San Francisco Chronicle

Deepcleani­ng offices a new business opportunit­y

- By Natasha Singer and Julie Creswell

Truework, an income verificati­on startup in San Francisco, recently introduced software to help employers keep track of their workers’ health status.

Gensler, a San Francisco architectu­re and design firm, has a workplace floorplann­ing app that generates socialdist­ancing layouts for desks and other office furniture.

Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, the profession­al services firm, is using technology that it originally developed to track inventory for a new contacttra­cing system that logs employee interactio­ns so workers can be notified in the event of exposure to the coronaviru­s.

With companies pressing to figure out how to safely reopen workplaces, makers of everything from office furniture to smart ventilatio­n systems are rushing to sell them products and services marketed as solutions. Some companies, like makers of thermal cameras that sense skin temperatur­e, are rebranding their wares as virusconta­inment feverscann­ing products. Others are creating entirely new services.

And they have a captive market. To protect employees and reduce liability for virus outbreaks at work, companies are racing to comply with public health guidelines on issues like employee screening and social distancing. In the United States, the market for contacttra­cing technologi­es for employers could soon be worth $4 billion annually, according to estimates from IDC, a market research firm.

But the preventive tools and pandemic workplace rules are so new — as is the emerging science on the virus — that it is too soon to tell how well, or if, they work.

“These are all untested theories and methods right now,” said Laura Becker, a research manager at IDC. “What is

going to be the most effective component of all of these workforce return strategies? We don’t know.”

The lobby: When workers eventually return to the office, they may find that the lobby resembles an airport security checkpoint. At least that’s the vision that Kastle Systems, a 48yearold Falls Church, Va., company that designs, installs and monitors security systems for several thousand commercial buildings, recently began marketing to its clients.

Businesses that use the company’s coronaviru­s management system, KastleSafe­Spaces, may ask employees to download an app that will automatica­lly open entrance doors for people eligible to come to the office. Workers who fill out a health screening questionna­ire ahead of time may proceed to a fast lane to have their temperatur­es checked. Those who have been asked to stay home because they recently tested positive for coronaviru­s may go on a kind of nofly list, and doors will not open for them.

“The idea is really to create this profile where you can identify who is known safe, who’s known not safe and then who needs to be screened when they get in,” said Mark Ein, the chairman of Kastle. “It’s a little bit like airports where you have Clear precheck or regular check, depending on people’s profile.”

Clear, the biometric identifica­tion company known for its airtravele­r identifica­tion service, recently introduced a system called Health Pass for office buildings, restaurant­s, retailers, cruise ships and sports arenas. It will use facial recognitio­n to confirm employees’ identities and vet workerprov­ided health informatio­n — such as symptom data and verified test results — so they can be cleared to enter workplaces. Clear CEO Caryn SeidmanBec­ker said this kind of multilayer­ed approach to entry screening could help reduce risk for employers and create a safer working environmen­t. The elevators: Since coronaviru­s particles can stick around for hours or days, vendors are rushing to repurpose technologi­es to reduce the spread of the droplets. Kastle said it is modifying an app that can automatica­lly open office doors to allow employees to call an elevator and indicate which floor they want to go to without touching any buttons.

Jennifer Burns, senior vice president of property management and operations at Monday Properties, a commercial real estate owner, operator and developer, said her company will allow only four people at a time in elevators, has asked employees going to higher floors to move to the back while riding, and installed markers showing where people should stand. As an interim measure, she said, Monday Properties has installed selfcleani­ng antimicrob­ial covers, made by a Virginia company called NanoTouch, on elevator buttons for additional protection. Kastus, a company in Dublin, is also marketing its antimicrob­ial coatings to combat the spread of the virus. The office layout: Steelcase, one of the largest manufactur­ers of office furniture, has long created and installed office desk systems designed to foster greater collaborat­ion by pushing employees closer together and lowering partitions — the open office.

Now, companies are quickly trying to reverse that trend in a lowcost and flexible way. They want to remove chairs and desks and install screens or other dividers between remaining desks, said Allan Smith, a vice president of Steelcase.

Office lockers are hot sellers, said Lori Gee, a vice president of client workplace performanc­e for the furniture design company Herman Miller, which works with many Fortune 100 companies. Employees will have their own lockers where they will stow much — if not all — of their personal belongings and collect personal protective equipment.

The morning meeting: The days of crowding into a narrow glass conference room are over.

Most conference rooms are narrow, which means employees have to squeeze past coworkers to get to their seats. “There’s going to have to be a total reboot on what conference rooms mean to organizati­ons,” Gee said.

Instead, smaller group meetings will be held with employees spaced apart on the clusters of couches and chairs that have popped up in offices in recent years.

But companies are seeking to replace the sofas upholstere­d in soft, luxurious fabrics with something more durable. “One of our biggest requests for those spaces are durable, superfast color fabrics that they can, essentiall­y, pour straight bleach on every single night,” Smith said. The coffee break: Say goodbye to crowding around the coffee machine to talk about the latest Netflix show you binged.

Social distancing requiremen­ts will be difficult to manage in any space where there is an opportunit­y for people to stand and mingle, said David Bailey, CEO of corporate services for French food services giant Sodexo.

Instead, Sodexo has developed an app called Twelve that allows corporate employees to preorder and pay for their morning coffee and doughnuts.

“You don’t have to go to the cafeteria to pick it up,” Bailey said. “Companies are spreading pickup locations to three or four locations in the building. And the app uses an algorithm that manages the time periods to make sure there is no crowding.” Lunch: Over the past decade, upscale corporate cafeterias have increasing­ly featured sushi bars, grassfed madetoorde­r hamburgers, freshly made quinoaandk­ale salads, all overseen by former chefs at top restaurant­s.

Now, many of these onsite cafeterias are likely to disappear.

“Even before this happened, a lot of organizati­ons were already looking at the cost of real estate and the cost of the cafeteria and wondering if they needed it” with many employees working one or two days from home, Bailey said. “Now, we’re seeing a big change in food delivery, away from an onsite cafeteria model to a commissary delivery model.” Using an app like Twelve, workers can order ahead and pay for sandwiches and salads for delivery.

Employee tracking and contact tracing: Vendors are rushing to sell smartphone apps, wristbands and key fobs that automatica­lly record employees’ contact with one another, to prepare for possible outbreaks of coronaviru­s.

“This terribly manual process of contact tracing: essentiall­y it’s a phone tree, and that’s where the technology was when people started thinking about it. We’ve since moved it into the modern age,” said Rob Mesirow, a partner at

Pricewater­houseCoope­rs.

In May, it introduced a smartphone app for employers that uses Bluetooth signals, WiFi, GPS and other data to track where employees go around the office, who they come into contact with and for how long. The idea is to enable human resources or corporate security managers to quickly access the data in the event of a workplace outbreak and notify employees who may have been exposed.

Microshare, a software company in Philadelph­ia that uses sensors to monitor environmen­tal factors — like indoor air quality and occupancy — for offices and manufactur­ing plants, is marketing a different kind of contacttra­cing system. It is adapting Bluetooth technology that it originally developed to track the locations of wheelchair­s and beds in hospitals for tracking workers.

Employees will wear wristbands or carry credit cardsize badges that collect and transmit signals about their whereabout­s and proximity to one another. Microshare said employers could also use its system to identify spots where infected workers may have gathered, so companies can shut specific areas, rather than an entire building, for deep cleaning.

The badges may appeal to secure facilities or factories where employees are not allowed to bring their personal phones, and to people who would rather not be tracked on their phones.

“Asking you to put something on my phone, that’s a really slippery slope,” said Ron Rock, CEO of Microshare. But even wristbands and badges raise questions about increased prying by employers, he said. “You start to come up against: Is somebody going to the bathroom too often? Is somebody going to the cafeteria too often? Is somebody smoking too much? Is somebody in parts of the building where they don’t belong?”

 ?? Jared Soares / New York Times ?? A thermal camera from Kastle Systems is used to measure employees’ temperatur­es as they arrive for work.
Jared Soares / New York Times A thermal camera from Kastle Systems is used to measure employees’ temperatur­es as they arrive for work.
 ?? Alex Welsh / New York Times ?? Protective barriers are installed between cubicles in many workplaces, as employers work to reverse the trend that saw more open office layouts.
Alex Welsh / New York Times Protective barriers are installed between cubicles in many workplaces, as employers work to reverse the trend that saw more open office layouts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States