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Office Design: From Action Office to Cubicles to the Home Office

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Munadil Shafat
9
Munadil Shafat
Student (MBA), Bangladesh

Office Design: From Action Office to Cubicles to the Home Office

Recently one of the administrators of my organization was sharing a plan to redesign our offices and his take on an open, more flexible and activity-based office design. He is a finance person and although such offices are in vogue lately, it made me a bit skeptical. I was really wondering what office design will best suit our organization in the Covid-19 aftermath. Luckily I stumbled upon a book called "The Best Place to Work" by Ron Friedman. Before answering this question, let's dive into a bit of history of office design specifically into the story of the birth of cubicles.

The Little Known History of Cubicles
Anyone with a knowledge of the history of Office Design, should know Robert Propst, a former professor of Fine Arts. He will be remembered for his office innovation at Herman Miller, a furniture manufacturing company of Michigan. Herman Miller gave the charge to Robert Propst to reinvent his company's growth. Robert Propst took some office furniture and came up in 1964 with his idea of "Action Office". You will be surprised to know that Action Office was the precursor of what we now know as "Cubicles". But sadly the objective of Action Office was far from how the industry has been using cubicles for decades.

Objective of Cubicles
To reinvent office furniture, Propst studied how employees use their office, how information flows between them, and examined the ways productivity can be improved. His study revealed the desperate need of modern office design for an overhaul – one with less distraction, more space and one that will give employees some level of privacy and control over the way they worked.
He invented "Action Office" which is characterized by two desks, a small table, ergonomically suitable chairs, standing desks etc.

The Tragic Adoption
Although the Action Office was an award-winning innovation, it failed commercially to appeal businesses as it required more spaces and investments than businesses were willing to provide. So, within 2 years, Propst made a stripped-down version – Action Office 2 – removing most of the original features of his award-winning design. The new design only featured vertical partitions, easy-to-assemble unit and a fraction of cost of traditional furniture. That was the birth of Cubicle. Ironically industry used Cubicle to cram more employees into less spaces which goes totally contrary to Propst's intention for Privacy and Personal Space.

Lessons Learned
For those of us who are thinking about modern office design, we can surely take a lesson from Propst's original Action Office. Action Office took into account how employees work in an office. If we were to design modern office, we also have to consider what types of work employees are going to do office and then decide which design can facilitate in this regard. Influenced by the original idea of Action Office, a number of modern organization's are designing their offices following principles of a college campus. In a college campus, students where given with a host of resources, like massive library, garden, gym, lobby, park, cafe, dorms etc. Students thus have a choice, and university just acts like a pool of resources that students can use to succeed. But it is up to students whether they will use all these facilities to improve their knowledge or not. Universities are not going to bother anyway. Modern organization can also act like this and should provide an office that gives many options of its employees in terms of office design that will empower them for success.

Home Office: The Next Challenge
Due to COVID-19, the focus of thinking about offices must now shift to our home in conjunction with the post-Covid work office. There's still lack of research on how to revamp our home for office needs. But the core ideas probably remain the same, we have to study how employees use their home for office work, how information flows between employees, how they interact, giving them more space, privacy and control and minimizing distraction from their work and importantly considering employees well-being before choosing a design concept. There's probably no one size fits all solution and designing the best office approach for your company is likely to take considerable time and effort.

⇨ What are your ideas, tips and experiences regarding office design?

Sources: Friedman, R. (2014), The Best Place to Work: The Art and Science of Creating an Extraordinary Workplace

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  Jaap de Jonge
4
Jaap de Jonge
Editor, Netherlands
 

Modern Office Design

Thanks for the concise overview of office design. I didn't know much about it. Bernstein and Waber recently made the excellent additional point that not all types of interaction are equally desirable. Even if it's easier nowadays for workers to collaborate, using open offices and their laptops, tablets, smart phones and various messaging and virtual meeting software, all these things don't necessarily result in meaningful interactions and/or collaborations. In their words, "more interaction is not necessarily better, nor is less. The goal should be to get the right people interacting with the right richness at the right times". I would add: "… about the right things".
They recommend HR managers to use experiments and A/B testing software to test assumptions and understand how groups of workers really interact.
Reference: Bernstein, E. and Waber B., "The Truth About Open Offices", HBT Nov-Dec 2019.

  Anonymous
2
Anonymous
 

Definition of Office Design

Office Design is the process of designing and organizing a workplace to optimize worker performance, wellbeing and safety.
It ecompasses all components and elements of a workspace that are both decorative and functional. In an office workplace, employers increasingly focus on designing environments that optimize employee wellness like air quality, lighting elements, layout, color choices, ergonomics and stress reduction, as well as connectivity between employees. In industrial settings, workplace design focuses on ensuring workers can safely perform various jobs and efficiently conduct emergency safety procedures.
Also called Workplace Design.

  Robert Yawe
2
Robert Yawe
Innovation Consultant, Kenya
 

Offices Aren't Paddocks

Thanks for the insightful article, I had not known the history of the office cubicle and now that I do I will make every effort to spread the word that the intention was never to treat employers like ...

  Maurice Hogarth
2
Maurice Hogarth
Consultant, United Kingdom
 

Design for Effective Use; not for Head Count

An interesting posting, thank you. As with many other inventions or innovations the actual use doesn't match the intention; particularly when the driving force is 'profit now'. Having worked in share...

 

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More on Two Factor Theory (Human Motivation)
Summary Discussion Topics
topic How to measure motivation?
topic Civility and Respect Towards Employees
🔥 5 Motivational Techniques When Employees are Feeling Low
topic Privacy at Work | Privacy in Offices
topic How to Create a Psychologically Safe Workplace?
topic PROs and CONs of Employee Of the Month Programs
topic Motivation Engenders Commitment
topic Nothing Flourishes Without Attention
topic Achieving a State of Flow and Motivation
topic What motivates Employees to be more Innovative?
topic Role of Job Titles in Employee Motivation and Satisfaction
topic Using Herzberg's Two Factor Theory in Small Companies
topic Is Money the Primary Motivating Factor?
topic List of Intrinsic Motivators
topic Strong Motivational Factors can Overcome Demotivating Factors
topic What are (the Main) Causes of Attrition?
topic Avoid Under and over Motivation
topic Social and Environment Issues are Missing in 2 Factor Theory
topic Boredom Could be a Driver for Creativity and Performance
👀Office Design: From Action Office to Cubicles to the Home Office
topic Application of Two Factor Theory in Non-Governmental Organizations
topic Hygiene and Motivation: Hand and Glove
topic Is Lack of Challenge a Hygiene Factor?
topic Scope of Herzberg's Two Factor Theory Goes Beyond Work
topic The 2 Most Important Words to Say to your Employees
topic Two Factor Theory Still Holds Today?
topic Role of Knowledge in Two Factor Theory
topic Additional Hygiene Factors
topic Is an Employee Information System a Motivation / Hygiene Factor?
topic How to Keep a Workforce Motivated at Crossroads
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Two Factor Theory (Human Motivation)



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