| Literature DB >> 34886511 |
Melina Forooraghi1, Elke Miedema1, Nina Ryd1, Holger Wallbaum1.
Abstract
This study investigated the current design circumstances of an office as well as employees' perceptions of the office environment in relation to their perceived health, drawing on sense of coherence theory (comprehensibility, manageability, and meaningfulness). Previous studies have related the physical office environment to employee health. However, most studies have focused on alleviating negative effects, while health-promoting potential, including employee sense of coherence, has been overlooked. This study adopted a mixed method case study approach, combining semi-structured interviews with employees, structured observations, and analysis of architectural drawings. The results indicated that employees' perceptions did not always align with the ideas behind the architectural design and that employees understood the environment differently. The study also highlighted the interrelations (and contradictions) among the different components of sense of coherence. The findings imply that organizations may need to prioritize which components of coherence should be supported most by the office environment. It also suggests that case-specific design aspects should play a more central role in studying and conceptualizing healthy office design and that design solutions should be continuously modified during the use phase, while ensuring employees' participation. The study concluded that an 'ideal' office environment should not be the goal. Instead, office design should provide an environment in which employees are able to cope with challenges in comprehensible, manageable and meaningful ways.Entities:
Keywords: case study; flexible office; health; office design; salutogenic; sense of coherence; well-being; workplace design
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34886511 PMCID: PMC8657446 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182312779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Sense of coherence in an office environment, adapted from Forooraghi et al. [32].
Figure 2Research design.
Figure 3Floor plans of the studied office.
The participants’ demographics and professions.
| Demographics | Total Invited ( | Participants ( |
|---|---|---|
| Female = 109 | Female = 19 | |
| Researcher, professor, lecturer | 192 | 29 |
| Project assistant/guest researcher | 13 | 4 |
| Other categories (e.g., project manager, admin) | 33 | 8 |
| Interviewee’s time working in the organization | 0–1 yrs. = 21.9% | |
| Interviewee’s age range | 24–30 = 29.2% |
Sample questions from the interviews in relation to SOC.
| Sense of Coherence | Interview Questions |
|---|---|
| Comprehensibility | Are there any rules or agreements between colleagues on how to use the different office zones depending on your activity? |
| Manageability | What do you do when your work demands high concentration? Where do you concentrate? How? Why? |
| Meaningfulness | How do you socialize with your colleagues at the office? |
Interview coding strategy.
| Excerpt | Step 1 | Step 2 | Step 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| ‘ | Use of quiet rooms for spontaneous/informal discussions and phone calls | Understanding the function of space | Comprehensibility |
| Exposure to visual stimuli | Control over the environment | Manageability | |
| Increased access and proximity to colleagues | Social connections and support | Meaningfulness |
Figure 4Perceptions of comprehensibility in the office environment as reported in interviews.
Figure 5Wayfinding in the office space.
Figure 6Pictures illustrating interviewees’ understandings of the function of spaces.
Occupancy during a working week.
|
|
|
| Office rooms, 2 persons | 25.9 |
| Office rooms, 6–8 persons | 28.29 |
|
| |
| Meeting rooms, 4–6 persons | 27.4 |
| Meeting rooms, 6+ persons | 28.2 |
| Quiet room with sofa | 11.1 |
| Quiet rooms, 2 persons | 30.5 |
| Quiet rooms, 6 persons | 44.4 |
| Flex rooms | 69.4 |
| Phone booths | 14.5 |
| Breakout areas | 22.2 |
| Lunchroom-5th floor | 88.8 |
* Percentage of workstations occupied with respect to maximum number of workstations. ** Percentage of the total number of 18 observations that the spaces were observed in use.
Figure 7Perceptions of manageability in the office environment as reported in interviews.
Figure 8Example of visual transparency on floor 4, calculated as the ratio of the glass/open area to solid wall area.
Figure 9Access to resources.
Figure 10Perceptions of meaningfulness in the office environment as reported in interviews.
Figure 11Nature references.
Figure 12Social connections and support.
Figure 13Visual clutter.
Figure 14Examples of personalization.
Proposed modifications.
| Suboptimal Comprehensibility Features | Design Setting | Proposed Modifications |
|---|---|---|
| Wayfinding | ||
|
Difficulties orienting in the building |
Symmetrical layout Repetitive furniture; lack of visual clues Square layout |
Add a distinct labeling system; add visual clues, e.g., assign a color per staircase, add distinct furniture particular to a corner, provide ‘you are here’ maps. |
| Understanding the functions | ||
|
Quiet rooms used for spontaneous/informal discussions |
Not reservable Soft and facing furniture |
Allocate meeting rooms with soft furniture for informal meetings. Implement a booking system. Take out large couches from quiet rooms and replace with armchairs that offer visual seclusion. |
|
Phone booths for concentrated work |
Low transparency level; minimal distractions Signaling of unavailability |
Dedicate enclosed spaces with visual protection for concentrated work. Use signage to communicate behavioral rules. |
|
Meeting rooms for individual, and concentrated work |
Availability Whiteboard and large table |
Introduce multipurpose rooms for individuals and project teams. Provide large meeting tables that allow for laptop use, note taking or discussing large drawings |
|
Reception area perceived as an undefined space |
No receptionist Lack of information for visitors |
Clearly communicate the function of the reception area with physical and digital information boards. Showcase the research and education carried out by the department to those from outside the department. |
|
Meeting rooms with 4-person capacity perceived too small for 4 persons |
Small table for four laptops Small area per employee (2.5 m2/person) |
Reduce the room capacity to 2 persons. Include large meeting tables that allow for laptop use, note taking or discussing large drawings. |
| Behavioral rules | ||
|
Exposure to conversations and noise |
Ambiguous office etiquette |
Use signs on workstations to communicate availability, e.g., ‘Do not disturb’ or ‘I am available’. |
|
Mess and visual clutter |
Provided in-house guidebook |
Increase enclosed storage space for teaching, research, and administrative materials, e.g., by implementing a modular storage cabinet. Communicate a clear protocol and office etiquette regarding extra equipment, work materials, cleaning, and hygiene of common spaces. Follow up to ensure the office etiquettes are complied with. Formally dedicate breakout areas to groups and direct responsibilities for maintenance and cleanliness. |
| Information sharing and transparency | ||
|
Ambiguous maintenance procedure |
Provided phone numbers for maintenance at doors No follow-up system |
Implement a responsive maintenance system e.g., by assigning a follow up number to each problem report. |
|
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|
|
| Control over the environment | ||
|
Disturbance due to low temperature |
Centralized climate system and lack of control |
Raise the temperature. Provide extra heaters. |
|
Disturbance by automated shades |
Malfunction of automated shades and lack of control |
Enable manual control over daylight e.g., with opaque curtains. |
|
Exposure to visual stimuli Exposure to acoustic stimuli |
Glass partition and high level of transparency Shared office rooms Lack of behavioral rules |
Provide opaque curtains and dividing panels between workstations. Use signs on workstations to communicate availability, e.g., ‘Do not disturb’ or ‘I am available’. Provide a range of solutions from noise-cancelling headphones to sound-absorbing panels and quiet rooms. |
|
Poor soundproofing |
No sound insulation provided in meeting rooms or phone rooms |
Improve Soundproofing of meeting rooms e.g., by adding sound-absorbing panels. |
| Access to resources | ||
|
Difficulties working with equipment and ergonomics |
No training provided |
Provide digital and physical training and instructions on how to set up and use technical equipment. |
|
Limited storage space |
All employees with assigned desks have access to a storage cupboard |
Increase enclosed storage space for teaching, research, and administrative materials, e.g., by implementing a modular storage cabinet. |
| Participation and involvement | ||
|
Limited possibilities for involvement in pre- and/or post-relocation processes |
Limited employee involvement in change processes |
Implement yearly workshops to discuss the physical work environment and ensure employee involvement in the change processes. |
| Life management | ||
|
Lack of bike facilities |
Changing room, bicycle storage, and bicycle parking are provided. |
Introduce and communicate about the facilities with the employees, make them accessible, and provide secluded bike storage with locks. |
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| Nature references | ||
|
Unpleasant/lacking views |
Views onto brick and concrete walls (east-facing and part of north-facing façades) |
Investigate the possibility to allocate unpleasant façade sides to short term activities such as phone rooms, or video recording rooms. |
|
Insufficient indoor plants and greenery |
Similar plants in breakout areas |
Add more plants and allow employees to choose the type of plants. Encourage employees to bring their own plants. |
|
Compromised daylight |
Automated shades limiting access to direct daylight |
Enable manual control over daylight e.g., through opaque curtains |
| Social connections and support | ||
|
Isolation and lack of sense of community |
Low capacity and/or abundance of breakout areas; lack of allocated breakout area for divisions |
Allocate breakout areas to different groups. Organize collective activities for personalization of breakout areas. Implement a break schedule in allocated breakout areas. |
|
Increased hierarchy between teachers and students |
Lack of student access to teachers’ area |
Furnish the reception area as a break area where staff and students can informally meet. |
| Personalization and sense of ownership | ||
|
Sterile and impersonal feel |
Use of neutral and earthy colors; discouragement from personalizing workspaces |
Add art and posters (e.g., nature, design/engineering related photos) to the meeting rooms to underline the type of university building. |
|
Limited possibilities for personalization |
Discouragement from personalizing workspaces |
Allow personalization in offices with some guidelines in terms of clutter. |
|
Implicit ownership at the intradivision level |
Proximity to workstations Signaling of ownership through personalization and frequenting of specific spaces |
Formally dedicate breakout areas to groups and direct responsibilities for maintenance and cleanliness. |