Tags :
The Evolving American Office
The Evolving American Office
The Evolving American Office
As Technology Enables, Costs Increase and Budgets Decline, the Modern Workspace Gets Smaller…and Smarter
(ARA) -
Corporate tightening of the proverbial budgetary belt has affected
more than the bottom line in the American workplace.
Ongoing opportunities to leverage technology, along with pressures
to reduce real estate costs, energy and waste have reshaped the way
21st-century offices are designed, run and occupied.
"What we think of as the workplace has evolved over the last 30
years in some pretty interesting ways," notes Kelly Sterk,
workplace research manager for office furniture manufacturer
Allsteel Inc. "Granted in several of the physical and behavioral
aspects at which Dilbert pokes fun, we seem to have changed very
little, but we've actually come through a number of fascinating
workplace shifts that reflect what's now possible -- given that
technology allows us to work anytime and anywhere -- and has
ushered in a 'networked' model for communication styles versus the
old 'assembly line' model."
"In the last several years we've seen a significant shift in how
and where people work, which in turn has also shaped space
allocation in the modern office. The last recession seemed to
really catalyze many companies' focus on both finding greater
efficiencies and enabling their staff to work smarter," he
continued.
Collaboration Shapes Design
While the long-standing migration of staff from private offices to
open plan continues, the most recent significant shifts are in the
proportion of space assigned to individual work areas versus group
activities, and the size of those individual areas.
Allsteel researchers and others have long observed that in many
cases individual offices or workstations are unoccupied for up to
40 percent of the day. During this time, workers instead congregate
in conference rooms, teaming and training areas, informal gathering
spots, and alternative worksites to confer, strategize and conduct
work in a more fluid, less-hierarchical way.
"Companies have found a growing need to create dedicated space for
learning and collaboration -- formal and informal, planned and
unplanned," Sterk says. "Designing for group work has firmly taken
root in the American workplace."
Private, closed-door offices and conference rooms are giving way to
more free-flowing environments conducive to team brainstorming.
Office design also now takes advantage of public spaces where
employees tend to gravitate and assemble -- the proverbial "water
cooler," whether the space is a fax/copier station, a break room or
cafeteria, a library, or even waiting areas such as the space
outside elevator banks or the lobby.
"Companies have recognized the importance of these spaces as
locations for informal, short-term collaboration," Sterk says. "In
fact, many executives have begun to realize that's how the majority
of tacit information is passed along amongst workers. There's a lot
of value in water-cooler talk. Why not provide areas to facilitate
it?"
Offices Shrink in Size
While collaboration and teamwork are important and help drive the
way companies do business in today's competitive marketplace,
studies show that 65 percent of work performed by office workers is
still being done independently. Further, a recent independent
survey of organizations by Allsteel reveals that more than half (56
percent) of respondents indicated they currently have non-dedicated
workspaces at their headquarters or central campus locations. The
traditional 1-to-1 ratio of workstations to workers is very likely
a thing of the past for many organizations.
Simply put, the ubiquitous cubicle is a long way from becoming
extinct. It is, however, getting smaller.
While cubicles vary in size (some as large as the private office
they might be replacing), recent research conducted by Allsteel
shows only about 16 percent of workers now occupy
10-foot-by-10-foot or larger cubicles. Today's workforce is more
frequently assigned to 8-foot-by-8-foot or 6-foot-by-8-foot
spaces.
Those 8-foot-by-8-foot workstations -- depending on the depth of
worksurfaces -- can provide three-sided, U-shaped stations.
Six-foot-by-8-foot are almost always two-sided, L-shaped stations.
In both cases, storage is usually provided by drawer cabinets
(called pedestals) under each end of the U or L, and overhead
shelving cabinets hung above or on sides of the cubicle.
Clutter Challenges Usable Worksurface Space
Larger workspaces don't necessarily mean more organized "stuff,"
however. The challenge of storing everyday office clutter --
computers, printers, piles of files, books, supplies and other
accoutrements of daily office living -- may take up an even greater
proportion of the surface in someone's station.
Interestingly, only about one-fourth of an office worksurface ends
up being used for tasking. The remainder is consumed with not only
paper and files but also computer equipment and related
peripherals.
"The increasing use of electronics means workers need more places
to plug in and store these devices," according to Yana Adamichina,
Allsteel product business manager. "They still need a place to
store their files and supplies even if they are working in a
condensed space."
The big question is: If your stuff was more organized, and you
could get it off your desk, could you work effectively with less
work space?
Furniture manufacturers are responding to this goal. One such
response, Allsteel's Reach integrated storage, tackles office
clutter efficiently, cost effectively and ergonomically.
Reach cabinets replace (consolidate, really) those traditional
overhead cabinets and pedestals with a single "wall" of storage
that also replaces the panel to divide space, while providing
increased storage capacity and space effectiveness to individual
workstations -- all at arms' length. It provides storage that
doesn't just hang on the panel wall. It is the wall. This design
uses vertical space more efficiently by also using the space
between the worksurface and the underneath of the overhead
cabinets, and means less square footage, less clutter and less
effort, in an 8-foot-by-8-foot, or even a 6-foot-by-8-foot
configuration. Employees will have more-than-sufficient storage
space and more effective worksurface, even in a smaller
workstation.
Adamichina points out that it all results in better organization.
"As you consolidate traditional storage into this Reach cabinet,
freeing up knee space under the desk and eliminating the overheads
protruding into one's space, the workstation feels so much more
open, and people are more comfortable and can get more organized.
The workstations feel much more spacious and user-friendly, even if
they are smaller. We've found that smaller workstations provide all
the storage the larger size did and then some; but don't feel any
smaller."
Case in point: A 6-foot-by-8-foot Reach workspace, compared to a
traditional 8-foot-by-8-foot station provides 9 percent more
storage per unit, while improving density by 33 percent --
potentially saving thousands of dollars each year in real estate
costs. The savings are greater in a smaller space.
"Consider the savings when you compare a typical 8-foot-by-8-foot
station to another Reach size -- a 6-foot-by-6-foot station,"
Adamichina says. "Instead of using, for example, 17,000 square feet
of real estate, you'll need only 10,525 square feet for the same
number of workstations. Use half of this extra space for group
spaces, like project teaming, gathering, eating or other social
areas. Use the other half to add 48 more people to your staff."
Or, if you prefer, give half back to your landlord and immediately
cut costs. Over a typical 10-year lease, an average rate of $24 per
square foot, it's possible to save $4,800 per employee.
"A shrinking workplace doesn't have to be a bad thing," Sterk
concludes. "If it's planned carefully and executed smartly, it can
save money and actually be even more efficient and functional than
larger, showier, yet less-well-thought-out spaces."
For more information regarding the shrinking office, as well as a
host of other workplace solutions for the office, visit
www.allsteeloffice.com.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
