> For years I worked in an open-plan office. I found it highly distracting and annoying. I honestly hated the space.

Yes, I also hate sterile open-plan office space! Some related office space insights from renowned architect Christopher Alexander (who sadly passed away recently):

Alexander reminds us that people spend most of their time at home or at work; nevertheless, office environments are almost universally empty of real vitality. "They are missing a depth of feeling and richness of function that lets people reach into those parts of their everyday life and work that are really important". He goes on to criticize stereotyped office furniture as one of the prime contributors to an inhuman work environment. The environment produced by office furniture has realized the nightmare of Orwell's 1984 at a level so subtle that many managers are not even aware of it. This is the deathly world that 58 million people in the U.S. are forced to inhabit eight hours a day. Not only is the situation oppressive, but instead of making it better, our culture has invested considerable resources to teach people to accept it without question. Architecture schools and the professional media deliberately mislead the public by insisting that emotional well-being is not a requirement of interior design. As a result, few people imagine that a pleasant work environment is even possible today.

It is all right to say that individuals and groups have control over their realms and their work environments, but it simply won't work unless the actual physical materials the building is made of, and the structural systems by which it is put together, actually invite and facilitate this adaptation.

People cannot work effectively if their workspace is too enclosed or too exposed. A good workspace strikes the balance ... You should not be able to hear noises very different from the kind you make, from your workplace. Your workplace should be sufficiently enclosed to cut out noises which are a different kind from the ones you make. There is some evidence that one can concentrate on a task better if people around you are doing the same thing, not something else.

I've worked in many different office environments over the years. My favourite was perhaps my first job in a sprawling lab environment in old converted cottages, with typically two people per office. It's the only place I've worked where you could actually open the window!

Update: See also: Open-Plan Offices are now the Dumbest Management Fad of All Time


In reply to Re^2: Do you prefer to work remotely? by eyepopslikeamosquito
in thread Do you prefer to work remotely? by pollsters

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