The Standard (St. Catharines)

Workplace has gone to the dogs

- BILL GRAVELAND

CALGARY — Man’s best friend is moving on up — to the 16th floor of a downtown Calgary office building.

As the city continues to suffer from a severe economic downturn caused by low oil prices, real estate firms are struggling to fill a glut of empty office buildings.

When Aspen Properties took over The Edison, a mostly empty 30-floor building in the downtown core, it decided to follow businesses in Silicon Valley and make the tower dog friendly.

At Entuitive, a consulting engineerin­g practice on the 16th floor, 14-year-old Jazzy, a Shih Tzu/toy poodle spends most of her day sleeping in a small dog bed next to her owner Nicole Wilson’s desk.

“My dog actually has separation anxiety so between my mom and myself we have to co-ordinate who’s going to take her because she really can’t stay home by herself. She actually makes herself super sick when she’s by herself,” Wilson said.

“Lots of people who are maybe having a rough day, they’ll come by our cubicles and give our dogs a pat and go about their day. It creates a really good aura throughout the office.”

David Leonard brings his rescue dog, one-year-old Riley, to the 45-person office to help socialize her.

“She’s got pretty high energy and it’s good to mentally stimulate her here. She just walks around the office with me and that’s enough to keep her satisfied,” Leonard said.

“She’ll just hang out in the boardroom and do her thing and keep everyone company. It kind of brings a lot of people together.”

Scott Hutcheson, executive chairman of Aspen Properties, said the firm is looking at putting out the doggie welcome mat at other buildings.

“In Silicon Valley, the bulk of the employees are probably under 40 and probably 10 to 15 per cent of the employees bring their dogs to work. It works,” Hutcheson said.

“There’s research done on it. You have three Cs: more creativity, more compassion and more connectivi­ty in a pet-friendly environmen­t.”

There are strict rules in the building, which is just over half full, he said. Badly behaved dogs aren’t allowed and there are separate elevators for people with pets. An outdoor park and pet spa is being developed on the third floor.

Hutcheson said companies need to address whether having dogs is compatible with their workforce.

“Do you have people who are violently allergic to an animal? If that’s the case then ... you probably choose that person’s health over the dog,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada