Open plan offices were supposed to be the answer. More collaboration, fewer silos, better energy. What nobody planned for was the noise. Every call becomes everyone’s call. Every keyboard click carries. A mid-morning sales floor can hit decibel levels that rival a busy cafe, and people are trying to concentrate through all of it.
Across Dubai, companies are waking up to a problem that performance reviews and ergonomic chairs cannot fix. The issue is acoustic, and it needs an acoustic solution.
Noise in a workplace is not just annoying. Research from acoustic engineering studies consistently shows that employees in noisy environments make more errors, take longer to complete tasks, and report higher stress than those in quieter settings. For industries where precision matters, that is not a minor operational footnote.
Dubai’s commercial real estate is dense. Buildings go up fast, floors get packed, and glass-heavy interiors look stunning but do nothing for sound management. Hard surfaces reflect noise rather than absorb it. What starts as a manageable hum becomes a wall of sound by 11am.
Companies paying premium rent for Grade A offices often discover too late that the space was designed for aesthetics, not acoustics.
Acoustic panels are sound-absorbing materials installed on walls, ceilings, and sometimes floors to reduce reverberation. Reverberation is the persistence of sound after the source stops. In a room with reflective surfaces, a single word echoes. Multiply that by 40 people on calls and you get a room where nothing is clearly heard.
Panels work by converting sound energy into a small amount of heat through friction within the material’s fibres. The result is a room where sound travels less, echoes die faster, and conversations stay more local. You can hear the person in front of you instead of the entire floor.
The panels themselves come in a range of finishes. Fabric-wrapped, perforated wood, suspended ceiling baffles, and freestanding screens all serve different spatial needs. For open plan layouts in Dubai, a combination of ceiling baffles and wall panels usually delivers the most consistent result.
Akinco has been supplying and installing acoustic solutions across the UAE for years. Office acoustic treatment is one of their core areas, and the approach they take starts with an assessment rather than a catalogue.
Every space responds to sound differently. Room dimensions, ceiling height, floor material, furniture density, and even the type of work being done all affect what the acoustic problem actually is and what will fix it. A call centre has different needs than a legal firm’s open floor. A trading room is not the same acoustic challenge as a product design studio.
Akinco measures first and specifies second. That process means the panels installed are the ones that address the actual problem, not just the most common configuration.
The difference is noticeable quickly. Staff who worked with background noise for months often remark on how much calmer the space feels within the first week. Meeting rooms that used to require raised voices become genuinely usable for normal conversation.
Speech intelligibility improves across the board. That matters in industries where instructions need to be clearly heard and repeated less often. It matters in client-facing areas where perception of professionalism starts with whether a visitor can hold a conversation without strain.
Productivity benefits follow from there. Less cognitive load from filtering background noise means more mental capacity for actual work. For employers spending significant sums on hiring and retaining talent in Dubai’s competitive market, that return on investment from acoustic treatment is rarely questioned twice.
If your office has noise complaints, high speech levels on calls, or meeting rooms that rarely get used because they are too disruptive to neighbouring desks, those are not layout problems. They are acoustic ones.
Akinco works with businesses across Dubai and the wider UAE to assess, specify, and install acoustic treatment that fits the space and the budget. The process is straightforward: site visit, acoustic assessment, solution proposal, installation.
No unnecessary complexity. The goal is a quieter, more functional workspace, and the route there is well established.