DISCOVERABLE DESKS
Finding location and orientation in a mobile workplace
SOPHIE SCOTT
1
, BEN DOHERTY
2
, ALESSANDRA FABBRI
3
,
NICOLE GARDNER
4
and M. HANK HAEUSLER
5
1,3,4
UNSW
1,3,4
{sophie.scott|a.fabbri|n.gardner}@unsw.edu.au
2
BVN
2
Ben_Doherty@bvn.com.au
5
UNSW & CAFA Visual Innovation Institute Beijing
5
m.haeusler@unsw.edu.au
Abstract. The drive towards increasing productivity through
collaborative ways of working has spurred a parallel trend in flexible
and adaptable workplace environments. Mobile desks are one
feasible solution to this but workplaces that adopt mobile desks risk
creating spatial inefficiencies. These range from overcrowding or
underutilization, to potential compliance issues in terms of fire egress
requirements and health and safety regulations. While there is a need
to understand mobile desking configurations there are currently no
well-established ways to track the location and orientation of mobile
desks within workplaces. Consequently, this paper describes a research
project that adopts an action research methodology as an iterative and
participatory framework to investigate and develop a unique method
for capturing the location and orientation of freely moveable desks in
an open workplace environment. This uses an ensemble of Bluetooth
location beacons and computer vision techniques to provide a finer
resolution than either method alone can currently provide. The
demonstration of this ensemble method is the main contribution of
this work. This paper demonstrates that combining these methods can
enhance the advantages of each; computer vision gives higher resolution
and beacons reduce the scope of the image search task
Keywords. Indoor Positioning Systems; Office Space Planning;
Location Data; Computer vision; activity-based working.
1. Introduction
The drive towards increasing productivity through collaborative ways of working
has spurred a parallel trend for flexible and adaptable workplace environments.
In an Australian context the workplace organisational strategy known as
activity-based working (ABW) has gained increasing popularity (Candido et al.
2018). In an ABW environment, users are encouraged to change locations within
Intelligent & Informed, Proceedings of the 24
th
International Conference of the Association for
Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia (CAADRIA) 2019, Volume 2, 653-662. © 2019
and published by the Association for Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia (CAADRIA),
Hong Kong.