The Denver Post

COLORADANS ADAPT HOMES AS REMOTE WORK CONTINUES

Coloradans adapt at home as remote work becomes the new reality

- By Aldo Svaldi

Before the pandemic hit, working at home was the exception, not the rule. But what was a novelty is likely to become a more permanent reality, and that is driving a hunt for alternativ­es to plopping down a laptop on the kitchen table.

About one in five employers expect to have 40% or more of their staff at a remote location come next spring, according to a survey last month from The Conference Board. Before COVID- 19 hit, only 3% were that open to out- of- the- office work arrangemen­ts.

“People are like, ‘ This is driving me crazy — this is not good for our family dynamic. One or both of us need to get out of the house,’ ” said Mike Koenig, president of Studio Shed in Louisville, recounting what his company is hearing from customers.

The maker of pre- fabricated sheds has seen its orders rise five- fold since the pan

demic hit. And almost all of the buyers, 95%, plan to use its modernstyl­e sheds with interior finishes as home offices or work studios, not storage.

“It has gone meteoric for us,” he said.

Demand is so strong the company added a night shift to handle shipments. The manufactur­er has gone from around two dozen employees to closer to three dozen to meet orders for the sheds, which start at around $ 20,000.

Nearly half of workers report that their mental health has deteriorat­ed since they began working at home, according to a survey conducted by KPMG. Part of that reflects the added workload employees face as colleagues are furloughed or let go.

Koenig suspects the lack of separation between work space and personal space could also be contributi­ng to mental stress. Home is meant to be a sanctuary from work, a place to enjoy your family and detach. Now more people are finding no escape.

Erin Miller, who lives in Centennial, was already working from a small home office before the pandemic hit, doing copy editing and document layout. She and her husband, who shared the space occasional­ly, had weighed whether to build an addition to accommodat­e a larger office. But the high cost and a 16- month constructi­on schedule gave them pause. Then the pandemic hit.

“With the stay- at- home order, my husband had to move part time into the office with me this spring, which was not ideal for either of us,” Miller said. The two had considered a Studio Shed years earlier and revisited the option.

The Millers purchased a 10- footby16- foot shed with lap metal siding on May 15 and completed it in early July. The footprint was small enough to not require a permit with the city, although they did need a permit for the electrical work. They hired a certified installer to speed up the constructi­on time and to deal with drainage issues in their yard. “My commute to work is a bit longer — out the back door and across the grass instead of just down a flight of stairs — but the space is welcoming,” Miller said. She also uses the shed to relax after work or visit with friends, but there has been one complicati­on.

“My biggest problem is keeping my two teenagers from trying to take over the space — they think it’s really cool and regularly offer suggestion­s as to how they and their friends might like to hang out in the space,” Miller said.

Build it with an office

Six months into the pandemic, some builders are convinced enough that remote work is here to stay that they have reconfigur­ed their designs to include dedicated offices.

“The number of folks we see who have a home office has gone way up,” said Randy Carpenter, president of KB Home’s Colorado Division. “They tell us stories about working from their kitchen table or their couches or their garages. That make- shift workplace is not working for them.”

Prior to the pandemic, about 5% to 10% of those visiting a sales office might be working at home, Carpenter said. Now that figure is running closer to 40% and will

likely ahead. remain elevated in the years KB Home has redesigned some of its existing plans to provide home offices that look more like work offices rather than bedrooms repurposed as a den with a desk dropped in. Models showing the new configurat­ions should be available for viewing next month at Baseline Villas in Broomfield, Cooperleaf in Aurora and Flatiron Meadows Villas in Erie. cabinets, that USB and The serve electrical jacks, offices shelves as data desk come outlets connection and space. with countertop­s that There built- mimic points are in what And the people rooms would have find extra at soundproof­ing work. so the kids or pets don’t interrupt that important video call.

KB Home includes the offices without expanding the footprint of the house. The extra finishes add about $ 2,000 to $ 4,000 to the cost of a more traditiona­l design, Carpenter said.

Denver- based M. D. C. Holdings Inc. also has revamped the plans at its subsidiary Richmond American Homes to help homebuyers adapt to the pandemic.

Like KB Home, it is offering more options when it comes to home offices or integratin­g technology into other rooms so people can use them as workspaces. But the company has also expanded its Sunstone Plan to convert the fourth bedroom into multiple uses — teen center, an extended workspace or a home gym.

“Many homeowners are living in a home that no longer makes sense for them, and we want to offer solutions,” Heidi Sheldon, the company’s national vice president of marketing, said in a release.

Long after the pandemic has passed, the physical changes made to living spaces will be visible.

A mountain getaway

Another way to cope with the cabin fever that working at home can generate is to rent another home, preferably one within driving distance that offers a change of scenery.

High Rocky Homes co- founders Nadim Tannous and Alex Haler, like many owners of vacation properties, didn’t know what to expect regarding the future of short- term rentals after travel ground to a halt.

But the two, who either own or manage more than 50 properties in Colorado, California and Florida, have gone from worrying about survival in April and May to coping with a flood of requests.

“In June and July there was a surge in activity of people going up to the mountains wanting to getaway. We have had historic occupancy rates the last couple of months,” Tannous said.

Haler adds that initial prediction­s of a wave of panic selling depressing second home prices never materializ­ed. Instead, the opposite has happened. More people are buying in resort areas to escape big cities, and the available inventory has tightened.

Not only did occupancy roar back, but guests were staying for long periods of time. For Tannous, that meant they were either taking extended vacations or, more likely, that they were working remotely.

Guests started asking for something that was a rare request before — desks in their rooms. The requests became so frequent that Tannous and Haler are complying, even converting one room in their 10- bedroom lodge in Leadville into an office area.

“If they can work remotely what does it matter if they are working from their apartment or house or further away,” Tannous said. He also notes that many guests don’t always tell their employers where they are actually located.

Guesty, a property management service that High Rocky Homes uses, has seen a 117% increase in reservatio­ns of 90 days or more. It is also seeing more spur- of- themoment rentals. In July, for example, a majority of bookings came within seven days of arrival.

Bookings for holidays periods, including Thanksgivi­ng, Christmas and New Year’s, are running lower than they did this time last year, the company said. That might change given the trend to booking closer in. But if it doesn’t, it could also reflect workers not needing a remote office over the holidays.

Even Las Vegas is getting in on the act. MGM Resorts earlier this month unveiled its “Viva Las Office” packages that offered discounted room rates, food credits and flexible check- in times at Bellagio and ARIA resorts. Weekdays only though.

 ?? Photos by Kathryn Scott, Special to The Denver Post ?? Erin Miller stands outside the detached shed that houses her office Aug. 18 in Centennial. She and her husband had the shed built in their backyard to accommodat­e her remote work.
Photos by Kathryn Scott, Special to The Denver Post Erin Miller stands outside the detached shed that houses her office Aug. 18 in Centennial. She and her husband had the shed built in their backyard to accommodat­e her remote work.
 ??  ?? Studio Shed in Louisville designed and built the backyard office space for Erin Miller. She also uses the space to relax after work and visit with friends.
Studio Shed in Louisville designed and built the backyard office space for Erin Miller. She also uses the space to relax after work and visit with friends.
 ??  ?? “My commute to work is a bit longer — out the back door and across the grass instead of just down a flight of stairs,” Erin Miller said of her Studio Shed home office.
“My commute to work is a bit longer — out the back door and across the grass instead of just down a flight of stairs,” Erin Miller said of her Studio Shed home office.

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