Humanscale, the global leader in ergonomic workplace solutions, today announced NexPoint(TM) kiosk, a thoughtfully engineered point-of-sale (POS) system that brings the brand's award-winning ergonomic ...
The B Corp Certified designer and manufacturer takes a bold leap in circular design and sustainable manufacturing to extend the lifespan of products intentionally built for reuse. “Due to high ...
New York-based Humanscale aims to lead the next wave in design, sourcing, manufacturing, and product lifecycle, even as its furniture supports a healthy, more intuitive, more active way for people to ...
On Tuesday, March 23 (2pm + 3pm EDT) tune in to Humanscale LIVE as the brand's expert hosts answer your questions in real—time and share their tips and tricks to build the ideal WFH setup, no matter ...
Madison Seating highlights the Humanscale Freedom Chair as a compact ergonomic option for hybrid workers furnishing small apartments and multi-use home offices. People working from home need seating ...
Humanscale is the first company to ever obtain full Living Product Challenge Certification offered by the International Living Future Institute, which they achieved for not only one, but two products.
The Humanscale Freedom is a luxury office chair that doesn’t make any pretenses about doubling as a gaming chair, but that’s not to say it couldn’t be a great fit for both roles. After all, any chair ...
NEW YORK, June 16, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Humanscale – the leader in responsible design and manufacturing of high-performance seating and desking products – has just announced that 25 of their products, ...
Humanscale’s new New York City headquarters is located in the historic Grace Building, an ecru-color LEED Silver-certified skyscraper that overlooks Bryant Park. Inside, wraparound windows offer ...
The Humanscale Freedom is not your average chair. It's not just another ergonomic chair. It's designed by ergonomics pioneer Niels Diffrient to remove complexity. Diffrient removed levers, knobs, ...
Apple messed with a cardinal rule of industrial design when it made the iPhone 6. The glassy screen, 5.5 inches on the diagonal, was too large for people with small hands to reach the top. To ...