Video Editor: Mohd Ibrahim
The coronavirus pandemic has brought in a paradigm shift in the way we 'work'. As a long-term impact of this, 'office spaces' as we know it might be a thing of the past.
While some of us are yet to get back to physical workspaces, a few others have – with staggered timings, limited employees, and stringent sanitisation measures, among others.
So, is this the end of a place called 'office'? Are the desks and laptops in our living rooms here to stay for a long time?
Akshat Bhatt, Principal Architect, Architecture Discipline believes that it is "too soon" to dismiss a physical workspace as most 'office' work is also about exhange of ideas. Speaking to The Quint, he said:
However, he added that an office space will be less dense for a significant time from now on.
According to Meena Murthy Kakkar, Design Head and Partner, Envisage, when you return to office, you are likely to find far less tables and chairs, and a partition between work stations, if you are in an open-office set up.
You are also likely to find screening.
However, one area of the office that is likely to be expanded is the reception area. Both Kakkar and Bhatt agree that while offices may not entertain employees and guests like they did earlier, anyone who enters will have to go through a sanitisation process.
Reception desks may now have a ‘sneeze screen’, which is essentially a panel between the receptionist and the visitor. In some cases, the reception area might also be expanded to have a small sitting place so that meetings can be conducted then and there.
The architects say that another major change that one will witness in the COVID world, with regard to office spaces, is that there will be fewer headquarters but many more smaller, satellite workspaces.
For example, instead of having one big headquarters in Gurugram, an organisation may prefer to have smaller offices in Delhi, Noida and Gurugram.
But for the architects, designing an office space just got more complicated.
“I would just say that we need to stop jumping to conclusions and we need to analyse every situation for what it is and be ready for things to change, as and when. You can’t say, I have designed this and that’s done. This situation is such that every few days is going to throw up something unseen,” said Kakkar.
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