Design Is Only the Beginning: Managing Change in Office Renovations
By Mike Niezer, RA Kelly Shields, LEED AP
April 2, 2026Post Tagged in
It’s easy to think about renovation as a construction project. Define the scope, design the space, deliver on time and on budget—and success follows.Our own office renovation wasn’t just a physical transformation. It was an alignment with how our team works day to day—how we collaborate, how we move through the office, and how we interact across disciplines. And that’s where change management became critical to the project’s success. |
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What Change Management Actually MeansChange management is the intentional effort to help people navigate both physical changes and behavior-based changes. Without that intentionality, the risks are real. Research by McKinsey and Company shows a majority of change initiatives fail—often due to a lack of communication or employee buy-in. And we foresaw how easily that could happen. If people don’t understand the “why” behind a change—or how it affects their day-to-day work—engagement and productivity can decline. For us, that meant success couldn’t just be measured by construction milestones. It had to be measured by how well our team adopted and used the new space. |



