Culture How Office Design Has to Change in a Postpandemic Workplace - Buzzwords as Corporate America tried to get the goy back into the office

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Over the past four years, a contentious conversation has played out in the world of design: What is the future of work, and what should it actually look like?

The conversation, once a place of common ground, takes as self-evident our desire not to return to where we were before the pandemic, but to move forward in showcasing a new visual expression of what work can be.

In many ways, that means a wholesale rethinking of how an office looks. As functions change, so must form. But as anybody who has cursed or praised their workspace knows all too well, design has the potential to be an optimistic act, where invention and ideas have the power to change our lives for the better.

Rarely have we needed that optimism more than we do now in our postpandemic workplace. In our quest, designers have embraced three universal truths about the reinvented workplace: the widespread adoption of hybrid work models; the importance of well-being in the workplace; and the increased desire to make the workplace meaningful. These three priorities have prompted designers to undertake a fresh journey in conceptualizing and designing workspaces crafted for a new era.

The new hybrid workplace
There was a time when the design of an office was simple and straightforward. Everyone had a desk, meetings occurred in conference rooms, and social moments were allocated to corner water coolers, small footprint kitchens and a copy room.

Over the past few decades, the design of the workplace has seen a tremendous evolution beyond the simple and toward the diverse, with workplaces introducing such elements as game rooms, meditation spaces, all-hands assembly halls, screening rooms, full catering kitchens, coffee bars, podcast studios, gyms—just to name a few!

But in many ways, those changes are minor compared with what must happen now. Workers’ expectations changed during the pandemic. They got used to many of the pleasures of a home environment—and they want some of those pleasures transferred to the workplace; the separation between what work looks like and what home looks like can’t be as stark as it once was. The generational differences also became more apparent, as new workers began their careers working from home, making their expectations of the workplace often different from previous generations’.

In addition, home has become a place for “solitary” work time, which means the office becomes a place that has to be more conducive to collaboration and less a place to get away by oneself.

What exactly might that look like? In some cases, desks are being replaced with lounge- configured soft seating and warmer temperature lighting; conference rooms are being removed from their enclosures and being brought out into the open; and private offices are being made bookable, so that more people can access them when they need focus days in the office.

It may appear that these simple changes wouldn’t have a large visual impact on the built environment, but they do. Bringing conferencing into the open, offices are visually shifting to a more active and dynamic space where collaboration and activity are front and center. And where clients lean toward more social and soft seating, the overall vibe quickly moves from a familiar office to more of a buzzy cafe where coming together occurs across a coffee table in lieu of a conference table. It can make all the difference.

Workplace wellness
During the postpandemic recovery period, our clients expressed heightened concern for the safety of their staff. People want to feel protected and healthy when returning to work. That means investing in the mechanical systems and ventilation strategies that clean and move the air within a space, and in materials that remove or reduce airborne toxins and harmful materials from daily touch.

The most visible tie to wellness comes from a renewed desire to connect to nature. That can be a view outdoors, outdoor terraces or designing opportunities to bring nature indoors with lush and verdant interior landscapes. Whether it be the visual connection to, or the direct ability to touch and engage with landscape, the impact on the visual environment is tremendous.

To complement this natural touch, we are also seeing an investment in the use of natural daylighting in spaces through more-intelligent lighting controls and a reduction of artificial lighting in favor of natural daylighting.

It’s more than work
Work and life were distinct in the past, but in the past decade, offices have expanded to include more aspects of daily life. The postpandemic office accelerated that expansion. Today, office design aims to blur these boundaries by inviting everyday experiences into the workspace. This is perhaps the most important, and it’s a notion we call “life-ing.”

We are seeing a concerted shift toward making the work environment far more participatory with the outside world due to two critical factors—an abundance of space and a need for energy in the workplace. For companies moving toward hybrid, the overall reduction in staff population comes with it a feeling of emptiness in the office. If it feels empty, productivity and absenteeism increase.

In an effort to fill that void, we challenge our clients: Bring the community and the public into, at minimum, 10% of their footprint through programming that defines new purpose for the workplace. Where once an organization’s workspace was purely focused on its own work, these spaces now invite events, community and ways of coming together into their workplaces without a desk in sight.

For our client Spotify’s Content Campus in the Los Angeles Arts District, we designed a space that is a collection of music and podcast facilities that connects artists with what they need to launch their careers—including listening rooms, recording studios and a screening room. We also included a 900-person music venue for live performances that is easily configured to open up to the surrounding neighborhood.

The most interesting part throughout these production spaces are the workplaces for
Spotify’s employees. They are scattered between these active spaces and adorned with traditional, but bookable, desks. Open and flexible collaboration areas are woven through the space, made up of lounge seating, high-top tables and comfortable nooks, various sized conference rooms, game rooms and coffee lounges.

Creativity is further fueled by vibrant, full-height artist murals, and soft music plays across the full space. The mixing of the traditional and familiar work environments with the artists’ spaces creates a visual atmosphere that celebrates the overlap of functions to make the overall experience much more than a traditional office space.

Community programming
At our own headquarters in Los Angeles, we have challenged ourselves to use our abundance of newfound space with opportunities to change the visual fabric of our office through new community-driven programming.

For example, our space once defined as our “all hands” now flexes as community space for our neighbors by serving as a polling place, community events, and as a shared co-working site for clients, collaborators and neighborhood researchers. What makes this adjustment successful is the anticipation of the unexpected: Seeing the community step inside our doors and develop new connections that you wouldn’t ordinarily find in the workplace disrupts the day-to-day with renewed and visible energy.

Surprise, disruption and renewed energy are the hallmarks of what the next five years could bring, as designers take advantage of a remarkable opportunity to shift away from how work has been defined over the past decades.

As workplace design evolves, we know that the experience of work is more meaningful when we broaden the circle of influence and are connected to who we are—both at work and in life. We all see the reward from opening the doors and embracing the outside world inside the office. In the decades to come, I hope to look back on this moment as the moment the workplace, once again, became irresistible.
 
This article is totally insane and written by someone who has never worked in an office let alone a post pandemic office.

Previously where I worked, if you were at your desk , you were working or maybe chatting with the person next to you. All meetings, including conference calls were taken in meeting rooms or in common areas.

Now even on mandatory days, a lot of people are on teams calls talking at their desk and it's loud. The idea that conference rooms should be brought out into the open to add to that noise is fucking retarded.
 
These things are not even half as common as those "you darn millennials!!" YouTube videos imply. Even when companies do invest in them, they put them in one flagship location and impose restrictions so they are rarely used; satellite offices get nothing. In my experience, at least.
There always is a catch somewhere.

And shitlibs have to be the most cuntiest of all business people.
 
Open floor plan offices scare me, they resemble stuff closer to the elementary school computer lab than a functional office, and if you're doing real work, you need that extra space, and you definitely don't want someone yapping on the phone next to you. If cubicles bother you that much, then just remove the walls and let everyone keep the two or three desk setup around them.
 
This article is totally insane and written by someone who has never worked in an office let alone a post pandemic office.

Previously where I worked, if you were at your desk , you were working or maybe chatting with the person next to you. All meetings, including conference calls were taken in meeting rooms or in common areas.

Now even on mandatory days, a lot of people are on teams calls talking at their desk and it's loud. The idea that conference rooms should be brought out into the open to add to that noise is fucking retarded.
He's an office designer.

The article is effectively an ad. He's selling this dreamy office environment rather than a real one.
Andy Lantz is an Architect and visionary leader directing groundbreaking design solutions as Creative Director at RIOS. His depth of experience is all-encompassing of multidisciplinary design as he influences teams across the firm with his perspectives and point of view for achieving dynamic experiences through design. For over a decade, Andy’s work has served an impressive roster of clients and projects – from competition-winning places that enhance the public realm along the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood and along the banks of Lady Bird Lake in Austin, Texas, to notable music institutions and content production facilities in Los Angeles, to leading the industry in envisioning the future of work with market-ready products and forward thinking design approaches that reframe potential in workplace design.
 
If if isn't a move back to private office spaces then it's pretty retarded. Even before covid there was all kinds of studies coming out showing of they were bad in just about every way and for all interests.
 
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This shitty meme from an oldhead who watched too much Mad Men needs to stop.

I don't even remember any water cooler scenes in Mad Men.

The managers and executives held court behind closed doors with their liquor trays.

Most gossiping took place in the hallways outside of executives' doors beside secretaries' desks.

They also had that central doorless art room during the middle seasons.
 
It's always the same old tired song and dance when they "rethink offices" - shit that's geared towards very social, extroverted people. I don't care if there's podcast studios, lounge areas, pickleball courts, or whatever else bullshit, what the office lacks is any goddamn sense of privacy. My office has been undergoing renovations for months now, and part of that has included moving some of the finance people into the software development area. This is hell, because they tend to be very social, and very loud, while prior to this the developer area was very quiet, conversations were had in a hushed tone and distractions were minimal. Couple that with the disastrous decision to move to three days in office per week, it has become nearly impossible to get a desk on any day except Monday and Friday, and it means that you are far more likely to be sitting next to somebody else who isn't actually part of your team.
Even when I'm in office, the majority of communications occur over Zoom, Teams, or email. There is no amount of makeup they can put on this particular hog that will make me want to come into the office. Hell, the last month I've only actually showed up one day, as well as a few days of coffee badging.
If they want to rethink the office, they need to ask more than just the most social people. Those types already had an incentive to return just by the nature of an office. None of these are incentives to me.
 
Of course the Kraut would consider "Intel gray" an actual color instead of a soul-sucking corporate abomination.
Its meh at best... needs to be a bit darker and there should be skulls painted all around the office...
 
There's an often unspoken reason no one wants to go back to the office: we don't work 40 hours a week from home. A typical productive office worker can complete their full week's work in a fraction of the usual time. Management doesn't actually know how long it should take a worker to complete any given task, so it just tells you to do 40 hours a week. They pay for your time, not your productivity. Working from home is an overwhelming advantage to productive workers who can use the free time they used to waste on reddit/kiwifarms/twitter/etc. at work to do literally anything else.

Only office workers legitimately pulling 40+ hours are big money lawyers who will really spend 80+ hours in the office a week desperately trying to make partner.
 
The most important meetings occur in hallways on the way to meetings with clients or area managers, that's where the little data person hurriedly briefs the boss and trains them to repeat "the YTD is eight percent growth... no, eight percent, eight percent growth, the YTD is eight percent growth..." so really what we need are longer corridors, and more alcoves with dead pot plants under single-glazed ye olden tymes criss-cross windows.
 
Just give me my own place to work with a separate air con system so I'm not sweating like a pregnant nun because the air con is always set to the comfort levels of the most frail old woman in the office
 
Work and life were distinct in the past, but in the past decade, offices have expanded to include more aspects of daily life. The postpandemic office accelerated that expansion. Today, office design aims to blur these boundaries by inviting everyday experiences into the workspace. This is perhaps the most important, and it’s a notion we call “life-ing.”
Globohomo depopulation agenda.

Creativity is further fueled by vibrant, full-height artist murals, and soft music plays across the full space.
This is torture.

Surprise, disruption and renewed energy are the hallmarks of what the next five years could bring
> disruption

If it feels empty, productivity and absenteeism increase.
...productivity increases? how is that bad? just fire the absentees and save millions in salary, some of which can be redistributed to productive workers.

It's always the same old tired song and dance when they "rethink offices" - shit that's geared towards very social, extroverted people. I don't care if there's podcast studios, lounge areas, pickleball courts, or whatever else bullshit, what the office lacks is any goddamn sense of privacy. My office has been undergoing renovations for months now, and part of that has included moving some of the finance people into the software development area. This is hell, because they tend to be very social, and very loud, while prior to this the developer area was very quiet, conversations were had in a hushed tone and distractions were minimal. Couple that with the disastrous decision to move to three days in office per week, it has become nearly impossible to get a desk on any day except Monday and Friday, and it means that you are far more likely to be sitting next to somebody else who isn't actually part of your team.
I got hired by a real estate developer with a "rethought" office. The company is run by a mafioso who faps to the fantasy of being a "thot leader" and his techbro simps, and then there's a four-person-thick layer of pedicured hr lizards between the simps and everyone else. The office is a lizard den for them to waste paper and drink takeout coffee. There was no "software development area", there wasn't even a way to book several desks together. On "office day", the team could be scattered across two floors. The statute of limitations hasn't expired, so let's just say I ran away on the second day and cost them $6000 in payroll and equipment because of their utter disfunction.
 
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