Since Google’s acquisition of the service back in 2006, most of the updates to YouTube’s website were accompanied by rather negative reactions. Nevertheless, there’s no way getting around that Material Design will also find it’s way to YouTube.com one day.

About three weeks ago, I published an article imagining a Material Design update of YouTube on Android. This concept here, however, turned out to be actually more than just a simple design refresh. Instead, it’s a complete reimagination of how YouTube works, and of how the user uses the service, laying a greater focus on channels and aiming for a new, TV-inspired atmosphere.

The new site would be vertically divided into 2 big sections: “Exploring” and “Video”. Since the two sections share the same space, expanding one section automatically reduces the width of the other one. The aim of this partition is to bring video multitasking, which is part of YouTube’s mobile apps since August 2013, to the site.

The widths of the two interfaces could be resized dragging the floating action button. Tapping on the button maximizes the currently smaller section. Both interfaces do of course heavily adapt to the space available. In contrast to the content in the “Explore”-section, the video player would always be visible.

When the user searches for example for something, the results would appear in the Explore section. Clicking on one of the results would not lead to a completely new page anymore, but instead the video would start running in the already visible videoplayer, with the video-section getting maximized. The user might then either watch the video, or he could also minimize the video-section and continue searching while the video keeps running pinned on the right side.

The video player should not only be always visible, but it should also always contain some content. Even if the user has just entered the site, there could be a commercial spot or a random video out of the users subscriptions be running (of course without sound). This is also supposed to further said TV-inspired atmosphere on YouTube.

As long as the user does not choose a video himself or interacts with the player, new automatically running, randomly chosen videos would follow one after another. User-selected videos, or videos which the user has interacted with (paused, hovered) would of course still not simply go away after they’re over, but instead continue to suggest similar videos and give the option to replay the video.

The user can alternatively also start a video by dragging it over the player, or, he can drag it below or above the running video, adding it to the queue. Thus, the queue feature would be prominently and intelligently implemented, gaining much more attention, and thus already preparing the whole service for the upcoming music subscription service.