Both WAM sites were designed and furnished by a professional decorator […] They include modularized carrels to offer students the feeling of private, personal workspace. [One] lab is decorated in shades of rose and blue, with wall carpeting to buffer sound. [The other] lab is appointed in peach and turquoise and buffered with dark wood wall paneling.[2]
This design reflects how themes of private and public space inform sites of technoencounter, especially as a dorm operates as both a public and private space. Here, the designer was attempting to move away from the sanitary, institutional paradigm of existing labs, and toward a “softened,” more home-like aesthetic. Even further, the modular carrels specifically aimed to foster “the feeling of private, personal workspace.”