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5 Innovative Strategies for the Post-Pandemic Office

  • Published: May 1, 2022

Source: Facilites Net

Today’s workforce requires flexibility in choosing their work environment –  a variety of spaces based upon what type of work teams are doing in the office. Consider the following renovations and/or enhancements to a post-pandemic office environment:

 

1. Project Rooms

The office should be considered a meeting place where teams can come together to collaborate. Instead of conference rooms with a large table and multiple chairs, consider incorporating project rooms. These rooms are designed for creativity with moveable furniture and whiteboard walls that allow for ideation and brainstorming more fluidly. They also allow a paced approach in completing a project when not all members of the team are present in the office every day.


2. Videocast Rooms

Zoom calls will still be around, particularly with a hybrid workforce. Consider rooms dedicated to these calls to mitigate disruptions to others at the office. In addition to outfitting rooms with full audio-visual capabilities, consider the acoustics and how to absorb the noise coming from these spaces. These rooms can also have clean or visually interesting backgrounds that showcase the culture of the company.


3. Private Spaces

Open concepts will remain integral to creating flexible office designs for those returning to work. However, many employees have either grown used to privacy or are seeking privacy as they transition away from complicated work-from-home situations. The type of privacy can be accomplished through both soft architecture and furniture solutions or the strategic “zoning” of workspaces — all made easier by the reduced daily attendance in a hybrid model. The bottom line is that today’s workforce wants the ability to choose what they need, how they’ll use it, when they want it.


4. “The Porch”

Because we worked from the couch, desk, kitchen table, bed, etc., many are used to moving around the house throughout the day and truly working from anywhere. Therefore, many employees will look for the same variety during their day at the office. The good news is that interesting seating and working arrangements come naturally with a flexible office model, and if a company sticks with that strategy, new “porches” can be created to prevent workspaces from becoming stale.


5. Outdoor Rooms

When large all-company meetings are required, this is the time to get creative with outdoor spaces available at the building. Can you host a meeting in the parking lot, on the front lawn or even on the sidewalk? These untapped outdoor spaces should be considered part of the “office” moving forward.

As you are determining what the office will look like, it is important to remember to focus on what the people need versus the company’s needs. The space should be purpose-built and centered on fueling the teams in whatever work they are planning on doing at the office. While it will look different, there is, indeed, a need for an office space and it is up to us to design it in a way that is built around the people who will spend time in it.

4-Step Process for Re-Designing Work

August 7, 2022

Source: MIT Sloan Management Review Tackling today’s workplace uncertainties begins by recognizing that challenges are not simply binary judgments (office vs. home, full-time vs. part-time, etc). By seeing a task as managing a process of re-design and change, senior leaders

5 neurodiversity

5 Strategies: Designing an Office for Neurodiversity

July 20, 2022

Source: Fast Company Workplace leaders, listen up: It’s time to ditch the one-size-fits-all-brains approach to office design. The human brain works in all manner of ways, as reflected in today’s neurodiverse workforce—and the workplace needs to step up to the

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