“…Gutman (2010, p. 155) argues that “a building cannot be conceived apart from the human activities it serves to facilitate and encourage.” Pinch (2008) shares the same view when highlighting the necessity of studying both people and things to see how interactions between them occur and what the outcomes are. Studies addressing built spaces and the interactions that shape them include work on apartment building lobbies (Bearman, 2005), trading room offices (Stark, 2009), laboratories (Owen-Smith, 2013), engineering offices (Allen, 1977), corridors (Hurdley, 2010; Iedema et al, 2010), doors (D’Hoop, 2018), schools and dormitories (Heilweil, 1973; Minami & Tanaka, 1995), business centers (Perrée et al, 2018) as well as coffee machine and photocopier rooms (Fayard & Weeks, 2007). Despite this apparent multitude, the detailed exploration of buildings remains an “underdeveloped field of enquiry” (Jones, 2011) in terms of understanding their variety of hosted interactions.…”