Implications of Working from Home for the Design of Healthy Work Environments in the Post-Pandemic City

Q2 Social Sciences Built Environment Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.2148/benv.49.3.423
Matthew Zenkteler, Francisca Rodriguez Leonard, Debra Cushing, Greg Hearn, Marcus Foth, Veronica Garcia Hansen, Glenda Caldwell
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Abstract

Remote work in cities is growing in popularity, fuelled by ongoing technological advances, the globalized knowledge economy, changing lifestyle preferences, the need to empower individuals, and – more recently – the eff ects of COVID-19. Social distancing measures introduced during the pandemic have inadvertently shown that a substantial proportion of work can be done from home or from third spaces such as co-working spaces. This paper off ers a critical appraisal of the implications of this trend for neighbourhood planning and workplace design. The appraisal is in three parts. First, to set the scene, we review recent scholarship on changing work practices in the post-pandemic city. Second, we offer a summative account based on empirical data from a survey conducted by the City of Gold Coast in Australia. This survey explored the spatial distribution of remote, nomadic, and home-based workers in cities in order to discover certain socio-economic, design and built environment features that relate to this distribution. This illustrates the impact that an uptake of home-based work has for urban planning and community design. Third, we look at some of the working from home implications for career progression and productivity, as well as physical and mental health. Based on perspectives from architectural science, environmental psychology and design, this part of the paper employs human-building interaction design scholarship to argue for the design of healthy work environments – both at home and in neighbourhoods – that increase productivity, reduce sick days, and yield be er health outcomes for the home-based workforce.
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居家办公对大流行后城市健康工作环境设计的启示
由于技术的不断进步、全球化的知识经济、生活方式偏好的改变、增强个人权能的需要,以及最近新冠肺炎的影响,城市远程工作越来越受欢迎。大流行期间采取的保持社会距离措施无意中表明,很大一部分工作可以在家中或共同工作空间等第三空间完成。本文对这一趋势对社区规划和工作场所设计的影响进行了批判性评估。评估分为三个部分。首先,为了设定背景,我们回顾了最近关于疫情后城市工作实践变化的学术研究。其次,我们根据澳大利亚黄金海岸市进行的一项调查的实证数据提供了一个总结性的说明。本次调查探讨了城市中偏远、游牧和居家工人的空间分布,以发现与这种分布相关的某些社会经济、设计和建筑环境特征。这说明了以家庭为基础的工作对城市规划和社区设计的影响。第三,我们将探讨在家办公对职业发展、生产力以及身心健康的影响。基于建筑科学、环境心理学和设计的观点,本文的这一部分运用人与建筑交互设计的理论来论证设计健康的工作环境——无论是在家里还是在社区——以提高生产力、减少病假,并为在家工作的员工带来更健康的结果。
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来源期刊
Built Environment
Built Environment Social Sciences-Urban Studies
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
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