Industry News: How COVID-19 will change your open office

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Elise Shapiro
Elise Shapirohttps://www.workdesign.com
Elise Shapiro is a contributing editor. Little did she know that her first job, in the facilities department at Ralston Purina, while obtaining her M. Arch at Washington University, in St. Louis would foreshadow where her career would lead. She has always been a strong advocate for providing the best possible spaces for people to work – where aesthetics meet function and drive business success.

Our weekly round up of workplace news from around the web. 

Desks are arranged lined up side​ by side, or “benching,” in the S​eattle office of B+H Architect​s on April 1, 2020.
PHOTOGRAPH BY RUTH FREMSON, THE NEW YORK TIMES VIA REDUX
  • National Geographic reports on how the coronavirus pandemic is exacerbating workers’ worries about returning to jobs in these often debated floor plans.
  • Coronavirus won’t kill the open office. But Fast Company shares how you should expect it to change.
  • Changes are coming to the corporate workplace, says RE Journals. The instigator of those changes? Coronavirus, of course. But the key word here is “changes.” The corporate office will change, but it won’t disappear.
  • Say goodbye to the crowded office: The Conversation shares how they think coronavirus will change the way we work together.
  • CNBC believes that the office we once thought of as the future, is the office of the past.
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