We were happy to be one of the earliest sponsors of events at Rangoli Metro Arts Centre, MG Road. Interspace donated murals and sculptures by local artists to brighten up the promenade. Committed to promoting indigenous arts, we try and include many such installations and feature walls in our corporate projects as well.

Using our abilities to engage
with communities in a
meaningful way

CSR INITIATIVES

Interspace regularly contributes to organisations working with causes we believe in, like healthcare (Bowring and Lady Curzon Hospital) and animal welfare (CUPA). One of our most memorable projects which combined our skills with our passion was designing and building homes for flood victims in Haveri, in association with Tata Relief Committee. 144 houses measuring about 290 sft each in area were built to stringent specifications. The community was provided with all the necessary infrastructure: roads, sanitation, power, school, community centre, public spaces, parks etc. Completed in 2009, the project was built on schedule and within the cost, inspite of difficult soil conditions and its geographical remoteness. The population of Mannur is completely resettled now and the community is thriving.