Abstract

Over the past few decades many corporate organisations have moved to open-plan office designs, mostly due to financial and logistical benefits. However, recent studies have found significant drawbacks to open plan offices and it is unclear how office designs can facilitate the best work output and company culture. Current design practice aims to optimise efficiency of space, but no previous research has tested the effect of office design experimentally in a working office. This paper describes an experiment comparing four different office designs (Open-plan, Zoned open-plan, Activity based, and Team offices) against a suite of wellbeing and productivity metrics in a real world technology company. Results suggest that two very different designs (Zoned open-plan and Team offices) perform well compared to Open-plan office designs. Zoned open-plan and Team office designs improved employee satisfaction, enjoyment, flow, and productivity, while Activity based and Open-plan designs performed poorly by comparison. The Open-plan office design was rated more poorly by employees, had higher levels of unsafe noise, and once employees no longer had to be in the Open-plan office design of the experiment, they spent more time at their desks.

Highlights

  • Office design is an important factor in many variables of interest to managers, but the impact of open office design has rarely been explored experimentally

  • Recent research has even gone so far as to wholly condemn open office designs, but designers are working with creative ideas to improve the open workplace [1]

  • A linear model revealed a significant effect of office design on participant satisfaction with the workplace (F = 39.958, p < 0.001) (Table 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Office design is an important factor in many variables of interest to managers, but the impact of open office design has rarely been explored experimentally. Since open offices have become mainstream, research has questioned their efficiency and general likability. Recent research has even gone so far as to wholly condemn open office designs, but designers are working with creative ideas to improve the open workplace [1]. There has been no randomized, controlled trial in a working organisation capable of establishing such causal relationships. This paper presents the first randomized, controlled experiment in a working international technology company with the aim of finding an optimal open office design for employees.

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