Industry News: Redesigning The Office For The Next 100-Year-Flu

- Advertisement-

Popular Articles

Chair of the Month

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. 

Redesigning The Office
Architects say making the office more like the outdoors — with filtered air and good ventilation — will be a priority post-pandemic. This living wall in the Danielle N. Ripich Commons at the University of New England in Biddeford, Maine, is one such approach. Image via WBEZ.
  • WBEZ asks by 2025 or so, after the immediate threat of the coronavirus has likely passed, which short-term fixes will be part of the new normal? And what other design changes could be coming our way?
  • Architectural Digest explores why Dunder Mifflin Scranton was not the best for productivity.
  • Jason McCann, the founder of office furniture company Vari, talks with Entrepreneur about dealing with crises, how workspaces will adapt to the new normal and recovering from business losses.
  • The Morning Call talks with Jill Wheeler, vice president of sales and marketing, City Center Allentown, about how sharing office space with co-workers is crucial to business success.
  • CBC shares how Canadians should expect their workplaces to change as they return to the office.
  • EBN reports on how WeWork can respond to demand for post-pandemic workspaces.
- Advertisement -

More Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest Articles

- Advertisement-