The State of The Office
The State of The Office
Max Nathan
with Judith Doyle
a futures publication
by Max Nathan
with Judith Doyle
Contents
List of tables and figures
Introduction 1
2: Unsolved problems 11
The reality gap 11
Uncharted territory 13
5: Do as I say, not as I do 31
How in control are we? 31
Don’t I just love being in control? 33
Long shadows 36
It’s like a jungle out there 38
6: Space sovereignty 42
Handing over the reins 43
Ways to do it 46
Conclusion 49
Glossar y 50
References 51
List of tables and figures
Table 1: The workspace we want: office workers’ overall scores 20
Table 2: The workspace we want: first choices 20
Table 3: The workspace we want: office workers’ first choices 21
Table 4: Control of working space: all workers and office workers 32
Table 5: Day to day control of space: results for office workers 32
Table 6: Control of working space: results by gender 33
Figure 1: The state of the office: four scenarios 40
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Introduction
Introduction
‘Space is the place.’ Sun Ra
The average desk is occupied for only 45 per cent of office hours. But the office is far from dead:
we still spend most of our lives at work, and most of that time in one place. For most companies,
solid working space is still vital to business success.
In fact, the years since the early 1990s have seen something of a golden age in office design. On the
back of economic expansion, the ICT revolution and the dotcom boom, designers and architects
have constructed a wave of exciting, innovative [Link] workplace has been reinvented as an
arena for ideas exchange, drop-in point for mobile workers and a forum for professional and social
interaction. Moving into a new HQ, or facelifting the old one, is now a recognised technique for
changing corporate image and energising organisational culture.
With leaner times ahead, this is a good point to take stock. What has been learnt, and how could
things be done better next time?
Looking closer, the shine starts to come [Link] has been innovation without dissemination. With
their plug-in points and intelligent wallpaper, their ponds, swings, lawns and High Streets, their Zen
Zones and touchdown areas, the cathedrals of the cutting-edge remain the preserve of a select few.
Flexible working patterns and spaces might be widely discussed, but they are not widely available.
Most people work in very average spaces, where the workplace is simply where work happens and
where managers keep an eye on us. It’s dumb space: at best, bland, neat and cheap. Space
management is about control, autocracy and [Link] evolution of space is under-
resourced, chaotic and unplanned – particularly in the small firms that dominate the UK economy.
Worse, research shows that new forms of working space can save money and increase profitability.
But in practice, new ways of working don’t always deliver the promised benefits.
All of which leaves three urgent issues. First, there is often a mismatch between the types of
workspace employees need, and what employers give them. Second, even sophisticated ways of
organising working space don’t always work in [Link], the message of good workplace
design and management hasn’t reached most employers – and more importantly, hasn’t touched
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Introduction
most [Link]’s a disconnection between the workspace sector and business at large.
So how do we, the workers, respond to all this? Most of us appear satisfied with our working space.
But that happiness doesn’t come [Link] get it, we are forced to reclaim the office to get control of
it. Employees, users of space, are constantly modifying, adapting, tinkering with space, bending the
rules to make it fit. We all do this, in good spaces or bad. Sometimes this is fairly innocuous –
75 per cent of office workers admit to marking company stationery with their own names – at
other times it spills over into open hostility and resistance to company rules.
All of this take place within a much larger nexus of political, economic and social [Link] fully
understand how space is managed and controlled, we need to look at the dynamics of the firm.
Working space is the site of tensions between the formal, visible elements and informal, invisible
elements at play within company walls.
Not enough is known about these [Link] paper – which focuses on the office – tries to fill in
some of these gaps. It presents major new survey and qualitative data commissioned for this
research. It explores what we don’t know, sets out a framework for looking at the physical working
environment, and outlines new space strategies.
This paper also aims to disseminate. We want to spread the gospel of good practice and bridge the
communication gap between workspace experts and the business community at [Link] has to
come through user involvement and more democratic management. We dub this ‘space sovereignty’.
Space matters. Badly-designed or managed workplaces damage staff physical and mental wellbeing.
Without well-grounded strategies for the workplace, companies can lose money while relationships
with employees decay. Others run economy-class outfits with little concern for worker welfare. For
more and more firms, properly designed and managed workspace works best in the long run.
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There are two main traditions of office [Link] dominant view sees office space as ‘dumb space’.
It’s a shell; it’s where work happens. Space should be neat, cheap and bland. It should also help
managers keep an eye on workers. Control should stay at the top: space oppresses.
Until very recently, the dissenting minority has struggled to be [Link] group sees the office as
‘smart space’. It argues that the workplace can help us work harder, faster and better. Space should
be leveraged to change company culture and working methods. Most of all, working space should
be for the many, not the few. Employees should help decide the layout and management of the
workplace. It is these progressive views that are now gaining ground.
The office as we know it today evolved in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the product of
both the Industrial Revolution and the emergence of the firm. As with all evolutions of office space,
a number of technological, organisational, economic and cultural factors are responsible.
Industrialisation moved the focus of economic production from the land towards towns and [Link]
scale of production allowed by steam technology and mechanisation created whole new divisions of
labour and new types of capitalist workers. Upton Sinclair termed them ‘white collar’: middle management
and professionals co-ordinated sourcing and distribution, tracked sales and drew-up strategy. Under
them, salespeople, clerks and administrators processed orders and dealt with correspondence.
Offices were required to house, monitor and organise these workers. Early design layouts still
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reflected home environments – the 1849 Sun Life Assurance Company building is a typical instance
of this – but these soon changed towards more industrial forms.
Early 20th-century office design took place in a work climate dominated by rationalisation and
[Link] efficiency theories, the assembly line and time-and-motion studies helped
spawn the modern desk in 1915 (known as the ‘Modern Efficiency Desk’), banishing earlier models
and helping paper move more quickly through the office.4
The classic office space of this time involved highly standardised interior and furniture design, rows
of identical desks, large, plain office spaces (‘bullpens’) for the mass of workers and a small number
of private offices for senior staff, guarded by secretaries. After World War II the office experience
rigidified still further, as demobbed soldiers took military manners into the [Link]
standardised office probably reached its apogee in the early 1960s, with SOM’s Union Carbide
Building in New [Link] office design embodied a totally rational approach to the corporation,
with a rigid planning clearly expressing status through: ‘size and location of offices, number of
windows in that office, and the refinement of its furnishings ... individuality was subordinate to an
overall exquisitely detailed expression of utility, efficiency and modernity’.5
Most office design of the 1960s and 1970s involved variations on the SOM-style ‘international style’
offices. With few exceptions, the overall focus was on warehousing people, ignoring the individual
and applying standardised space and furniture styles. Firms with the budget for design ordered highly
detailed, homogenous, hierarchical spaces, put into practice at minimal cost.
By the late 1960s an office counter-culture had [Link] concept of Burolandschaft, pioneered
by the German Quickbourner Group placed great emphasis on interlocking, fluid and organic
working spaces with minimal divisions and area [Link] office as site for input/output efficiency
was replaced with the concept of working space as nurturing [Link] model did not gain
widespread acceptance, fading after numerous complaints about privacy, noise and lack of individual
control over space. Its long-term influence has been rather greater: today’s open offices and flexible
furniture systems began here.
Some Burolandschaft ideas were incorporated into mainstream design, with dire consequences. In 1968,
designer Robert Propst invented the cubicle as part of a panel-based office system, which aimed to
replace the bullpens of the previous decade. While well-intentioned, in practice using the cubicle soon
deteriorated into the classic Dilbert experience – extreme standardisation, anonymity and isolation.
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This is the autocratic office: the dominant themes are standardisation, efficiency, group solutions and
corporate control of staff. It has a long history. Managers have seen keeping control as good business
practice since the earliest days of the [Link] earliest factories and mills sprang up to take
advantage of new economies of scale, and to make monitoring production simple, controlling labour
through concentrating it in one space.6
Throughout the last century, however, there have been important exceptions to this. For Budd,
progressive offices have, until very recently, been ‘blips ... a quiet, constant protest’ against the
overwhelming mood of standardisation, cost reduction and worker control.7
The first progressive office appeared, not in the last few years, but in 1906. Frank Lloyd Wright’s design
for the Larkin Soap Company integrated new architecture with forward-looking management, mechanical
production systems and a range of leisure facilities – including a YWCA, library and music lounge.
Hertzberger’s Central Beheer Building in the Netherlands, constructed in the 1970s, is another
important example of flexible, democratic [Link] space banned markers of status, with simple
furniture the staff could rearrange according to taste; the culture of the space was empowering, and
both individual and group control of work and space were actively encouraged. Many of these
themes were echoed by Stone and Luchetti in [Link] seminal article ‘Your Office is Where You
Are’ blasted cubicles and single-space solutions, arguing for flexible, multi-functional spaces and a
working culture of trust and mutual responsibility.8
A new decade
These ideas found their champions in the 1990s. Work by the pioneers of the ‘Alternative Officing’
school – notably Francis Duffy, Fritz Steele and Franz Becker – mixes architecture, research and
environmental psychology. It develops rich new concepts for working space based on the interaction
between people, space and working culture. At the same time, wireless technology and the internet
have allowed the workplace to be physically transformed, and staff to move much more freely, in the
office and away from it. Around 25 per cent of the workforce, mostly in higher occupational groups,
now carry out some of their work at home and use ICT to keep in touch with clients and
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colleagues.9 The average office desk is occupied for only 45 per cent of office hours – the rest of
the time the worker will be in meetings, visiting clients, on holiday, training or sick.10
Other pressures have added to the mix. As employers recognise the importance of intangible assets,
designers have been looking for ways to spark ideas exchange and spontaneous communication
through space. Perhaps more importantly, in an age of rising property prices, especially in large
urban areas, many firms have been looking for ways to cut down on office space costs.
There are three key dynamics at work here. First, some workers now have multiple workplaces and
nomadic workstyles outside the office; second, there is a move towards flexible workstyles within
the office; and third, for many workers the office is being reconfigured as a forum for ideas
exchange, community space, team space, drop-in point for mobile workers – or catalyst for wider
cultural and organisational change.
Many designers and architects have developed new models of working space that aim to empower
workers, creating interaction and cross-fertilisation of [Link] models are often based around
traditional communities: neighbourhoods, streets or villages.11 Social connection, professional
interaction and multi-tasking are prioritised: rather than comprising conventional ‘cells’ and ‘hives’, the
office becomes a forum or ‘club’, with extra ‘den’ spaces for quiet working alone.12 Working space is
designed to increase flow of staff, ‘magnet facilities’ like photocopiers and drinks machines are set up
in public areas and accessways to stimulate chance interaction.13 These spaces are usually combined
with hotdesking and other hotelling solutions – flexible space systems where staff use workspace as
and when needed, allowing employers to provide less of it in the first place.14
Other firms have taken the idea of office as hotel to heart, renting space on a short-term basis.
The ‘instant office’ sector has grown rapidly in recent years, particularly in south-east England
through companies like Regus and Business Exchange. Providers lay on serviced offices, which can
be set up in a matter of hours to meet clients’ requirements.
If people, work, culture and space are all interconnected, as Alternative Officing advocates suggest,
then the workplace can be used as a tool for organisational development and [Link] idea has
been enthusiastically adopted by a number of firms using new working space to kickstart new ways
of working and cement new corporate cultures.15 Companies are trying out new systems, and many
are working well (see box).
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At the same time, if the process takes place in public, or if the resulting space is unusual or
eccentric, all kinds of useful exposure is generated for the firm. Companies have not been shy about
this either.
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Even think-tanks are getting in on the [Link] Mezzanine on London’s South Bank houses around a
dozen units in an open-plan setting designed specifically to spark new thinking across ideological
lines. In practice this may not always happen – insiders note that the most right-wing outfits are
carefully located across a sealed corridor where ‘we never hear or see them’.17
The seminal Hawthorne Experiments in the 1920s were almost entirely responsible for this.18 The
tests aimed to establish whether or not the physical environment had any effect on worker task
[Link] appeared to show that changes in the physical environment made no difference
to performance apart from an initial novelty [Link] implication was that psychological needs and
a sense of belonging were more important than space alone. Some time after this, Hertzberg’s 1966
study on job satisfaction placed the workplace as a ‘hygiene factor’, which might cause dissatisfaction
but had no positive impact on productivity once basic needs were met.19
The first of these studies is now widely questioned: for a start, many of the Hawthorne tests found
no Hawthorne effect.20 The second has been superseded by new evidence, suggesting physical
aspects of the environment do affect task performance. Air quality and extremes of temperature
pose particular problems, as does noise, both through the distraction it causes and through
‘masking’, where important sounds are obscured by the unimportant.21
This means that poorly-designed workplaces can affect how well people do their jobs, and in some
cases actually make people [Link] are obvious risks from handling or coming into contact with
toxic substances at work, or from breathing poor air – all aspects of Building Related Illness.
Furthermore, researchers estimate that between a third and a half of all new and reconditioned
buildings are afflicted with Sick Building Syndrome (SBS).22 SBS manifests itself as physical and mental
discomfort – symptoms include rashes, allergic reactions, tiredness and flu-like symptoms – but
there is no clear sign of a disease. Symptoms disappear when not at work, suggesting psychological
factors play a strong part.23
Space can also affect the balance sheet in a good way. Leaman and Bordass estimate that design,
management and use of space can account for up to 15 per cent of an organisation’s [Link]
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Much of the 1990s literature focuses on the soft benefits of new ways of working, showing, for
example, that working space also affects productivity through levels of communication and
interaction. Research by Space Syntax indicates that around 80 per cent of all work-related
conversations are sparked by one person passing another’s desk:
‘When you are working in a concentrated way you are unavailable. As soon as you get up to go to a
meeting, or the photocopier or whatever, you become available.’ 25
It follows that the more staff can be made accessible to each other through space design, the more
useful they could find each other, and the faster, smarter and more cohesively they could work
together.26 A study of IBM mobile employees – working at home, on customer sites and in flexible
office space – found that nearly 52 per cent felt this helped them to work more effectively. Around
66 per cent felt more satisfied with their jobs.27 Employees in Scottish Enterprise’s ‘Workplace of the
Future’ project report up to 50 per cent higher productivity.28 In professional knowledge sectors, a
workplace that can bring people together in this way should be worth its weight in desks. Firms in
these sectors are losing out if their space is not working as hard as they are.
New ways of working also create significant hard benefits by reducing total space used and recycling
older building stock.29 Getting rid of conventional office space can save a great deal of money. A
company like AT&T, which occupies around ten million square foot of space at £17-21 per square
foot, can reduce its total space by 20-30 per cent through flexible working practices – a saving of
£28-73m per year.30 British Airways’ flagship Waterside project aims to save £15m a year in
property costs.
Working space cannot be considered as simply the place where work takes place. Rather, it is linked
to other aspects of the firm, particularly people, work type and company [Link] benefits of
new space, therefore, come about when new ways of working are introduced – in other words, the
company reorganises itself around new space, rather than simply installing it and continuing as usual.
Overall, innovative working space:
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● can help staff work faster, harder smarter – and be happier in their work
● enables greater flexibility in how the organisation works
● is an asset to be leveraged in recruiting and retaining talent
● displays the public face of the firm and reinforces brand value
● is cheaper than the status quo in the long term. Doing nothing has costs too, as later chapters show.31
Much of the key research on how to put space change into practice has been done by Becker and
colleagues at Cornell University.32 They argue that the following are key when implementing new,
flexible working spaces:
● developing an ‘integrated workplace strategy’, where all employees have access to a range of
work settings for their various tasks
● properly worked-out, long-term programmes of change management, focusing on corporate and
organisational culture
● senior-level champions to motivate and set an example
● two-way conversations with employees, with scope for involvement in determining the detail of
change
● tracking the rumour mill and correcting misinformation
● ensuring change management is well-resourced, not considered secondary to change itself.
The case for new types of working space seems [Link]’s only one problem: why do
so few of us actually work this way?
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2: Unsolved problems
2: Unsolved problems
‘I looked into the reception room ... The same stuff I had had the year before, and the year before that.
Not beautiful, not gay, but better than a tent on the beach.’ Raymond Chandler33
Office space has changed radically – for a few people. For most of us, new ideas haven’t filtered through to
our workplaces and to the minds of our [Link]’s been innovation without [Link]?
‘A comparison of the vanguard Lloyd Wright Building with the basic configuration, layout and use of an office
building of the late 1980s shows surprising levels of similarity ... the office premises of the 1990s are all too
often responding to needs of the early part of the century: the need to centralise, secure and discipline
on a full-time daily basis a clerical labour force given limited means of communicating and managing.’ .34
There is a gulf between what designers and architects recommend, and what employers do. For a start,
only a few office spaces are custom-built. Over 75 per cent of office moves are simply to larger offices;
around 60 per cent of change consists of modification or adaptation to suit organisational needs.35
Tanis and Duffy, in a survey of over 5,000 workers in leading-edge UK and US companies, find that
over 58 per cent of respondents use high interaction or high autonomy models of working (or both)
during the same working day. Almost two-thirds (63 per cent) predicted they would be working this
way in the near future (between 2001-2003). In other words, most knowledge professionals require
the ‘den’ and ‘club’ -type spaces outlined previously. Around 63 per cent of current global office space
is not fit for purpose – it is or soon will be redundant.36
Employees bear the brunt of this. One of the first studies to ask office workers their views on
working space has uncovered a large, unhappy minority. More office workers seem dissatisfied with
their working space than with their jobs as a whole: 23 per cent to 12 per cent respectively. Around
a fifth of UK offices fail to provide an adequate work environment. In around a quarter, employees
‘have serious complaints about various environmental factors’, and in about a third of spaces,
employers face at least 13 obstacles to effective working.37 Bad space is a serious problem.
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Why has this happened? First, money. Most office design and facilities management is based on cost-
minimisation, not on what work is going to be done in the building.38 Second, perceived simplicity.
Underlying the cost-control impulse is an instinctive preference for simple, measurable notions of
efficiency. New models of working space suggest complex, expensive-sounding and intangible
[Link], size. Small firms with limited resources dominate the UK [Link] owners are
likely to have neither the time nor the resources to change space from [Link] typical pattern
of evolution tends to be chaotic, adaptive and mostly unplanned.
Much of the ‘workplace sector’39 itself has some way to go. Price notes that ‘the link [of working
space] to organisational culture, widely made in the knowledge management arena, is only beginning
to be appreciated in the workplace design arena ... the property professions as a whole still
struggle’.40 More importantly, the simple approach to space is probably shared by a majority of
employers in the UK. Myerson suggests that while most firms accept ideas of good practice in
theory, they are far less willing or able to adopt such ideas in practice.41 Other commentators are
less optimistic. Wilson argues that organisations tend to view working space in one of five ways, as:
● the place where work occurs: there is minimal effect on organisational performance
● a symbol of prestige: the outside matters most
● an expression of concern for the workforce
● an efficiency tool: money is spent where there’s a tangible return
● an inspirational force, with functional and symbolic roles: the workplace reflects the wider culture
of the organisation.42
Only companies in the last category come close to seeing the potential of working space. Firms get
the message – up to a point. Many in other categories might appear to embrace change, but for the
wrong reasons.
This suggests a fourth [Link] widespread failure of firms to adopt new models of working space
and new models of working also reflects the persistence of conventional models of work organisation.
People, culture and space connect, but not always in the right [Link] models of managerial
command and control tend to imply traditional modes of organising working space – or in some
cases, new models of working space managed along conventional command and control [Link]
explains the company with the prestigious lobby hiding shabby offices for staff; or the firm with cutting-
edge spaces for senior employees and a subterranean [Link] models of working life, with
their obsessions with control, status and hierarchy are depressingly prevalent in UK workplaces.
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The result: innovative working space doesn’t always deliver the expected benefits. Companies with
2: Unsolved problems
new spatial arrangements sometimes report higher costs and staff turnover, decreased morale,
slower product development, lower productivity and profitability.43 Space, staff and organisational
culture are out of alignment. As Price notes:
‘the point is made that the rhetoric ... frequently obscures an intention that is much more focussed on cost’.
There may also be a fifth factor. We all seem happy enough to buy conventional models of working
space. One commentator suggests that:
‘the work environment model of the 1960s is still with us, and it remains potent today ... the dream of
a corner office, of achieving status and the rest is as pervasive as it was forty years ago’ .44
This is a puzzle. If two-thirds of global offices are unfit for purpose, why do only a fifth of office
workers feel their space is inadequate? And why do more of them feel dissatisfied with their space
than their jobs? The great majority of office workers appear satisfied with their physical working
environment, but we know that much of this space is below par or poor. In other words, it seems
very likely we’re adapting, modifying, tweaking and subverting our working space on a grand scale, to
make that space fit our needs.
Uncharted territory
We need a much richer understanding of people, space and [Link] are three places in
particular where we need to dig deeper.
(1) The futures of work. Different types of work are evolving at different speeds, as are the spaces in
which they take place. However, much of the best research and key ideas in Alternative Officing
involves a narrow understanding of work that focuses on professional knowledge [Link] is
useful economic shorthand for the working space sector, but it says very little to many employers
outside current markets. For example, Holtham distinguishes what he calls ‘three types of work’
taking place in the office of the future: (i) information work: processing of information in teams
(ii) knowledge work: sharing (iii) knowledge work: creation.45
This typology is valuable, but misses out a great deal: particularly, administration, customer service
and sales work. All of these are growth sectors and can take place in office environments, such as
call centres (and all of which require gathering and manipulating ‘knowledge’).The real driver of the
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new economy is routine service employment. Much of the UK workforce will continue to be
employed in essentially hive-like spaces, which tend to be ignored by the design [Link]
occasional cutting-edge call centre, such as Egg’s space in Derby is the exception that proves the rule.
(2) The user perspective. There’s a wealth of work on working space, but a serious lack of
understanding of the user’s point of [Link] is very little research on what users of space want
from space and how they tend to behave in it. It is critical to know. Focusing on space without
focusing on users and their moods is not enough: the most productive workers are not necessarily
the happiest in their space, but those who find the greatest satisfaction in their work as a whole.46
By ignoring the user, space becomes dumb space. Space and facilities design and management can
be almost simple-minded. Myerson points out that:
‘although IT and human resource management programmes have commanded board-level time and
resources, the third element in the holy trinity of organisational change – the physical work setting –
has often been delegated ... or overlooked altogether’.47
‘they put in wavy desks and imagine everyone will start working in amazing new ways’.48
And that’s not all. Anjum notes that while the working space sector has started to develop an
understanding of employees as ‘consumers’:
‘their needs are often dictated by the client (the manager or the employer of the organisation) rather
than the employees themselves’.
This is a critical point. We have to be thinking about the processes and politics of space management
and change. In particular, we need to discover just how, and how much employees are adapting
space to fit their needs.
(3) The political economy of the firm. Working space and its effects on people, teams and organisation
rests on a wider set of relationships with the [Link] is a point well taken but rarely understood:
Alternative Officing models, with their focus on linking people, culture and space barely register the
complex realities of the [Link] workplace is intimately connected with the social and
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economic dynamics of the firm and the labour market.49 For example, working space should be set
2: Unsolved problems
within the informal tone of the company, not just its formal culture. Budd points out that most
conventional workspaces involve a ‘universal, bland sameness ... forms of paternalism, groupthink and
group control become a tacit objective of the built environment ... workplace tools underscore rank
and privilege’.50
Similarly, using the workplace to foster interaction between employees will have little effect if they’re
not interested in their jobs. People will simply gripe around the watercooler. Space can help, but
only so much. Engagement with working life does the rest.
To properly understand these connections, we have to develop a much better model of workspace.
Space is a key part of the ‘active firm’. Separation of ownership and control, economies of scale and
production methods create different, often competing groups – each with their own agendas. Profit-
focused shareholders, professional managers and salaried staff will all want different things at
different times.
To understand the politics and geography of working space, we have to know the politics and
geography of working life: the political economy of the firm.
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Many forces are in play in the modern company. Here, we shine some light on the informal or
‘invisible’ aspects of the firm; individual motivations and behaviours, customs, rituals and codes.
Realising the existence and persistence of this invisible firm alongside visible systems of organisation is
crucial to understanding what goes on inside company walls.
The things that make firms work can also work against them. If companies get too large, however,
they can suffer control loss, as information flows poorly through the organisation and errors are
made. Since most firms have elements of hierarchy, some poor decisions will be made and not
countermanded or questioned [Link] division of labour is also double [Link]
specialisation it implies can generate rigidity and inefficiency, commitment to group, not company
objectives and hence, conflict between expert groups in the firm.54
Surely this has all vanished in the age of networks and flat hierarchies? Actually, no. Sure, firms are
slowly becoming flatter, shorter, more connected and wired-up. Many firms have developed caring,
sharing corporate cultures and seek to nurture their employees. Some actually manage to do this.
Others, however, remain resolutely economy class enterprises: repetitive work processes, low-quality
product, high labour turnover, low morale and no corporate conscience.55
Why so slow to change? The same factors remain in the frame because they concern people, not
machines. Human wants, capabilities and behaviours explain much about why firms are the way they are.
Because they have imperfect information and are hired to do just part of the firm’s work, individuals in
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organisations often have to make decisions with less than all of the facts. Confronted with this, they tend to
Similarly, specialisation creates potential conflicts of interest between different departments and teams
in the [Link] will slow change down. Behavioural theories of the firm convincingly depict
companies as coalitions of much smaller groups and individuals: managers, union members and
various worker collectives, all jostling for position and bargaining with each other to support various
formal and informal policies.57 As Hay and Morris put it:
‘Firms as such cannot have objectives: only individuals can ...’ .58
Systems analysis produces a very similar [Link] firm is a complex social and economic
organisation, with dense linkages between agents and [Link] firm itself arises: ‘as many agents
achieve a critical density of interconnection and operate to common sets of rules’.59 Again, people are
critical to the whole process. If social environments change faster than people in them, the
organisation as a whole ceases to function.
Individual and group objectives can be crude or encouragingly complex. Many of us will simply crave
money, position and power at work. Some, though, will simply be passing the time. In one survey of
UK directors, over 75 per cent of respondents said that their main ambition was to retire. Over 65
per cent felt their time at work was wasted, most of whom would rather be playing golf.60
Others work for very different reasons [Link] job is their vocation; their work is a source of
value to them, fulfils social needs and acts as a form of community – or even surrogate home, in
some cases.61 Informal codes, rituals, friendships and networks develop into informal organisational
culture, which, as Cummings and Cooper point out:
‘... like social culture more generally, functions to create cohesiveness and maintain order and regularity in
the lives of its members’ .62
Routines reassure – and retard change. Many people like what they have and seek to perserve it.
Networks develop organically between [Link] are ‘communications channels ... that
honeycomb organisations. Messages and judgements course silently in networks ... We have all been
part of one and surprised by a few’.63
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3: The space we’re in
These factors and forces are played out in physical workspace. Working space is an arena for
resolving the complexities of information and economic organisation, a place of conflict, control and
exploitation. It is also a place to settle old scores and make new friends, to pursue power and glory,
earn your keep and live your life. It is far more than just people, culture and space.
● physical space
● job design
● work: process and sector
● people: workers and managers’ motivation
● organisational culture: codes, rituals and symbols
● corporate culture: organisational structure and objectives, rules, regulations and official tone
● economic resources: capacity, size, financial position, knowledge
● external factors: technology, state of expert knowledge, state of the world.
Literature on organisational behaviour makes a critical distinction between formal and informal parts
of the firm. When thinking about space, it’s useful to cut things another way: to distinguish between
the visible and the invisible firm.
● Visible: physical space, corporate culture and stated objectives, job description, economic capacity.
● Invisible: organisational culture and processes: satisficing, hierarchies and power relations, status,
knowledge, effective/actual objectives.
It’s worth spelling this out more [Link] visible firm is what you can see and what’s written
down: the space around you, company policies, balance [Link] invisible firm is everything else:
individual territory, institutional culture, team [Link] are two key points to note here. First,
the invisible firm has tendencies to resistance and drag. Networks, codes and customs tend to evolve
slowly and organically. Second, the invisible firm reveals itself through communication and behaviour
patterns in the workplace – and crucially, through the use and abuse of working space. Employers
and designers may know little about what goes on out there – but they ignore the invisible firm at
their [Link] is the focus of the next chapter.
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What do people want from their working space? And how do they behave in it? Here’s the
evidence. It draws on three national surveys of office workers, including new Futures data specially
commissioned for this paper. 65 The Futures team also conducted new qualitative research, which
involved asking people to photograph their working spaces using disposable cameras. A selection of
images – and interviewees’ comments – can be seen at the back of the report. All unreferenced
quotes are taken from Futures’ primary research.
Three main findings emerge. First, workers, especially office workers, value many different kinds of
spaces. Community space matters – but people also want their own, individual areas. Unfortunately,
trends towards hotdesking and flexible workspace are taking this away.
Second, habits and behaviour are critical. We want what we need for the job. But more importantly,
we also want what we have. We like what we’re used to and don’t want anything too different.
Third, we want control. Users of working space want control of that space – to help them do their
jobs, and because for their own psychological needs. We want to control the environment and the
things that might change it. We want stability, to avoid stress. We change the space and bend the
rules to suit the job and suit ourselves.
Favourite places
Our survey asked people to rank different kinds of working space. Placing the average rankings for
all space types side by side, office workers edge shared space into the lead, but only just (Table 1).
In other words, when giving a fully reasoned assessment, office workers can see the value in most
types of [Link] one consistent finding is the unpopularity of having one’s own office, working
alone and having relaxation areas. People want privacy and territory, but they also want company.
However, taking first alone, they prefer to have their own desk, workstation or office (all varieties of
‘own space’) than shared or flexible space (Table 2).
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4: What we want (and what we do
Table 1:The workspace we want: office workers’ overall scores.
Space type
7 = least important)
Don’t know 19 10
A closer look at the data reveals exactly what we like about having our own space. People prefer to
to get it)
of working space. And it’s having the space, rather than being able to work alone that seems to
matter – only six per cent of respondents thought having space for working alone was most
important to them.
This has implications for hotdesking and flexible working. It might be all the rage, but not with
[Link] the group as a whole, having one’s own desk or office is almost twice as popular:
25 per cent rate own space as most important, against 14 per cent for flexible space. For office
workers, the gap is even starker: 30 to 14 per [Link] is, having one’s own space is more than
twice as popular as having flexible space.
Particular professions show differing preferences (Table 3). Associate professionals (nurses and
policemen, for example), technicians and those in frontline services are most keen on shared space.
Senior staff and professionals show strong preferences for their own desks and for private space
(having one’s own office is most popular among the latter).The starkest findings are for clerical and
administrative workers, almost 40 per cent of whom rate having their own desk as the most
important type of space.
My own
14 23 17 39 6 24
individual space
Private space 14 13 2 8 – –
Shared space
for me and 16 16 35 25 26 13
colleagues
Flexible space
that can be
19 14 10 6 14 8
reserved as
required
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4: What we want (and what we do
Note also that many don’t have strong views on the matter – overall, around 20 per cent of all
workers and office workers don’t know what types of space they prefer.
to get it)
These results clearly reflect the types of work different people do – and thus, what they’re used to.
Associate professional and technical workers show the strongest preferences for shared space;
administrative workers show the strongest attachment to desks; senior and managerial staff are
most in favour of private offices.
The problem for the workplace sector is that many of these preferences go against most current
trends. Hotdesking and other forms of flexible working are taking away the individual and private
space most office workers seem so attached to. Certainly, employees in cellular offices are more
satisfied with their work environment than those working in shared or open plan spaces. Anjum
concludes that ‘most people would rather have a cellular office’ than any other type of space.66
This may reflect other factors as well. Senior and managerial staff tend to have most say over working
space – they can give themselves exactly what they’d most like. If that is so, their preferences are
fairly clear – 48 per cent of clerical/secretarial staff are placed in open plan offices, while 28 per cent
work in shared offices. And 54 per cent of professional/managerial staff have cellular offices.67
So how are office workers dealing with new-fangled spaces? And what else do they do at work to
get themselves the spaces they want?
Colonising
‘My in-trays are always full and I have since abandoned them to simply hold desktop detritus. I have
different degrees of ‘in’, depending on how many things I need to get through. There’s stuff in them I
have meant to read months ago. For really urgent work I just put in a pile right in front of me. Stuff
that doesn’t fit into the in-tray goes on a shelf next to me. Other stuff is put elsewhere. I try to operate
a hierarchy of surface areas ...’
Office workers colonise their space. Identifying, marking and maintaining territory are key human
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behaviours. Susan Cave defines territory as ‘an area that is visibly bounded ... habitually used and
to get it)
Territory matters because it is a human organiser:
‘Having control over our environments means that life is more predictable and we therefore know how
to behave ...’ 69
Some studies suggest that more intelligent individuals mark-off larger areas for themselves.70 Altman
makes important distinctions between types of territory.
● Primary: eg an armchair. Primary territory has clear markers, is owned or used by one person and
is considered under the control of the owner.
● Secondary: eg a classroom [Link] territory is used regularly but shared with others, using norms
and informal rules, and is generally not defended.
● Public: eg a park bench. Accessible to everyone and used on a temporary basis. However, markers
used to try and reserve it are usually respected by others.71
‘This is one of the company meeting rooms. It’s been colonised by someone for an internal project. This
tends to happen, though it’s not company policy as such. Rooms can be reserved, but people tend to
just take them over.’
There are clear parallels here with Newman’s work on ‘defensible space’, which he describes as ‘the
range of mechanisms – real and symbolic barriers, strongly defined areas of influence, and improved
opportunities for surveillance – that combine to bring an environment under the control of its
residents’.72
Traditional examples at work include building towers of books or files, or using human gatekeepers,
such as secretaries.73 Many of the workers we talked to were developing their own physical and
non-physical defensible space systems in the office:
‘The best spots allow you to face the door, see who’s coming in. People descend on you when you’re
working – you need to be prepared.’
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4: What we want (and what we do
Warmdesking
to get it)
At work, treating public territory as secondary or primary takes particular forms. Personalisation of
space is probably the most important aspect of these. It seems to matter to people on several
levels, as a symbolic means of self-expression and as something that helps them get the job done.74
A fifth of respondents in one survey thought workplaces should reflect ‘the personality of the
person working there’.75 Sundström finds that having a designated workspace – especially one that
can be personalised – encourages ‘responsibility’.76
This has always chafed with tidy-minded office managers and minimalist [Link] 1965
Business Etiquette Handbook states clearly that employees should:
‘Avoid over-decorating your desk or area. When your desk, shelves and wall space are covered with
momentos, photographs, trophies, humorous mottoes and other decorative effects, you are probably not
beautifying the office; rather you may be giving it a jumbled, untidy [Link] may also be violating
regulations against using nails in the walls ...’.
Rampant personalisation goes on nevertheless. In a recent survey by Office Angels, 75 per cent of
office workers admitted to marking company stationery and other items with their own names. Just
under half (49 per cent) always used the same mug. Some had even personalised the bathroom –
around 49 per cent had a favourite cubicle, which they’d wait to use if necessary. It all helps people
stay in control of working life: over 50 per cent thought that dropping their habits would cause
‘depression’ and ‘make their productivity suffer’.77
This strongly suggests that flexible workspaces may be making some employees unhappy by denying
them territory. One US study found that over a quarter of companies introducing flexible
workspace reported a loss of morale.78 In many others, it is likely that employees are bending the
rules and are developing their own rituals that grab territory back, such as ‘warmdesking’. We found
numerous instances of this:
‘This is officially a hotdesk area, but is permanently inhabited by one person who leaves it in a total mess.’
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Communing
It’s good to talk – preferably face to face. Social interaction is one of our basic psychological needs,
and formal and informal communication is vital at work. How close people sit together and whether
there are barriers between workspaces increases or decreases the chances of this happening:
communication between employees drops off alarmingly with distance. MIT research finds office
workers are four times as likely to communicate with someone sitting six feet away as 60 feet away;
people seated more than 75 feet apart hardly ever speak.79 Similarly, BT research finds that two
people working on different floors of the same building have a one per cent chance of meeting on
any given day.80 ICT may be compounding this – one recent study found around half of all office
workers regularly email colleagues less than 10 feet away.81
In the main, office workers seem happy with provision for routine work-based communication, but
not with arrangements for formal meetings or informal interaction. Around 50 per cent of
respondents in Anjum’s survey complained they lacked space for informal social interaction; those
we talked to in more detail felt having such space was very important:
‘The building as a whole is nice and friendly. But we don’t see much of people outside our floor ... you
can go for weeks without seeing anyone ...’
‘There’s a real mix of people, jobs and work styles in my office. What’s good is that there are lots of
conversations between different [Link] can talk across the whole space, other people join in. I’m
shocked at how good people are at adding value.’
‘Being up at the front of the shop is great; I really enjoy the interaction with customers. We have a lot
of regulars; it’s like being in a big family.’
If people don’t feel they own social space, however, it won’t work:
‘The space actually designed for socialising is never used – anyone can walk in and hear what we’re
saying. Our office is like someone’s front room though. Other than that, the pub is our social space.’
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4: What we want (and what we do
Keeping a low profile
to get it)
‘Privacy is a very serious issue in this space. The management has not provided any viable private
space for confidential talks, disciplining and so on. Staff use the canteen, reception area or training
rooms for the most part. However, because everyone works on the same level, it’s obvious when
someone needs to talk...’
We can have too much community. Densely populated spaces or spaces without privacy do not
make good workplaces, and make ‘homing at work’ tricky to pull off. High density environments – or
environments that people feel are crowded – seem to make complex tasks harder to do. For
example, it is hard to think or hold a meeting in a crowded room. People tend to be less chatty and
sociable. But simple tasks seem to become easier.
Crowding, density and privacy in the office are deeply connected with real and felt control over the
work environment. People given control, or those who feel in control are less affected by
crowding.82 Privacy is about ‘having control over the amount of interaction we choose to have with
others’83; or to put it another way, it’s about having selective control over access to the self.84
Privacy is a major issue at work, both to get the job done and to ensure personal [Link]
is a strong relationship between privacy and job satisfaction. Anjum finds that open plan and shared
offices have most complaints about lack of privacy – people have difficulty concentrating, dealing
with personal matters and colleagues’ annoying habits. Overall, our interviewees hold widely differing
views. For some, privacy can be a problem if people use different workstyles in the same [Link]
may mitigate the synergies supposedly generated:
‘I tend to work in a very chaotic way, switching between several things at once, work and non-work
stuff, as ideas, inspiration and energy strike me. The problem is that other people don’t always think I’m
working when I work like this, although I am. So I need to have some privacy.’
‘everyone says open plan is the way to go, but you can inhibit the team by being with them constantly ...’.
On the other hand, offices with very mobile workforces could find a lack of privacy useful in terms
of security and community:
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to get it)
the time, so it’s important to have mechanisms to generate and build community.’
People in the office are prepared to play dirty to get some privacy. One interviewee explained how
she had deprogrammed her boss’s phone so that he was unable to ring through to interrupt her or
give her more jobs to do. Someone else confessed that:
‘when I use the scanner, it leaves behind a picture of the last thing I scanned – if I’m scanning
something not obviously for work, I tend to do a further scan of my hand or something afterwards, just
to be on the safe side’.
‘We’re not allowed to smoke in the building – it’d look bad. So all the smokers go here round the back.
It’s become ‘smokers’ alley’ – they even put ashtrays in for us ...’
UK offices are rife with adaptation, modification, conversion and hijacking, both of space and of
objects within it. Everyone we spoke to provided several examples of customising, informal
subversion and modification of corporate [Link] invisible acts of rebellion are made visible
through their effects on space and its use. Sometimes conversion takes place with the tacit
connivance of managers and official culture, as in the example above. At other times it involves
assigning additional meanings to everyday objects in the office:
‘One day these ramparts were put up between our desks. We were outraged ... If we want to create
some personal space, we put headphones on and hide behind our monitors. There is no need to
actually play music – people know not to disturb you.’
Computers seem to have become a ‘Fourth Space’ for many [Link] were widely
considered primary territory, although they were usually the property of the employer:
‘My screen is my workplace – perhaps even more than my desk. Everything is always there. It’s the
focal point of my workspace, I do most things through it, work and non-work stuff.’
These feelings are particularly strong in companies with flexible working policies and laptops for
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4: What we want (and what we do
staff. In many cases the computers are considered surrogate desks and guarded jealously.
to get it)
The desk, is also used for any number of things: as storage space; as ‘workday node’ on which
people use to anchor the working day; as a drop-in point where jacket, phone and other personal
equipment is left for easy pickup; as an email/computer stop; and as the means of access to one’s
immediate support network – people around the desk.85
Living
‘This is where I spend up to 12 hours a day. It’s set up to function exactly as I want it. Books, music,
coffee, laptop, sofa, bin. When I’m working well, it’s my favourite place.’
At the margins, territorial behaviour at work starts to resemble behaviour at home. Altman and Low
suggest that people feel bonds with certain places, such as where they [Link] are a centre for many
daily activities and an important part of our [Link] often have significant memories associated
with them too, as well as social networks connected to them.86 For many people, this description fits
work.87 Many of us see work not just as vocation, but often as community. Where we have many
friends, spend much of our time and use the office as a base for ‘homing’ and working alike:
‘She’d created a home. She’d set up family photographs ... There were four carnations on her desk,
crocheted containers for her pencils and paper clips, a bright red cosy around her teapot. She’d refused
to let that workspace – unpromising as it was – remain the company’s.’ 88
Conversely, for those who often travel or are away from the office a great deal, home-like places
become more like places of work:
‘I spend a lot of time in hotels like this. When you’re away a lot, just watching TV or eating is not that
interesting ... It feels like a part of work, not home. So it makes sense to use the time you spend there
to work more than relax.’
Over time, as other sources of identity and belonging change and are eroded, work should become
more and more significant as a source of identity and belonging.89 Many of our interviewees felt this
way:
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to get it)
my own, complete, personal space.’
‘I’ve personally slept in the office one, two, er, several times. One evening I wandered in around 1am,
had a few cokes, played some table football and fell asleep in a cupboard. When I woke up, someone
was already at their desk, hard at work ...’
Aesthetics
‘I don’t have my own window, I share one ... the thing is, the views are so good that no-one really minds.
And the office itself is nice to look at.’
The physical environment also affects how well we [Link] is a U-shaped relationship between
task performance and environmental arousal. Extremes at either end, particularly in temperature
and noise, mean agitation or [Link] affects attention levels and as such, ability to get the job
done.90 These problems affect most office workers in one way or another. Control of the
environment is a major issue. Anjum finds that between 25 and 38 per cent of office workers have
no direct control of their ambient conditions. Air conditioning is the single biggest complaint: in
summer. Almost 60 per cent are unhappy with air conditioning systems, falling to just under 50 per
cent in winter.91 The fully automatic environmental control systems in many modern buildings are
partly to blame – especially when they go wrong.92
Around a quarter are unhappy with lighting systems and noise, particularly outside traffic. Not
surprisingly, conversation and telephone noise is a problem for those working in open-plan offices –
24 per cent of respondents were unhappy here. Other sound can also be a problem:
‘One of the worst things about working here is hearing the same background music over and over
again. What’s played is decided centrally; we can’t change it.’
Gender
‘He’s a real spreader ... look at that, he’s taken over about three desks with all his stuff.’
Men and women want many different things from working space. Studies suggest that males tend to
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4: What we want (and what we do
have larger territories than females;93 and that women both tend to disclose more to each other
than men do, and prefer less private environments. Anjum’s survey partly supports only some of
to get it)
these findings, recording that female office workers are more dissatisfied than men with levels of
privacy, temperature in winter, lighting and noise. However, men are twice as dissatisfied than women
with the state of the furniture in their workspace (62 per cent to 32 per cent respectively) and
around 25 per cent more dissatisfied with the space itself (56 per cent to 46 per cent respectively).
Yet simply providing many different spaces is not enough – it’s also how they’re provided and how
they’re [Link] consistent thread running through all the findings is the desire for direct and
indirect control over the everyday environment. Privacy is about having control over others’ access to
[Link] and personalisation involve taking control of particular spaces and maintaining that
control over time. It’s clear that users of space seek the ability to directly influence their immediate
environment, altering appearance, temperature, noise levels and so [Link] also seek the feeling of
being in control, and having potential control should conflict or stress arise in the [Link] not
only helps them feel better, it also helps them manage and perform their jobs better.
The workspace sector has started to realise that direct and indirect control is important for self-
expression and efficiency.94 As one designer puts it, ‘the more ‘degree of freedom’ that can be
designed into a workplace, the better.’95 Ironically, the Hawthorne experiments themselves help to
show why control and autonomy matter. Recent analysis of the tests suggest a quite different type
of Hawthorne Effect occured. Unlike workers on the factory floor, test subjects were constantly
consulted about their wellbeing, allowed to set up modesty screens, change the lighting and to
determine their own working rhythms. Perhaps not surprisingly, their productivity went up compared
to regular employees.96
The unhappy minority in UK offices clearly does not possess this degree of control, if it has any
control at all. But how much control does everyone else have, and what’s stopping them getting it?
Let’s find out.
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5: Do as I say, not as I do
5: Do as I say, not as I do
From: [Link]@[Link] on 24/09/01
To: [Link]@[Link]
Subject: new seating plan
Keri – just seen the new office plans ... I’ve got TWO windows and my area is twelve ceiling tiles bigger
than Graham’s! Maybe this open plan living won’t be so bad after all. If you’re going out, could you get
me a double espresso to celebrate – M 97
Most of us appear happy with our workplaces and our control over them. But our happiness is
hard-won. In most cases, being at work is about being under someone else’s control. Bosses and
managers are controllers and users of [Link] operate in the visible and invisible firm, often
confusing the two so that the rules suit or don’t apply to [Link] behaviours have deep roots
in conventional business practice, organisation and culture systems that prioritise close monitoring
and control of the workforce.
In practice, space management is often controlled from the top by senior staff and enforced from
the bottom by facilities personnel. User involvement and autonomy is [Link] result is
conflict: skirmishes between controller groups and users, played out in working space.
Anjum comes up with similar results, finding that employees are generally satisfied with their ability
to change space to suit their work routines. However, a large minority – 23 per cent of respondents
– is unhappy with their ability to change working space, rating it as ‘inadequate’, ‘poor’ or ‘almost
non-existent’.
Perhaps not surprisingly, men, senior employees, managers and ABs are most likely to feel most in
control of their working [Link] holds for both direct and indirect control. Cutting the figures by
occupation or class overall, however, feelings of control differ little across jobs (Table 5) or social groups.
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5: Do as I say, not as I do
Table 4: Control of working space: all workers and office workers.
Agree 39 39 42 41
Neither agree 7 5 7 6
nor disagree
Disagree 14 14 13 14
Strongly 4 3 3 3
disagree
Don’t know 2 2 13 3
Job type / Manager Professional Associate Clerical and Personal and Selling
% who: or senior professional secretarial protective
or technical services
Strongly agree 47 44 24 22 28 21
Agree 34 34 39 45 40 59
Neither agree
6 5 8 8 11 7
nor disagree
Disagree 9 13 21 22 12 11
Strongly
2 3 6 2 7 2
disagree
Don’t know 2 – 1 1 – –
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5: Do as I say, not as I do
% of respondants Day to day control Control of space organisation
who: Men Women Men Women
Strongly agree 34 28 36 30
Agree 42 43 42 40
Neither agree 7 8 7 6
nor disagree
Disagree 11 16 10 18
Strongly 2 4 2 4
disagree
Don’t know 3 2 3 2
Gender differences are more striking (Table 6). On both direct and indirect counts, there is little
difference between men and women who feel in control. However, those who feel they lack control
are far more likely to be [Link] may help explain some of the occupational differences.
Women are disproportionately concentrated in clerical/secretarial [Link] immediate
managers and bosses, who feel most in control, are most likely to be men.
On one level, senior employees are employees like any other and are likely to engage in much of
the behaviour discussed previously. On another, they are likely to have different professional wants,
as befits their position. Much organisation theory has focused on what managers want for
themselves – namely, income, status, power and security.98 Given that they’ve supposedly been hired
to maximise profits, some kind of balancing act is called for, and many bosses end up juggling
profitability and organisational goals, growth, fending off stockmarket take-overs, pursuing their own
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wants and controlling the workforce. Not surprisingly, one survey of UK managers found that a third
had logically inconsistent goals and objectives.99
This mixture of formal and informal goals has its most visible effects on working [Link] need for
status – ‘the value placed on an individual in comparison to other individuals’ – is particularly
important here, since it’s most easily displayed in visible form. People express status using markers
indicating rank and position. Anything can act as a status marker: people make up their own. In one
office where furniture provided no means of distinguishing people, an informal status system had
evolved, so that:
‘the man with the red ashtray is a senior analyst. The man with the green ashtray is one of our
programmers. The ones with two plants next to their desks are supervisors’ .100
One of our interviewees arrived in a new office to find names displayed alphabetically on the door
outside. She promptly rearranged these so that her name was at the top: after all, ‘I’m in charge
here’. Nevertheless, the favourite workspace status symbols remain the desk and chair. Researchers
in one office were told that:
‘you realise, of course, that your status in the corporate hierarchy is silently affirmed by the size, shape,
contour, tilt, swivel of your office chair. It’s as if managers and, say, secretaries, were entirely different species’.101
‘on the one hand, anecdotes suggest that office workers desire distinctions based on their own rank,
and are upset when someone of equal or lower rank has something they lack. On the other hand,
workers may not admit any more than a slight interest in status symbols, as if recognising that they
contradict the values of democracy...’ .102
Some commentators argue that the need for status, and the need to display it, can’t be designed
out. If it’s wired into us at work, the best strategy is to ‘heighten, maintain enhance or just fine tune a
status demarcation system’ to meet individual needs and organisational goals.103 This may be so.
However, senior staff are most likely to come out on [Link] is the problem: our interview group
felt wanting and displaying status was perfectly understandable behaviour. However, there was
considerable annoyance – and in many cases, resentment – at the way in which superiors displayed
status and exerted power visibly in the process.
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This corralling of office space can take fairly crude [Link] classic status-driven space (a typical
5: Do as I say, not as I do
UK Government Ministry, for instance) puts big shots at the top of the building, middle-ranking staff
in the middle and service staff in the basement. Private offices for senior staff remain the norm, even
while non-territorial forms of flexible working are introduced for everyone [Link] large, private
spaces are rarely occupied by the owner, but no-one else is allowed in:
‘This is one of the directors’ offices. It’s a pretty big space, she’s rarely there, but no-one else is really
able to use it. It’s not encouraged. The door is kept very much closed.’
So much for setting an example. Expressing status in this way can be contagious. We were told that
in another office, all directors had agreed to sit in with their teams. A new arrival refused,
demanding a private office, whereupon several others backtracked and demanded private space as
well. In some cases rooms were simply commandeered as their own domains.
Other methods are more [Link] grand design of many offices is easily read as personal expression
of greatness, particularly when senior staff are likely to have overseen planning and construction:
‘This is the new grand entrance hall. It’s designed to impress visitors, but is hardly ever occupied.’
This is often made worse by what Holtham and Ward tag the ‘café cliché’ – the exciting new space
promised for staff that turns out to be rather less impressive in practice. Holtham and Ward cite the
staff ‘olive grove’ in BA’s Waterside offices, a space intended for ‘quiet contemplation’ made difficult
by being on a busy public thoroughfare.104 The Futures interview group provided numerous further
examples:
‘We hate the staffroom. It’s inaccessible, much further away from where people actually teach ... it
hasn’t been thought through at all.’
‘This is the café, but we don’t use it. First, it’s colonised by IT people from the parent company who
spend all day playing pool. We don’t mix with them. Also, it’s quite far away from where we work, and
there’s nothing there you can’t get where you actually sit ... Bosses do tend to wonder what you’re doing
when you sit in the canteen as well – there’s a definite presumption you’re skiving.’
So are bosses’ priorities revealed – as is the status of most employees. Not surprisingly, as we saw in
Chapter 4, staff prefer go to a real café instead, or transform their current space into social space.
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Managers find other devious ways to keep control of space to themselves. J Thurlby’s story Swivel
describes a particularly sadistic example.
‘In front of the desk, facing Baxter, was the chair, a large, semi-formal swivel ... whoever sat there, found,
with reactions varying from amazement to consternation, that the swivel chair did not swivel. It was
fixed rigidly to the floor and its swivelling mechanism had been locked off ... When you sat in chair it
gripped you physically ... I found myself watching mesmerically for the moment when the luckless
occupant of the chair first found himself restrained by the inertia of the mediaeval contraption.’ 105
Wilson and Hedge report widespread use of dummy switches in offices, to fool employees into
thinking they can alter temperature, ventilation and light.106 A company we visited has a new building
with central atrium, where staff working in adjoining offices have blinds for privacy. However, unknown
to them, the CEO has been provided with a remote control device allowing him to open the blinds.107
Long shadows
The boss doesn’t just get their own way because they want to. It’s important to remember that in
theory, some kind of hierarchical relationships are hardwired into all firms of whatever shape:
establishing the firm implies grants of authority between owner, managers and employees – principal
and agents. Being employed, therefore, involves ‘granting authority within limits to direct’.108 Work
buildings are, in that sense, ‘structures of control – they both house the labour process and, in so
doing, facilitate control over it by the way that space is organised’.109 In practice, most offices have
offered variations on this theme:
‘The office has traditionally expressed hierarchical organisation through space standards and types of
office that correspond to rank. The managerial enclosed office and the open plan area for secretarial
and clerical workers correspond to the old-fashioned hierarchy of the factory floor: the open-plan layout
represents the space for de-skilled routine work at the point of production, and the enclosed office
represents an elite managerial status holding power and knowledge...’ 110
This is the dumb space paradigm explored earlier. More recently, the emergence of intelligent
buildings with fully integrated heat, light and ventilation ‘management systems’ has continued the
emphasis on total control:
‘All services are monitored and optimised by a sophisticated building management system, which provides
occupiers with total control of the working environment thereby minimising management costs.’ 111
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The angle is the same: better control allows ever more effective manipulation of staff, which
5: Do as I say, not as I do
generates better employee productivity. Workers are seen as promising but truculent factors of
production, to be tweaked and prodded, downsized and re-engineered as necessary. New office
space can help this to happen: it also helps save money by reducing floor space and increasing staff
density. Conventional office planning involves 70-80 per cent open plan workstations with 20-30 per
cent individual, private offices. In effect, it works on the basis that people are easier to manipulate
than furniture. As Tanis and Duffy put it, this approach:
‘with all its bureaucratic and Taylorist connotations ... is inextricably implicated in management by force’.112
Will brave new spaces make all this go away? Not necessarily. Space can still be used oppressively, as
well as progressively. If space management remains about keeping control at the top, then, as The
Workplace Forum’s Paul Wheeler argues, ‘some initiatives described as “flexible working” or as
providing flexible working do injustice to the real meaning of the words.’113 Evidence confirms earlier
suspicions. Open-plan, ‘intelligent’ or flexible workspaces are often introduced simply to keep costs
down and staff working at full stretch.
In some cases, professional knowledge workers are forced into flexible spaces by management
determined to generate business benefits (see examples in the next chapter). Progressive space is
introduced and managed oppressively. In other cases, routine white collar work is repackaged as
‘Team Taylorism’.114 Companies use team rhetoric but linear work routines – data input, claims
processing or customer service. Strategic space management decisions are taken to minimise cost
and maximise control, while maintaining senior staff privileges. Club-like spaces or open-plan
workspace are used to maintain intense surveillance:
‘managers sit in amongst the staff here; there is no separate space for them. However, they also tend
to walk around quite a lot. It’s a culture of visible supervision’ .115
Very little quiet or private space is provided for most workers, while managers may carve out
private spaces for themselves.
Lower down the hierarchy, facilities management staff enforce control. Automated building control
systems ensure employees have very little say over their direct environment:
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‘it does get stuffy very quickly ...You can come in when it’s freezing outside and within minutes you can
hardly breathe in here. By lunchtime you are nearly gasping for breath’.116
These spaces are often ‘temporary and impersonal in nature and have little or no employee control.
In the process of making an impersonal machine environment there is also a likelihood of
introducing dehumanisation, low morale, boredom and stress’.117
This type of oppressive space control has always hit female and lowest-paid staff hardest. In the
early years of offices, the first women workers tended to be housed in separate spaces, entering by
different doors and working different hours.118 Dohrn suggests this was done so women would not
see and envy the more interesting and better paid work of men.119 Vischer points out that:
‘many organisations encase their executives in closed offices with windows ... to ensure ... that they are
as unaffected as possible by the problem of the building environment ... People who work in offices,
especially clerical and support staff ... are not very highly regarded members of society ... they are
dispensable, replaceable.’ .120
Many of the vital cogs in the company – postroom workers, cleaners, care staff – get the very worst
spaces in which to work:
‘She’s an essential worker, the only nurse ... [she] gets a very small space in which to work. It’s very hard
to move about or get in there. She doesn’t really get to sit down and tends to get harassed and stressed.’
There is also an implicit assumption in many firms that while senior and professional staff need to
work flexibly, PA and support staff have to be confined to fixed desks.121 As Anjum points out, there
is no research suggesting this is the most effective way to do such work. It has most to do with
managers’ continued desire to keep an eye on and control subordinate staff.
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individual versus group needs: the desire for personalisation and personal control, versus
5: Do as I say, not as I do
●
managerial desires for single plans and templates
● visible versus invisible firm: formal rules and regulations versus the informal culture, customs, codes
and behaviours in a company.
In practice, one of four scenarios is likely to emerge. Users’ general wants and behaviours are more
or less the same: their jobs, workspace and management will differ. In most cases, managers and
other senior staff try to keep control of space, while users more or less openly modify and
customise [Link] offices are the site of open and not so open space warfare: tinkering,
hostility, skirmishes, guerrilla tactics and acts of resistance.
Some very poor quality environments lead to employee stress and sickness, typically on top of linear
workstyles and oppressive managerial control cultures. In other instances, flexible workspace may be
introduced without the necessary cultural change. New environments are introduced and enforced
in old-fashioned, top-down style. Only a few of the possible benefits will be leveraged. Smart space
meets dumb culture: again, user resistance is the result. And just occasionally, everything works in
perfect [Link] crude political economies are set out in Figure 1.
Most of us are adapting, modifying and bending the rules – and many of us claim to be happy
enough doing so. However, that satisfaction comes at a price. Adaptation and resistance is not
costless. It takes place at some expense in users’ time and effort:
‘...most office workers will confess that if they get their work done, it is in spite of their office space, not
because of it’ .122
Adaptation involves ‘processes that allow people to cope with their environment, including changes
in perception of the environment and actions taken to cope with problems’.123 As such, ‘all
adaptation methods are potentially stressful: they can lead to a slow-down or avoidance of work
and to workers becoming emotional or getting sick’.Time spent making the workplace fit for
purpose is drained from time spent doing one’s job. If working conditions are particularly bad,
adaptation degenerates into poor performance, stress and illness.
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Figure 1:The state of the office: four scenarios.
Factor/ It’s like a jungle A bad place New space, The glittering prize
Scenario out there to work new chaos
Management, and in some cases, designers are complicit in these problems. Smith and Kearny argue
5: Do as I say, not as I do
that generic ‘task-based’ workplace design is part of the trouble; it ‘is the most common because it is
easier to do, requiring the least data and fewest skills ...’. Bad planning is ‘an outside-in process that
bases design on management’s view. People are inserted into these generic workplaces and
expected to adapt’.124
Adaptation doesn’t just have individual costs; it also hits organisational effectiveness. Our office space
is inefficient on several counts: the cost of providing a desk in a UK office is around £6,000 a year,
but on average, it is used for less than half of hours worked.125 A 1998 survey of office workers for
IKEA found that 85% felt that their workplace inhibited their creativity.126 Standardised space
solutions are associated with significantly lower levels of employee satisfaction and productivity.127
So how do we move towards the glittering prize, from task-based to people-based design? The
workspace sector and employers at large need to be thinking much harder about matching space
with [Link] ideas are explored next.
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6: Space sovereignty
6: Space sovereignty
‘Accepting a new reality and embracing it are two different things, after all.’ Daintree Duffy128
How can we minimise conflicts and skirmishes in the workplace and make space work better for all
of us? We already have much of the answer, thanks to the body of best practice built up by leading
players in the workspace [Link] trouble is that when these ideas are applied to actual
companies, things don’t always go according to plan.
In 1994 the Chiat/Day advertising agency moved its LA branch from conventional offices to a
new-style college campus. On paper the plan looked promising: out with fixed desks and private
offices, in with laptops and mobile to sign out for the day, clusters of couches, central gathering
spaces, private brainstorming pods and personal lockers.
However, implementation left a lot to be [Link] plan was the brainchild of agency director
Jay Chiat, a minimalist with apparently open contempt for personal possessions. He ruthlessly
put his vision into practice: ‘Jay didn’t listen to anybody, he just did it’, says one erstwhile senior
executive. Many employees were wary about giving up their own fixed or private space. Chiat’s
response was simple – and in practice, almost meaningless: ‘you will have private space, it just
won’t be personal space’.
There was very little private or personal [Link] were not enough quiet working pods to
go round, and not enough locker space. Any attempts at ‘nesting’ – working in the same place
for more than a day – were put down by Chiat, who wandered round the office getting people
to move. Staff began hiding things in corners then forgetting where they left them.
Since the open-plan spaces were completely unsuitable for focused work, staff moved into the
enclosed client meeting rooms, took them over and barred the doors. Without enough
computers and phones to go round, breadlines formed at the concierge desk – managers
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6: Space sovereignty
assumed staff would mostly work remotely. Senior employees pulled rank, sending in their junior
staff: ‘get in there at six in the morning, get me a phone and computer and hide it til I get there’.
Within six months, staff were using car boots for storage, taking over rooms permanently, hiding
equipment in lockers and secretly ordering desks and fixed [Link] was a complete
U-turn and the company moved to new offices, based on zoned neighbourhoods, as before –
but with a desk, computer and phone for everyone.
The problem seems to be not what to do, but how to do it. How to move from dumb space to smart
space? How to better match the needs of users with the priorities of controllers? What’s required is some
kind of devolution of power over space and its management. Doing so will help turn the endemic tinkering,
adaptation, and reclaiming to best use for everyone. Given most firms do not have the budget for large-
scale space changes, it’s important to develop solutions that make the best of what already happens.
These measures are strategic, and they are just a start, but they do matter. As things stand, a great deal
of time, money and effort is being wasted on managing and changing the workplace. We don’t yet
seem to have reliable solutions on how to do [Link] boxed case study sections make this very clear.
As good practice suggests and this paper has shown, space change and space management have to
be seen as part of much larger corporate and organisational management programmes.
This requires resources, time and thought. It also requires sovereignty – many sovereignties. In a
whole set of workplace issues, the way forward is to better match control between agents and
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6: Space sovereignty
groups in the firm. Right now, control hoarding sits uneasily with the desire for autonomy. Good
practice for working space, therefore, should be seen as part of a larger programme of employee
empowerment. Empowerment and empowering systems can work if they are taken seriously, but
this requires granting freedoms to users, trust from managers and proper balance between the two.
People are not resistant to change – they are resistant to being changed.
So what might ‘space sovereignty’ look like? In many ways, it resembles good practice as it currently
[Link] difference is that user involvement in working space is placed front and centre. A space
sovereignty manifesto has three immediate demands:
Applying space sovereignty is not so simple, [Link] are several issues still to be resolved.
● Users of space have work to do – and lives to [Link] may not want to give up their time to
become self-governing space sovereigns. In most cases, they may also lack the design and facilities
expertise to make correct decisions, or to make them confidently.
● There is a risk that space sovereignty simply transfers responsibility for problem-solving. Conflicts
remain: now, everyone has to help solve them. Space sovereignty approaches help people to
realise the consequences of their choices, and the external constraints the firm may face.
● Exactly who has control? Devolving responsibility to a team will not help resolve internal disputes
over space within that team. If space sovereignty is to succeed, it is critical to set the scope of
individual, team and organisational control beforehand. Best practice may emerge, or this may
simply be at the firm or team’s discretion.
● Several strengths of space sovereignty will be required for different sectors, types of job and sizes
of firm. For example, in small companies extensive private space will simply be unfeasible, and
symbolic mechanisms to signal private time may be required. Much larger and well-resourced
firms will be able to provide a range of workspaces for different types of task. Work in some
office-based sectors will require much more group work than others.
● Space sovereignty concerns the micro environment – the immediate workspace, its contents and
management. It also concerns the macro environment – where the firm works and how that
environment is set [Link] are two very different areas of concern, and some companies may
have to restrict themselves to one, not both.
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Space sovereignty, therefore, is not a panacea. However, it should make a difference and it has to be
6: Space sovereignty
better than the status quo.
A team in this large training and research company recently moved from a conventional shared
office to a reconditioned flexible space – with much chaos.
At the outset, the team was presented with several options for new [Link] were clear
efficiency reasons for flexible space, and it became clear that consultation was cosmetic – the
move was preordained. Some staff wanted to retain fixed desks, and they have done – in a way.
Managers decided to allow them to ‘own’ the fixed workstations originally intended as spares
when the hotdesk area was full. Since there aren’t enough hotdesks to go round, working
culture conflict is now wired into the space.
To ‘fit everything in’, fixed desks and the PA – the hub of the team – has been located in the
corner space, out of sight of everyone else. Staff report it is now much harder to communicate
and interact than in the old shared office.
Worse, on arriving in the new office, employees found that much of the promised new
equipment had not arrived – no phones, no wireless network, no bookshelves and no sofas.
After working out of packing cases for some weeks, many simply gave up and stayed at home.
Some months on, team members confess to a variety of adaptive and resistance tactics. No
clear desk policy is in evidence or enforced. People routinely [Link] wireless computer
network broke down weeks ago and has not been fixed; the wireless phones are very difficult
to use and extremely unpopular. Hardly anyone uses the sofa area – instead, people go out for
coffee. Employees’ territorial attachment to their desks shows signs of being replaced with
attachment to computers – management moves to introduce a laptop pool are being met with
hostility. Negativity and resentment about the move remains strong.
Over the same period, a number of senior Company X employees were upgraded, quickly and
efficiently, to very spacious, well-appointed private offices.
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Ways to do it
Space sovereignty is not yet a fully worked-out programme – this paper is the beginning of a
conversation about [Link] section, therefore, sets out some good ideas already in operation, as
possible guidelines for action.
User involvement
Scottish Enterprise’s ‘Workplace of the Future’ pilot project has achieved notably high user satisfaction
ratings, and has had other teams in the company clamouring to be involved. Much of this has to do
with the extensive user involvement factored into the programme – and from the fact that users
volunteered for the programme at the [Link] voluntarist basis of the experiment placed it on
the strongest possible foundation. As a result, staff feel happy with the space – and feel they own it.131
User development
Experts may understand how to work in new physical environments, but new work styles and
required behaviours are far less intuitive to most users of space. When people don’t know what to
do, things go wrong. Smart designers and practitioners provide written notes, instructions or clues
on how to use new space and equipment within it. In short, we have to build employees’ capacity to
use new [Link] is probably much to learn from capacity-building programmes elsewhere,
particularly best practice in the community development sector.
Practitioners aiming to regenerate a community put great emphasis on involving local people in the
design and implementation of regeneration [Link] long-term aim is to encourage ground-level
entrepreneurship, giving citizens the knowledge and abilities to fully manage their own community.
The experts phase themselves out.132
‘Planning for Real’ (PfR) is particularly useful for managing space change. PfR uses a range of graphic
tools to show plans for new construction. In informal, public and group sessions, citizens are encouraged
to feed their ideas in, giving in idea cards, talking to designers and using simple maps and plans.133
The Enterprise Village project aims to grant macro environment sovereignty to whole classes of
6: Space sovereignty
workers currently constrained in particular ways and places – particularly administrative, clerical and
secretarial staff, who find themselves stuck behind desks and under the eyes of their managers.
Enterprise Village aims to construct large-scale serviced offices in commuter towns, enabling these
groups of staff to work remotely from the parent HQ building without exhausting daily
commuting.135 These proposals are part of a much larger programme of time sovereignty and
employee empowerment.
Space sovereignty can help to capture these by encouraging space management settlements at team
level or below. Space sovereignty also encourages a usefully hands-off facilities management style, in
which teams develop their own models of workspace within a single company [Link] is much
to learn here from shared workspace.
The Inti design/new media space in east London is a successful working model of this approach.
Inti’s aim is to foster a work community for several small firms, a space for ideas exchange, mutual
support and joint [Link] hire desk space in a large, mainly open [Link] is discreet but
active management of the space. Many companies wishing to move in – and offering more money –
are refused because of the clash of corporate character, sector and working [Link] aside,
tenants have complete freedom to rearrange and decorate their space as they wish.137
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US firm Netform has developed techniques to map patterns of social interaction and different kinds
of employee [Link] invisible firm is rendered visible, and this can be used to redesign space
to increase effective interaction and meet individual need.140
Sovereignty in action
Sapient, a US e-business management consulting firm has developed one version of space
sovereignty.141 The firm gives each project team their own room where they work on a single piece
of work from 10-12 weeks to 18 months or so. For that time, the room is theirs and they can do
what they want with [Link] practice fits very neatly with the working methods of the firm. It is also
part of a wider ‘cultural inclusion’ programme, which aims to make everyone feel a fully paid-up
member of the company. As a recent start-up, the firm is keen to maintain the initial working
atmosphere, and to keep a close match between formal and informal culture as it becomes more
established. So far, the visible and invisible firm have remained well matched.
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Conclusion
Conclusion
‘I have a lovely view from the window, but I never see it. I come in, open the window, sit at the desk
facing the wall and get down to work. I could move the desk, but I haven’t got round to it yet. I generally
enjoy the office as it is.’ 142
This is a happy story. Most office workers are broadly satisfied with their working space and the way
it is run. Some are lucky enough to work in modern, well-designed and exciting workplaces that
help them work better, faster and more contentedly.
This is also an unhappy story. Most office workers spend time and effort adapting their working
space, defying orders and bending rules so that they can actually get their jobs done. A significant
minority is unsatisfied with what they have; more still face numerous barriers to effective working.
Overall, office workers seem more dissatisfied with their working space than their jobs.
It is not straightforward to unpick the reasons for this. Space and space management should be seen
in the context of the economic and social dynamics of the firm. Employees are central: they want
control over working space and they attempt to get it by any means necessary. Staff, their customs
and rituals continually clash with official culture and rules – and with facilities managers, line managers
and senior staff. Bosses tend to complicate things by mixing up personal and organisational needs. In
most offices, the result is conflict: constant skirmishes and running battles over working space.
No-one seems to mind this too much. However, the lack of perfect space does matter. As we’ve
seen, adaptation is not costless. It has major individual and economic costs, and hits both
organisations and the UK economy.
There is a way [Link] space is managed well, power-sharing agreements have evolved between
the different groups in the company, and everyone works more effectively as a result. Often these
agreements don’t just cover space, but fit into whole-company programmes of employee empowerment.
We need smart space and we need space sovereignty. Otherwise, we’re just moving the furniture
about. Will we get it? Don’t be too [Link] empower users of space requires controllers to
relinquish the levers of power. Experience shows that doesn’t happen without a struggle: there are
decades’ worth of conventional thinking and entrenched interests to dismantle. Citizens of the office
– return to your desks and prepare for the battle ahead.
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Glossar y
Glossary
Cell a conventional enclosed or fully private workspace, such as a private office or study.
One of Tanis and Duffy’s four work types, along with dens, clubs and hives.
Club a workplace with shared workstations and a range of communal work settings.
Designed to allow employees to work in groups or solo as the task requires.
Den a workspace designed for a small group to work together effectively – on a single
project, for example. Useful for team-based work models, such as consultancy.
Flexible space working space based on the notion that individuals undertake different types of
task during the working day, and therefore provides various types of working space
– which could include hotdesked space, open plan space, private space and so on.
Footprint the total amount of space taken up by an office or worplace, usually given in
square feet.
Hotdesking a desk system in which desks do not formally belong to anyone and can be used
as required.
Hotelling a system of desks which do not formally belong to anyone but can be reserved
or booked as required, usually through a concierge. Effective with mobile workers
or those out of the office more than 50 per cent of the time.
Interaction Tanis and Duffy set out the ‘Interaction-Autonomy Model’ to explain how, as a
/Autonomy result of exploiting IT, so the demand for a wider range of new kinds of office space
is likely to [Link] some tasks will be organised in a more autonomous fashion,
others will become more networked and interactive – such as project work. In
practice, most jobs combine both work types, often during the same working day.
Modular space Workspace assembled from a set of components or modules, which can be set
up in different ways to suit the user or team.
Virtual office employees who are constantly on the move carry their offices with them. Laptops
and various telecommunications services allow mobile workers to connect to the
central office from virtually any location.
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References
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4 D Albrecht and C Broikos (2001): ‘On the Job: Design and the American office’, [Link]/Exhibits/New_On_The_Job_Text.html
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10 P Bray (2001): ‘It’s a Different World’, The Daily Telegraph, February 26.
11 J Myerson (2000): ‘Feel the Freedom’, in K Parish (ed.) Wirefree Working, London: Management Today/Orange.
12 J Tanis and F Duffy (1999): ‘A Vision of the New Workplace Revisited’, Site Selection, September.
13 F Steele (1986): Making and Managing High Quality Work Places, New York: New York Teachers’ College.
14 Myerson divides these office types into Team, Exchange, Community and Mobility Offices. See J Myerson and P Ross (1999): The Creative Office, London: Lawrence King.
15 J Tanis and F Duffy (ibid.); J Myerson (2001): Foreword in Design Week, September.
16 Examples sourced from P Buxton (2001): ‘The Soft Option’, Design Week, September; A Chaudhuri (2000): ‘Perk Practice’, The Guardian, 30 August; A Copps (2000):
‘Egg Cracks Good Office Design’, The Times, 11 December; D Dhingra (2000): ‘Screen on the Green’, The Guardian, 20 March; Electronic Arts (2000): ‘Inside EA
Europe’, [Link]; [Link]/[Link]; L Hancock (2000): ‘Ministries of Fun’, Viewpoint, Issue 8; K Hilpern (2000): ‘The Sweet Smell – and
Colour – of Success’, The Guardian, 9 October; R Lieber (2001): ‘Your Company’s Headquarters’, FastCompany, January; [Link]; ‘Queen opens
Portcullis House’, 27 February 2001, [Link]. H Takenoa (2000): ‘Air-Conditioning Systems of the KI Building,Tokyo’, in D Clements-Croome (ed.) Creating
the Productive Workplace, London: E and FN Spon.
17 Research interview.
18 F Roethlisberger and W Dickson (1939): Management and the Worker, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
19 F Hertzberg (1966): Work and the Nature of Man, Cleveland: World Publishing.
20 For a discussion of Hawthorne, see R Gillespie (1991): Manufacturing Knowledge: A history of the Hawthorn Experiments, Cambridge: CUP.
21 S Cave (1998): Applying Psychology to the Environment, London: Hodder and Staughton.
22 A Chaudhuri (2001): ‘Is Your Office Making You Ill?’, The Guardian, 27 September.
23 S Cave (ibid.).
24 A Leaman and B Bordass (2000): ‘Productivity in Buildings:The ‘killer’ variables, in D Clements-Croome (ed.) Creating the Productive Workplace, London, E & FN Spon.
25 UCL Space Syntax (2001): ‘Work Environments’, [Link].
26 F Becker (1995): Collaborative Team Environments: The ecology of collaborative work, Ithaca: Cornell University IWSP.
27 F Becker, K Quinn and L Callentine (1995): The Ecology of the Mobile Worker, Ithaca: Cornell University IWSP.
28 For more information, see [Link]/workplaceofthefuture.
29 J Myerson (2000) (ibid.).
30 D Duffy (1999): ‘The New Workplace: Cube Stakes’, Enterprise Magazine, 15 April .
31 Points made in the group discussion at the Workplace Forum seminar on Measuring Performance and Effectiveness, London, 27 July.
32 E.g. F Becker, C Tennessen and L Dahl (1997): Workplace Change: Managing Workplace change, Ithaca, New York: Cornell University IWSP; F Becker, K Quinn,
A Rappaport and W Sims (1994): Implementing Innovative Workplaces: Organisational implications of different strategies, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University IWSP.
33 R Chandler (1943): The High Window, London: Hamish Hamilton.
34 T Thompson (1995): ‘Radical Solutions in Space Planning for the Changing Organisation’, London: DEGW.
35 N Anjum (ibid.).
36 J Tanis and F Duffy (1999) (ibid.).
37 N Anjum (ibid.).
38 J Worthington (1997): Reinventing the Workplace, Boston: Architectural Press.
39 An umbrella term used from here on to refer to designers, architects and the ‘property professions’ of real estate, development and facilities management.
40 I Price (2001): ‘Linking Facilities to Corporate Productivity: Can it be done?’ Paper presented to the Workplace Forum seminar on Measuring Performance and
Effectiveness, London, 27 July.
41 J Myerson (2000) (ibid.).
42 B Wilson (1987), quoted in C Baldry, P Bain and P Taylor (1998): ‘’Bright Satanic Offices’: Intensification, control and Team Taylorism’, in P Thompson and C Warhurst
(eds.) Workplaces of the Future, London: Macmillan Business.
43 I Price (ibid.).
44 C Budd (ibid.).
futures
51
References
45 C Holtham (2001): ‘The Office of the Future: Why the most important technology will be the coffee machine’, City University Centre for Virtual Work,
Commerce and Learning, [Link]/~sf329/office/ec/pdf.
46 C Lavis and R Sinclair (2001): ‘Mood States and Perceived Hedonic Consequences of Task Performance Affect Productivity’, Alberta: University of Alberta.
47 J Myerson (2000) (ibid.).
48 Research interview.
49 C Baldry, P Bain and P Taylor (1998): ‘’Bright Satanic Offices’: Intensification, control and Team Taylorism’, in P Thompson and C Warhurst (eds.) Workplaces of the
Future, London: Macmillan Business.
50 C Budd (ibid.).
51 S Lewis (1917): The Job, London: Jonathon Cape.
52 G Akerlof (1970): ‘The Market for Lemons: Qualitative uncertainty and the market mechanism’, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 84: p.488-500; R Coase (ibid).
53 O Williamson (1981): ‘The Modern Corporation: Origins, evolution, attributes’, Journal of Economic Literature, 19: p.1537-1568.
54 M Weber (1947): The Theory of Social and Economic Organisation, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
55 D Brown, R Dickens, P Gregg, S Machin and A Manning (2001): Everything Under a Fiver: Recruitment and retention in lower paying labour markets,York:
Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
56 H Simon (1979): Rational Decision-Making in Business Organisations’, American Economic Review, 69: p.493-513.
57 A good example is R Cyert and J March (1963): Behavioural Theory of the Firm, New Jersey: Englewood Cliffs.
58 D Hay and D Morris (1991): Industrial Economics and Organisation: Theory and evidence, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
59 I Price (ibid.).
60 Quoted in J Gladthorne-Hardy (1970): The Office, London: Curtis Brown Ltd.
61 J Doyle (2000): New Community or New Slavery: The emotional division of labour, London: Futures,The Industrial Society.
62 Cummings and Cooper (1997), quoted in Anjum (ibid.).
63 K Stephenson (2000): ‘Network Management’, [Link].
64 Quoted in W Berger (1999): ‘Lost in Space’, Wired, February.
65 The three studies used are (1) N Anjum (1999): An Environmental Assessment of Office Interiors from the Consumers’ Perspective, PhD Thesis, Dundee, University
of [Link] is a national survey of 1,000 office workers. (2) A national survey of employees conducted for Futures by ICM Research. ICM interviewed a random
selection of 1000 adults aged 18+ by telephone between 31 October-1November 2001. 570 people were workers – either full or part time. Interviews were
conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of all adults. (Removing craft and skilled manual workers, plant and machine operators,
and manual workers, Futures estimates 404 respondents are ‘office workers’, i.e. those with an office as a main or sole working space.) (3) Futures qualitative data.
We sent 50 disposable cameras to people working in all kinds of jobs across the country and asked them to take pictures of where they worked. We asked them
to think about what type of spaces they work in; how they use and organise their workspaces; what they like or dislike about them; and how the politics of their
organisation and team play out in the physical [Link] pictures were used as the basis for semi-structured interviews with a selection of participants. A
selection of the images (and interviewees’ comments) are set out at the back of this report and on the State of the Office microsite at [Link]/futures.
66 N Anjum (ibid.).
67 N Anjum (ibid.).
68 S Cave (ibid.).
69 J Edney (1975): ‘Territoriality and Control: A field experiment’, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 31, p.1108-1115.
70 S Cave (ibid.).
71 I Altman (1975): Environment and Social Behaviour: Privacy, personal space, territory and crowding, Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole.
72 O Newman (1972): Defensible Space, New York: Macmillan.
73 N Gillen (2000): ‘What Role Could Virtual and Physical Environments Play in the Life of New Economy Organisations?’, paper presented for Workplace Forum
seminar on The Enduring Importance of Place, London, 28 November.
74 L Harris and Associates (1978): The Steelcase National Study of Office Environments: Do they work?, Grand Rapids, MI: Steelcase; E Sundström (1986):
Work Places: The psychology of the physical environment in offices and factories, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
75 BOSTI (1991): The Impact of Office Buildings in Productivity and Quality of Working Life: Comprehensive Findings, New York, BOSTI.
76 E Sundström (ibid.).
77 Office Angels (2001): ‘Office ‘Rituals’ Make Workers More Productive’, press release, April, [Link].
78 AWS data quoted in D Duffy (ibid.).
79 Quoted in M Gladwell (2001): ‘Village People’, The Guardian, 6 February.
80 Quoted in J Myerson and P Ross (ibid.).
81 ‘Half of All Emails Travel Only 10 Feet’, The Net, September 2001.
82 S Cave (ibid.).
83 S Cave (ibid.).
84 I Altman (ibid.).
85 Research interview.
86 I Altman and S Low (eds.) (1992): Place Attachment. Human Behaviour and Environment: Advances in theory and research, volume 12, New York: Plenum.
87 R Reeves (2001): Happy Mondays: Putting the pleasure back into work, London:Your Momentum.
88 Coombs (1977), quoted in Sundström (ibid.).
89 J Doyle (ibid.).
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T H E S TAT E O F T H E O F F I C E : T H E P O L I T I C S A N D G E O G R A P H Y O F W O R K I N G S PAC E
90 S Cave (ibid.).
References
91 N Anjum (ibid.).
92 C Baldry et al (ibid.).
93 G Mercer and M Benjamin (1980): ‘Spatial Behaviour of University Undergraduates in Double-Occupancy Residence Rooms: An inventory of effects’, Journal of
Applied Social Psychology, 10, p.32-44.
94 A point made forcefully by Sundström in particular.
95 Wyon (1997), quoted in Anjum (ibid.).
96 Gillespie (1991), quoted in Baldry et al (ibid.).
97 [Link]@[Link], Financial Times, 27 September 2001.
98 R Marris (1964): The Economic Theory of Managerial Capitalism, London: Macmillan; O Williamson (1964): The Economics of Discretionary Behaviour:
Management objectives in a theory of the firm, New Jersey: Englewood Cliffs.
99 D Shipley (1981): ‘Pricing Objectives in British Manufacturing Industry’, Journal of Industrial Economics, p.429-443.
100 Zenardelli (1967), quoted in Sundström (ibid.).
101 Fitzgibbons (1977), quoted in Sundström (ibid.).
102 Lipman, Cooper, Harris and Tranter (1978), quoted in Sundström (ibid.).
103 E Konar and E Sundström (1985): ‘Status Demarcation and Office Design’, in D Wineman (ed.) Behavioural Issues in Office Design, New York:Van Nostrand Rheinhold.
104 C Holtham and V Ward (ibid.).
105 J Thurlby (1986): ‘Swivel’, London Magazine, quoted in J Lewis (ed) (1998): The Vintage Book of Office Life, London:Vintage.
106 S Wilson and A Hedge (1987): The Office Environment Survey: A study of building sickness, London: Building Use Studies.
107 Although he assured us he wouldn’t dream of using it.
108 J Hess (1983): The Economics of Organisation, quoted in D Hay and D Morris (ibid.).
109 C Baldry et al (ibid.).
110 T Thompson (ibid.).
111 C Baldry et al (ibid.).
112 J Tanis and F Duffy (ibid.).
113 Research interview.
114 C Baldry et al (ibid.).
115 Research interview.
116 C Baldry et al (ibid.).
117 N Anjum (ibid.).
118 R Crompton and G Jones (1984): White Collar Proletariat: Deskilling and gender in secretarial work, London: Macmillan.
119 S Dohrn (1988): ‘Pioneers in a Dead-End Profession:The first women clerks in bank and insurance companies’, in G Anderson (ed) The White Blouse Revolution:
Female office workers since 1870, Manchester, Manchester University Press.
120 H Vischer (1989): Environmental Quality in Offices, New York:Van Nostrand Reinhold.
121 Research interview.
122 H Vischer (ibid).
123 R Dubos (1980): Man Adapting, New Haven, CT:Yale University Press.
124 N Anjum (ibid.).
125 R Reeves (2001): ‘Britain Uncovered: Work’,The Observer, 18 March.
126 Quoted in N Anjum (ibid.).
127 F Becker, K Quinn, A Rappaport and W Sims (ibid.).
128 D Duffy (ibid.).
129 Sourced from W Berger (1999): ‘Lost in Space’, Wired, February.
130 Sourced from research interviews.
131 For more information, go to [Link]/workplaceofthefuture.
132 P Brickell (2000): People Before Structures, London, Demos.
133 Neighbourhood Initiatives Foundation (1995): A Practical Handbook for ‘Planning for Real’ consultation exercise,Telford: Neighbourhood Initiatives Foundation.
134 More information from Helen Hamlyn centre at the RCA, or go to [Link].
135 For more information, go to [Link].
136 C Holtham (2001): ‘On Location’, Design Week, September.
137 Research interview. For more, go to [Link].
138 Research interview.
139 Research interview.
140 For more information, go to [Link].
141 Cited in D Duffy (ibid.). For more information, go to [Link].
142 Research interview.
futures
53
the state of the
office
Ugh, cubicles.
I have a favourite [Link] best spots allow you to face the The staircase is very light, peaceful and spacious – it gives
door, see who’s coming in. People descend on you when you some mental space, people working here tend to use it a
you’re working – you need to be prepared. lot. Lighting downstairs is quite intense.
This, to me, is a scene of total disorganisation and inefficiency … it’s really bad news.
the state of the
office
Metaplanning in a colleague’s
[Link] take breaks for
home-made soup and fresh
bread – it gets us working
more creatively.
This is the only person in the building who’s angled their The space actually designed for socialising is never used –
desk across two walls. It helps fill the room, but I think it also anyone can walk in and hear what we’re saying. Our office is
creates a sense of control over the whole space. It’s a like someone’s front room though. Other than that, the pub
gesture of a powerful person. is our social space.
‘why do we work?’
● What are the new rules of the labour market?
● How are the lines between 'work' and 'life' being
redrawn?
● Are we becoming a network nation?
● Will the workplace embrace diversity, and how?
● Is future work feminine?
● Where will we work? Does place matter?
● What makes a creative company?
● What does the high performance organisation
really look like?
● Who will exercise sovereignty at work?