“…Generally, there appears to be a shift from formal craft and skill-related workshop instruction, where students occupy their own personal studio desk space within the studio, to informal, blended, online, peer-led and classroombased teaching approaches common in modular delivery (Ghassan & Bohemia, 2015;Scott-Webber, Branch, Batholomew, & Nygaard, 2014). Moreover, hot-desking is common (where students work in whatever free unallocated desk spaces they find) and increasingly no-desking (where students work in whatever free unallocated place they find) arrangements have become widespread in design education, encouraging a reliance on digital skills and communication (Mokhtar Noriega, Heppell, Segovia Bonet, & Heppell, 2013). Boys (2008) suggests that the formal/informal divide hides more than it reveals about the complex relationships between learning and the spaces in which learning takes place.…”