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Q&A: Moving the office outside

By | November 26, 2012, 1:25 AM PST

“Can we have class outsiiide today?” has been whined in elementary schools for decades, but how about taking the corporate office outdoors? Grabbing your laptop and dashing off that next memo en plein air sounds rather lovely to us, yet few businesses have created outdoor spaces specifically for work. (There are plenty of café tables for munching, gabbing and lounging, though.)

Jonathan Olivares, who has designed furniture for Knoll, Danese Milano and Driade — and who also wrote A Taxonomy of Office Chairs last year — spoke with us about the challenges and possibilities of outdoor workspaces. With multiple grants from the Graham Foundation, he has spent the last few years researching the subject, exhibiting his outdoor-office designs at The Art Institute of Chicago from March until last month and at the furniture trade show NeoCon next summer.

Why aren’t outdoor offices something we started seeing years ago?

There’s a funny thing about how our society works: We’ll adopt assumptions and habits that were established years before we were even born, and these habits will continue and continue until they become rituals. Often we won’t even question them.

Working only indoors goes back to the paperwork explosion from 1850 to 1960. It was so dominant and pervasive, and paper doesn’t like the outdoors — it blows around, it blinds the eye. Heavy metal filing cabinets were also essential to office work, and they couldn’t possibly be brought outdoors. Now, with a laptop or iPad, you can do serious work outside. We just need the right spaces.

How did you get started on this project?

A few years ago, I realized that there isn’t any professional outdoor office furniture. It wasn’t a topic that even existed. You’d google ‘outdoor office’ and find pictures of people sitting at a picnic table, telecommuting from their backyard. It’s not much better today, but it’s starting to become part of the public conversation. The idea for this project was to design and develop what an outdoor office might actually look like.

Tell me about your research process.

I spent a lot of time looking at places where work has taken place outdoors. I read about how Plato’s academy worked; I looked at Montessori schools and TV outdoor offices and conceptual works from the 1970s. Then I went to 18 corporate headquarters throughout the country and talked to people. I also visited colleges and universities and ran student workshops.

Is this something you’re proposing as a complete replacement of the indoor office, or do you see it more as a supplement?

I don’t think people should work outside eight hours a day, just like I don’t think people should sit in an office eight hours a day. Some people will say to me, ‘Haven’t you ever been to Texas in July or Minnesota in January?’ People think I’m implying that everyone should work outside every day. That isn’t the idea at all — my goal was to give people a legitimate environment for those beautiful days. We actually did the math, and if every white-collar worker in the U.S. spent two hours per year working outdoors — and turned off the lighting and HVAC inside during that time — we would save enough electricity to power the Empire State Building for an entire year.

So what does an ideal outdoor workspace look like? I’m assuming it wouldn’t involve the picnic tables or benches some offices already have.

A lot of companies do have outdoor spaces, but they treat them as leisure space: cafes, gardens, patios. There’s an attitude within the workplace that looks down on that as a legitimate workspace. I think if they put business furniture outside, that would make a huge difference. It would make it look like a workplace instead of a barbecue or café.

What else did you include in your outdoor office designs?

In each design I proposed, you eliminate the 360-degree view of your surroundings. That helps hone attention span and also creates an acoustic shelter. Shade is also hugely important. Laptops and white paper don’t do well in sunlight. Ideally, the outdoor workspace should be positioned in a place that’s naturally shaded by trees or a building. Once you address privacy, blocking the vista, acoustic privacy, shade and making the setting look serious, you can really do anything. There could be as many outdoor office designs as there are indoor.

How close are we to seeing outdoor offices become a fixture in the corporate world?

Very close. I think it’s already happening, and we’re really going to start seeing them in the next year or two. It’s something people are starting to think about actively. Knoll and Herman Miller both launched outdoor collections recently, and while the furniture isn’t specifically for office use, it certainly could be.

What other changes are happening right now with furniture and design in the workplace?

All of a sudden, the barriers between home and work have become smaller and smaller. If people are expected to work more at home, they also expect work to be more like their homes. As a result, both work and home spaces are becoming more similar. Sofas, for instance, had very little place in the traditional workplace. Now they’re becoming more accepted. The desk is becoming closer and closer to a table — even a dining table — and in the home, dining tables are increasingly being used for work. Both sides are moving closer toward each other, meeting in the middle somewhere.

All photos courtesy of Jonathan Olivares Design Research

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Molly Petrilla

About Molly Petrilla

Molly Petrilla is a contributing writer for SmartPlanet.

Molly Petrilla

Molly Petrilla

Contributing Writer

Molly Petrilla is a freelance writer based in New Jersey. She has written for The Pennsylvania Gazette, Philadelphia magazine, Cleveland Magazine, The History Channel Magazine and The Princeton Packet. She holds a degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

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Molly Petrilla

Molly Petrilla

Molly Petrilla does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Jonathan Missed ...
Jonathan should revisit his research and study how farmers, ranchers, and construction workers handle their 'office' tasks. Pickup trucks and tractor cabs have long been used as mobile outside offices.
Posted by EmmettRedd
26th Nov
0 Votes
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Glare
Shame about the glare on the many, many laptops and tablets with glossy screens to improve readability.

They are next to useless outside in the sun, despite many happy-clappy ad's with people being jolly and using their laptop under a tree or in the park etc........
Posted by neil.postlethwaite@...
26th Nov
+1 Vote
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Exactly how many people in the US live in environments...
...where working outside is viable for more than 1/4th of the time?

I work out on my deck whenever weather and my current mode of work permits. But I'd hardly invest serious money in doing so if I was a business.
Posted by JohnMcGrew@...
26th Nov
+2 Votes
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Charlatan?
His puffery extends even as far as cropping the same photo in three different ways and presenting all three crops for us to wonder at the effrontery of someone who claims credit for what is simply a common working habit for most of us.
Posted by neolog
26th Nov
+1 Vote
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Confused about the controversy
I'm confused as to how creating an outdoor work environment became so controversial. I work indoors every day, with no window. I would LOVE for my company to invest in an outdoor workspace where I could put in a few hours without it being perceived as goofing off. I think the whole point is that there remains a stigma about white collar workers working outdoors, but that that doesn't have to be the case. While that may seem intuitive to folks at more progressively-minded companies, it's still a ways over the horizon for most of us.
Posted by brewskiletta
27th Nov
+1 Vote
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Indoor/outdoor transition space
We are building a strawbale home. Because they insulate so well (and cost more per square foot), one of the design principles is to use a lot of "indoor/outdoor" transition space. This is a combination of sunlit rooms, plants, trees, patios, screening and orientation to favorable breezes which provides "3 season living" (at least in KY) on pretty days. In our home there is a smaller core living space which is enclosed in strawbale walls for winter, but most of the year the whole space can be used. I think this is the larger issue that Mr. Olivares is getting at, and it informs furniture selection & workplace design. Some of the high class, expensive hotels I have stayed in feature this philosophy, and many of their spaces are used for work (by travelers, but they're still working).

Beautiful outdoor environments can be distracting, but they need not be. As Mr. Olivares points out, they can also be energy saving, as well as lifting the spirits and drawing the most motivated and high-quality employees.
Posted by ClearCreek
1st Dec
+1 Vote
+ -
Yeah It's Been The Late Night show to me.
Don't know how much day I have to do that.Each day school and each day out of the tunes.

---------------------------
Google TV
Posted by buddyinfo
Updated - 14th Dec
0 Votes
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http://www.appliedergonomics.com
Cool ides.think if they put business furniture outside, that would make a huge difference. It would make it look like a workplace instead of a barbecue or caf.
Posted by AppliedErgonomics1
26th Apr
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