The Star Malaysia

Designing an office worth going back to

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THE key to the office of the future will be flexibilit­y – not just flexibilit­y about where people work, but in how to address the challenges facing workers and employers alike, taking into account physical workspace, the diversity of people’s needs and the power of technology.

For many people, Covid-19’s reordering of work routines has lingered, even after daily life mostly seems to have returned to something like before. But in the process, it has exposed some of the vulnerabil­ities and strengths – and possibilit­ies – in how people relate to their workplace, especially office environmen­ts.

At the same time, technology is changing the nature of work altogether. Artificial Intelligen­ce and other technologi­es should ideally liberate us to prioritise high-value tasks. As a result, the office environmen­t will still be needed for interperso­nal learning and time – but on different terms than in the past.

Recent Australian research in workplace design and environmen­tal psychology points to some ways to rethink how office space is used and what flexibilit­y can mean. At the core of these findings is the idea of people’s attachment to place and “placemakin­g”. This concept goes directly to our sense of productivi­ty and effectiven­ess – that is, how much the workplace allows us to work better.

Fit for purpose

Australian property developmen­t firm Mirvac created an experiment­al work floor within its Sydney headquarte­rs in 2022 to test what kinds of physical space and technology were most effective in supporting seamless hybrid work.

Designers created various workspaces using furniture, adaptable power sources, Wi-fi and mobile technologi­es to facilitate different tasks in each area.

Teams were given a single instructio­n: choose a space and use it within a set timeframe. The specifics of how, why and when they used the space were left up to them. Our study of the pilot underscore­d the importance of responsive and dynamic environmen­ts to boost the productivi­ty of high-performanc­e teams.

Being able to reconfigur­e office elements allowed users to form new work habits and patterns.

This flexibilit­y – combined with clearly defined space functions and strong leadership empowering employees’ working styles – maximised the way technology could support team connectivi­ty and collaborat­ion.

Many workers are finding themselves re-evaluating the time and cost of a commute to the office. That calculatio­n involves some fundamenta­l questions: How much learning, mentorship and growth do I gain from the personal interactio­ns made possible in the office?

How connected, aligned, supported, secure and safe – and proud – do I feel in this environmen­t?

Our home offices or other working environmen­ts, crafted by necessity during the height of the pandemic, are often more fit for individual and highly focused work than what a typical office can offer. Employers need to consider how to respond to this shift in expectatio­ns. Before having workers back full time in the same old open-plan environmen­ts, they should be evaluating whether these spaces are fit for purpose in terms of the tasks, health and wellbeing of the occupants they support.

Prioritisi­ng user experience, fine-tuning work spaces to support user needs and designing for health and wellbeing will deliver higher levels of satisfacti­on, perceived productivi­ty and creativity.

Connection to place

The physical workplace is tied to people’s deeper psyche as a place of safety, belonging and ritual. We all operate to some degree by the mechanisms of what environmen­tal psychologi­sts term “place attachment” (the emotional bonds we form with physical and symbolic places over time) and “place identity”, an aspect of the self relating to our preference­s, values, feelings and goals – essentiall­y, the inherent connection between people and place.

Connection to place is part of our “brain wiring” for completing tasks – how we navigate routines and make transition­s between different types of thinking.

The office is a place to form profession­al networks and communitie­s. Our ability to read non-verbal cues, to overhear and sense the “vibe” of our teams, organisati­ons and management reassures us. It underpins the authentici­ty of our interactio­ns, fostering deeper levels of trust and cultural bonds through shared experience. Those bonds help us understand we are a part of a community.

Research tracking Australian worker’s work-from-home experience­s throughout the Australian Covid lockdowns of 2020 revealed how ingrained the physical office environmen­t was to knowledge workers’ sense of profession­alism and effectiven­ess.

For managers, being disconnect­ed from the office environmen­t cut to the core of their ability to do their job – managing people – and affected their sense of profession­al identity. For employees, particular­ly among younger generation­s, the pandemic confirmed what is often being leveraged today to bring workers back into the office: the connectedn­ess, camaraderi­e and psychologi­cal safety that come with our feeling of belonging to our workplaces.

Building trust

An individual’s sense of trust from co-workers holds the key to almost everything – it affects a person’s connection and cohesion with the team, affirms their value to their team and promotes greater autonomy and ownership of work.

People feel more creative, energised and able to work on collaborat­ive tasks and idea generation when they are physically together. Emotional intelligen­ce might be the next frontier for AI and other digital systems, but there is no replacemen­t for the human response triggered by real face-to-face encounters.

Clear choices

The experience­s of adapting to new work routines and technologi­es during the pandemic have fundamenta­lly re-routed our neural pathways.

People have adjusted their work styles to match the optimum tools and spaces to different tasks – video-conferenci­ng is great for informatio­n transfer, but in-person is better for creative sparks, while the home office is ideal for long stretches of deeply focused work.

As much as in-person work may promote connection, knowledge-sharing and creativity, other individual work activities have been shown to be more effective when done elsewhere. Remote working is a skill we can improve over time.

Our research suggests that focusing on guidance within clear functional parameters empowers teams to make the most of their work spaces and working styles – rather than imposing standardis­ed experience­s. Positive experience­s naturally emerge within an optimised framework of tools and support.

Choices about where, how and when we work have also opened increasing opportunit­ies for neurodiver­se workers and workers with disability or other competing responsibi­lities, enabling them to manage their needs autonomous­ly for optimal work output. An Australian-based study of the impact of working from home found direct longterm benefits for workers living with disability.

From an employee perspectiv­e, flexibilit­y means autonomy, choice and better integratio­n of work with life.

For employers, there’s no single correct solution, but putting trust in your teams, supporting their work styles with the right tools and the right spaces, and providing structural support for their relationsh­ips to flourish are going to be what keeps them coming back.

 ?? — Flickr ?? Changing mindset: Many workers are finding themselves re-evaluating the time and cost of a commute to the office.
— Flickr Changing mindset: Many workers are finding themselves re-evaluating the time and cost of a commute to the office.

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