I spent nine and a half years with my own office (right out of school, too; I was quite lucky to have that) and while it wasn't much, it was mine. I then moved to a much better position with a more open concept. Not ultra-trendy-start-up open, but still with nine people in one room. The effect on my ability to concentrate has been very noticeable. If there is more than one conversation going on in the room, I need to get up and leave until it's over; I can't accomplish anything. I wouldn't go back to my previous position for anything, but I do miss my office.
"Instead [at lunch] you will sit with your own company teammates, so that you can talk freely about your current projects and issues."<p>What seems more hellish to me, is teammates that can't shut up constantly talking about work during breaks.<p>While I see problems with shared office spaces, exchange with or people from sometimes completely different domains during breaks is the biggest plus for me. At least from experience in Switzerland and Colombia.
I sympathize with the author, open spaces were invented to function as a hipster panopticon and to maximize landlord gains.<p>But these rants sound very passive aggressive. Maybe it's a cultural difference which makes it harder for me to understand, but can't you just ask to turn on/off the heating, ask the dog owner not to let their animal invade your space, ask the office owner to alert you about repairs, etc.?<p>A simple solution i found to this problem is to work at old people cafes, or better yet in a retirement house.<p>Extra cozy, extra safe, nobody disturbs you, you get free cake/coffee/tea, freelance gigs and the occasional invite to date their daughters
I can't imagine such a work situation appealing to anybody other than extreme penny-pinchers, or maybe fresh grads, straight out of colleges. This sounds exactly like trying to get work done in a university library or study hall. If you've never known anything better, or you're the kind of person that needs that social stimuli, I can imagine you might think it was normal enough; I couldn't do it then; I'd work alone in my room or buried in the stacks. And now? Forget about it.
We have a "private" office in a WeWork. For me the worst part is the desk itself, it's totally substandard as a task desk. Same with the chairs, people joke about the college analogy but I had better desking as a college student. Secondly, a lot of the interior decisions are questionable, such as the pendant light that casts glare on my monitor.<p>Also the music in the common areas is irritating and I even like some of the songs they play.
I was just meeting/working at the largest WeWork anywhere, in Moorgate London. I like the atmosphere, my 'but' would be noise levels. It only takes one loud/noisy neighbour and your concentration is gone. Multiples of that makes it hard to have a meeting, where you may well also be disrupting someone else's day by making too much noise.<p>Therefore more sound proofing is needed...
I think open shared office spaces are an effect of high rents in Sillicon valley and major capital cities. Startups having limited capital rarther spending it on employees salaries getting more head count. Shared space is not effective for concentrating during coding.<p>I doubt shared spaces has been evaluated for effectiveness versus personal office. Shared spaces may be a cause of people working remote.
It seems like every study and every data point is all saying the same thing: with exceptions made for meetings and occasional gatherings <i>when physical proximity actually matters</i> the vast majority of tech workers prefer to telecommute themselves, are more productive when telecommuting, it's obviously cheaper for the company to not rent absurd amounts of space where they can pay employees to be physically present and less productive, etc.<p>So why exactly are we still having offices at all? Seems like if I were going to start a business today, I'd occasionally rent a meeting room and otherwise not have any real estate actually connected to it, aside from maybe a server room in my home or something. Why are we so obsessed with having physical locations for companies? Is this just a fad that won't die?
I was very impressed by the WeWork offices in southern california. Modern, maze-like, soundproofed rooms, conference areas spread around (multiple floors). It was a little cumbersome to get in to with all the security, but was otherwise delightful.
One unintended consequence of cramming 3-4x the amount of people into a building designed in the 60s/70s for offices is the influx of traffic. On top of that, parking becomes very problematic.<p>On top of that bathrooms and kitchens are harder to maintain, though admittedly those can be more easily remodeled.<p>May not be a huge deal in the city, but definitely in a lot of office parks in the 'burbs I've been in.
People working from home is not a failure of modern office design. It is a failure of the core concept of the office itself. It no longer has value to offer. Originally, factories were necessary because physical colocation of workers was physically necessary. It was a sacrifice, an overhead taken on that created its own problems but which paid for them in overall benefit. Those benefits are now gone. Offices are now dead weight, an inefficiency that will be eliminated (as will be the unfortunate few barnacles who cling to their underbelly and previously solved some of the problems offices invented). Maybe not tomorrow, but eventually they will. They destroy value, and add none.
I've never worked at a WeWork, but I've worked at shared office spaces before and I never had issues with the other people renting offices. Maybe it's the clientele WeWork attracts.
Not that I disagree with the specifics here, but I think there's a happy medium to find. Individual boxed offices for every employee is not efficient use of space most of time. While it's popular to kvetch about open plan offices now, when the pendulum swings back there's plenty to complain about the isolation and dead air of a private room (most are no bigger than closets).<p>Personally, I think the move towards working from home is tremendous. Perhaps it is a failure of office, but maybe that's okay. Offices are something of a hold-over from the days of the Empire State Building and insurance companies with 10,000 employees processing hand written forms. Maybe open plan offices with the expectation that most folks wont spend all their time there is a better default?
| Overhead lights that switch off after a certain time if no motion is detected. I have even had this happen to me in the toilets :-)<p>Ah, so you're the guy on his phone in the toilet, occupying a stall for way longer than necessary, while others have to wait. Thanks, buddy.