Jennifer Busch

Jennifer Busch

Jennifer Busch, Hon. IIDA, as Vice President, A&D Market Development at InterfaceFLOR. Entering one of several newly created positions designed to fortify our connection to the architecture and design industry, Busch has been a fixture in the commercial design industry for the past 20 years. As editorial director for Contract magazine, Jennifer helped create Contract China and the online publication Green&Design. In 2009, she received Honorary IIDA status, to date the only design editor to have received such recognition. Busch will be responsible for development and management of business relationships with major architectural and design firms throughout North America.


More Posts by Jennifer Busch :

Consumers Value Sustainability in Hospitality

In early 2012, MindClick SGM partnered with leading internet travel service Expedia to conduct an online research study of consumer attitudes toward sustainability in hotel properties. The survey of 5,000 Expedia consumers across demographic lines was intended to determine consumer definitions… Continue reading »

Faster, Cheaper…Better

Good design is increasingly critical to good healthcare If the healthcare sector routinely exists at the center of multiple, sometimes opposing forces, today it is being pulled in more—and more complex—directions than ever before, all of which have some influence… Continue reading »

Three Trends in Retail Design

The national unemployment rate continues to hover around 9%, the stock market is performing erratically, and household incomes are stagnant. So there may be few logical explanations for why we have seen 14 consecutive months of growth in the retail… Continue reading »

Jennifer on Design: Senior Living Trends

Byron Kuth, a principal of Kuth Ranieri (www.kuthranieri.com) in San Francisco, calls it a “demographic tsunami,” and questions whether anyone is ready to meet the demand that is coming—and coming fast.  He is talking about the retirement of the Baby… Continue reading »

Three Trends in Office Design

It’s hard to define precisely what the “office of the future” will look like, but top corporate designers from around the country agree that it will look nothing like our traditional (and quickly fading) concept of the corporate workplace. Branding—expressing… Continue reading »