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A graphics page presenting two organic cell-cluster org diagrams of the firm's disciplines, one labelled around a central "impact", one as a solid black shape study.
Summary
A graphics page showing how the firm's interdisciplinary services are diagrammed as an organic cluster of cells, presented both as a labelled version around a central "impact" and as a pure black shape study.
Visual description
Warm cream background, section number "2.8.7 Org diagrams" top-left on a hairline rule. A short left text column notes these are examples of how the interdisciplinary firm is illustrated in keeping with the graphic-forms approach. The right two-thirds holds two large circular diagrams side by side. The left one is built from rounded white cells packed inside a black ring, each cell labelled with a discipline (facilitation, place-making, community and stakeholder engagement, branding, wayfinding, strategy, interior design, architecture, research, environmental graphic design, communication design) clustered around a central white circle reading "impact", with a stippled dotted halo radiating outward and the word "curiosity" tagged at the lower-left edge. The right one repeats the same cell cluster as a solid all-black silhouette with no labels, showing the underlying shape language. The persistent left-rail section index (Graphics in bold with an arrow) and the standard footer sit on hairline rules.
Key takeaway
Rendering an org or services map as an organic cluster of rounded cells rather than a boxes-and-lines chart, so the diagram itself carries the brand's shape language. Pairing the labelled diagram with its unlabelled black silhouette shows that the structure works as both information and pure graphic.
Reuse notes
A distinctive way to visualise an interdisciplinary or multi-service organisation where the disciplines genuinely interlock. The stippled "curiosity" halo and central "impact" core tie the diagram to the brand's stated values. Best where there are enough disciplines to fill a cluster; a handful of services would look sparse.
From this deck: Organic org diagram impact cluster
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