When the Great Recession Hit, Studio Blitz Saw an Opportunity

Upgrade’s new San Francisco headquarters, spread over 32,000 square feet, uses a bright color scheme to differentiate activity zones and guide circulation.

Seth and Melissa Hanley founded Studio Blitz, a multidisciplinary firm based in California, in 2009.

“The thing about starting during a recession is that there’s nothing to lose,” quips Melissa Hanley, principal, cofounder, and CEO of Studio Blitz, the multidisciplinary firm she launched in 2009 with her spouse, Seth Hanley. Amid mass layoffs at the firm they were working for, the Hanleys looked to the new wave of start-ups emerging in San Francisco and Silicon Valley for inspiration. Ever since, Blitz has evolved with this environment, carving out a niche in tech-sector-focused workplace design.

Melissa says founding their own practice during such a turbulent time “was really about hustling,” a mindset that matched that of their entrepreneurial clientele. The rocky terrain of the Great Recession— and the stresses involved in starting a business—didn’t hinder their creative drive: “If we ended up failing and living in a tent in my parents’ front yard, it’s a really nice yard,” she laughs.

In those early years, Blitz began to navigate a new normal in the design world: working on specific office interiors as separate entities from the offices around them, rather than designing the building as a whole. The scale allowed Blitz to test ideas more quickly than if it had been working on an entire structure. More often than not, its clients wanted to be intimately involved in the details. The experience has been invaluable. “To experiment while being your authentic self as a designer has propelled our work forward,” remarks Seth, the company’s principal and creative director.

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In designing spaces for companies searching for less traditional offices, such as Google, YouTube, and global security services provider Northland Controls—the design of which won the IIDA Northern California Honor Award for medium-size offices in 2018—Blitz has tried to go deeper than the original brief. “We say, ‘If you ask someone what they want, they won’t tell you what they need,’” says Melissa. “We aim for the needs rather than the wants.”