Life

How Wellness Design Is Redefining the Office: Super Buddha’s Newest Project Is SuperSure’s Office In Miami’s Wells Fargo Center

A bold rethinking of office space that puts feeling, flow, and human experience first.

Written by Contributing Writer

For decades, corporate space design followed a rigid formula. Office interiors were engineered for output, not wellbeing. However, the modern workplace has undergone a philosophical realignment. As hybrid work reshaped employee expectations and burnout became an economic liability rather than just a personal one, companies began to reconsider the emotional and physiological impact of their environments. The notion of a workplace as a sanctuary — an idea once reserved for luxury hospitality or high-end residential architecture — has outgrown its niche. In the corporate world, wellness has become a cultural value and, increasingly, a design imperative.

Today’s most forward-thinking organizations are no longer optimizing only for productivity. They are designing for presence, clarity, and creativity. Soft lighting replaces harsh glare. Natural materials and organic forms replace hard plastics and endless gray carpet. Meditation rooms sit alongside conference rooms; circadian-aligned lighting systems complement standing desks. In this emerging paradigm, architecture becomes a tool not only for physical function, but for emotional resonance. Corporate spaces are now expected to support mental equilibrium, elevate mood, and invite moments of stillness, as much as they facilitate ambition and collaboration.

It is within this cultural shift that Miami’s Wells Fargo Center has become home to a new expression of workplace design led by the artist known as Super Buddha. Across 25,000 square feet of penthouse space, Super Buddha has transformed a traditional corporate floorplate into a multi-sensory wellness environment for AI-driven insurance technology firm SuperSure. His vision — rooted in Asian aesthetics, numerology, symbolic color therapy, and contemporary spiritual architecture — reimagines the corporate office as a place of renewal rather than depletion.

The space features a sequence of experiential rooms designed to shift psychological states. A Zen meditation room provides infrared light, frequency-tuned audio, and a sculpted environment curated for cognitive reset. A vitality suite brings chiropractic and acupuncture practitioners onsite weekly, merging workforce care with hospitality-grade wellness services. Thoughtfully programmed hospitality zones — including two restaurants and a Tulum-esque lounge — serve as restorative social anchors rather than transactional break areas. Even circulation paths are choreographed to stimulate positive effect, with art-driven affirmations, blossoms, koi motifs, and luminous palettes embedded throughout the architecture.

This integrated environment reflects a new frontier in design culture: corporate real estate that borrows sensibility from wellness resorts and transformative art installations. Super Buddha is offering a template for where the next era of office life is headed.

BDG Media newsroom and editorial staff were not involved in the creation of this content.