The lowly cubicle makes its comeback
Ubiquitous fixture and workers return to offices
Among office designers and architects, cubicles are rarely mentioned. The once-ubiquitous fixture, so popular in the 1980s and ’90s, has become vilified as a sign of the dehumanization of the workforce. Design experts today say cubicles are a “hard no.”
And yet cubicles, like scrunchies, are back, spurred by demand from employers and employees alike.
“I frankly thought the cube market was dying,” said Brian Silverberg, who sells refurbished and used office furniture with his brother, Mark, in their store, the Furniture X-Change in North Brunswick, New Jersey. “We have sold more cubes in the last three years than in the five years before,” he said, adding that 2024 would be “bigger than this year.”
COVID-19 was an amplifier of a trend that preceded the pandemic. But as workers returned to the office after months of working at home, quiet spaces became more important, said Janet Pogue McLaurin of Gensler. “We had seen a drop in effectiveness because of noise interruptions, disruptions and a general lack of privacy,” she said.
Global demand has pushed cubicles and partitions to a $6.3 billion market, which is expected to grow over the next five years to $8.3 billion, according to a 2022 report from Business Research Insights, a market analysis firm.
Furniture manufacturers had already recognized that workers wanted some privacy despite the tendency of employers to value collaborative areas more highly than individual workspaces.
Anyone who has ever worked in an office with benches “hates the open plan,” said Michael Held, vice president of global design at the
furniture-maker Steelcase.
Working from home during the pandemic offered some relief from noisy co-workers, but it also brought new distractions, including constant interruptions by family members and roommates and the nagging temptation to do household chores. Employees cite a lack of focus as the biggest problem with remote work, said Ryan Anderson, vice president of global research and insights at MillerKnoll, the furniture-maker, which tracks worker trends with the Boston Consulting Group and the messaging platform Slack.
As a result, just as companies are trying to juggle remote work and inoffice mandates, they are also deliberating the right mix of collaborative areas, conference rooms and individual spaces.
For example, at Grassi, a New York accounting firm with 500 employees, the offices have been reconfigured to hybrid spaces, emphasizing cubicles or semiprivate areas along with open collaborative spaces.
Some of the company’s seven offices were “too open with no dedicated private space,” said Jeff Agranoff, the company’s chief human resources officer. Now the firm has a combination of open and private spaces. (The company also eliminated reservation scheduling for desks, an arrangement known as hoteling. “Everyone has a dedicated space,” Agranoff said, “because we were concerned that significant hoteling would deter people from coming back to the office.”)
Many employers now offer a variety of workspaces, including shared offices, conference rooms, phone booths and libraries, McLaurin said. And, yes, cubicles.
Just don’t expect to see 6-foothigh panels — those remain out of fashion. Instead, the new cubes offer what Held called “sitting privacy” with 54-inch-high panels.
And unlike the cubicles in films
like “Office Space,” which satirized their commodified and sanitized look, the current iterations are ergonomic and flexible and may include lighting. They can be rectangular or rounded, with fixed or adjustable walls, and can accommodate multiple electronic devices.
Teams can adapt them to different needs, and some include sound-masking features. Steelcase, for example, has incorporated panels that absorb sound waves, creating “less echo in the space,” Held said, while also reflecting out less noise.
MillerKnoll has a workstation that “is not so much a cube and not really a private office,” but is a “small enclosed environment that is comfortable physically,” Anderson said.
Standing desks are often incorporated in both new or refurbished workstations. Some of Grassi’s refurbished cubicles include glass walls. Arms can be attached to raise or lower monitors to accommodate different heights as well as video calls.
Lucas Mundt, a logistics analyst at Simple Modern in Oklahoma City, had helped co-workers hang photos, but he wanted to transform his cubicle into a faux wood cabin. “I wanted to do it big and over the top,” he said.
He added laminate wood floors and covered the walls with a woodlike adhesive paper. He appended a picture of a window and, although he does not hunt, added two stuffed animals meant to replicate those often found in hunting lodges. The chandelier and the space heater — which looks like a wood-burning stove — are voice-activated.
The transformation was a hit in the office. The company’s CEO, Mike Beckham, was such a fan that he posted photos on social media and gave everyone in the office a $250 allowance — about the amount Mundt estimated he spent — to redecorate their cubicles.
Mundt acknowledged his renovation was beyond the norm. “If I’m going to spend 40 to 50 hours a week there, I wanted it to feel comfortable and relaxing,” he said. “And I feel at home in the mountains.”