Positions will probably never look the same in a post-Coronavirus world. Open floor plans, shared snacks, and more than ever notwithstanding places for napping or hanging out were once markers of trendy places to work, but now these perks seem precarious in the context of a pandemic, as some offices reopen.
New York-based startup Room made a name for itself selling sequestered phone booths to open offices, with clients including Uber, Google, and Salesforce. At the end of August, the company advertised a new line of products that can help transform open offices into something more suitable for social distancing in 2020.
The modular pods are ilk pop-up meeting rooms with extra ventilation, and Room is also offering a new analysis tool to give patients data on how office space is used, and how employees can safely return.
Room’s proposal is just one idea popping up hither how to work during a pandemic. Architect and designer Mohamed Radwan created a system of airtight office pods with air purifiers, and multitudinous other designers have created tiny backyard offices, or even ways to transform the home into an part, tastefully.