T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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362.1 | It didn't happen to ME personally, but... | DPDMAI::RESENDEP | Topeka is in Texas | Tue Aug 11 1987 19:17 | 27 |
| "Office of the future" was implemented in the Southern Area last
year. They carried it a step further, however, in that there were
fewer desks than people. In other words, people share desks. The
theory is that they should be out of the office calling on customers
most of the time anyway, so sharing desks shouldn't be a big problem.
Unit managers were moved into cubicles also.
There was a great deal of wailing and moaning and gnashing of teeth.
I was among the wailers.
In reality, it turned out to be a nightmare in some situations and
an improvement in others. The decision for managers to have cubicles
has since been changed, and offices will be provided as they were
before. The worst scenario was where salespeople were sharing desks
and telephones. That turned out to be almost totally unworkable.
Situations where expansion space was provided for and therefore
no desk-sharing occurred worked out quite well. In fact, once the
new facility was built and people moved in, they seemed to rather
like it.
Bottom line seemed to be that the desk-sharing was what made it
unworkable. Situations where individuals still had a desk to call
their own turned out to be quite workable, and employees seemed
to be more or less satisfied.
Pat
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362.2 | | BMT::KOZAKIEWICZ | You can call me Al... | Tue Aug 11 1987 19:25 | 21 |
| The joke in our district (suburban NY) goes something like:
"One company, one message, one architecture, one office."
I have always regarded cubes, no matter how efficient and cost effective they
are, as one of the most oppresive work environments. I work in SWS. Been
on the same residency for almost 5 years. One of the reasons I have not
actively pursued career moves which would bring me back into the office (and
up until now, this has fortunately not hindered me), is the fact that I would
have to work in that environment. I mean, at the customer site where I am,
I have a private office with a door, 12x16 with a real desk, conference table,
credenza for my terminal, bookcase, AND A WINDOW! Hell, in DEC, those are
almost V.P. accomodations!
I guess the bullpen idea goes along just dandy with the fine VT100's some
specialists are lucky to have sole possession of. Of course, in our office,
you can't fit a VT100 on the your desk and use it at the same time, so
no one is missing anything! :-):-):-)
:-)
:-)
:-) <- dripping with sarcasm...
|
362.3 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Ain't no time to wonder why... | Tue Aug 11 1987 20:36 | 12 |
| I think that in the enthusiasm to have "The Office of the future",
a number of our management structure have forgotten a few things.
Any real working "future offices" have a few other considerations,
such as recreational areas, seperate and adequate support
facilities, access to resources that have been removed from
the desktop and so on.
q
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362.4 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Aug 11 1987 21:15 | 16 |
| The "Office of the Future" may make sense when most people are out most of
the time -- so I'd say you SWS folks may just have to live with it, since
your job is to be at customer sites.
If you're working on a project, you should have the same accomodations we have
in Engineering (or better):
10x10 office, three full desk-size tables, bookshelves all around (big enough
to hold the equivalent of at least three-four VMS doc sets), full size four
drawer filing cabinet, terminal, telephone, chair, and guest chair.
BTW, this is basically what everyone in engineering has -- VPs don't necessarily
have any more space than secretaries (although their bookcases and filing cabs
might be in the secretary's office making their office a bit roomier).
/john
|
362.5 | | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! In Rebel Without a Clue! | Tue Aug 11 1987 21:35 | 11 |
| RE: .4
That what people in Engineering should have John. Reality is
that NAC is growing so fast that "real" offices are hard to come
by. Here in LKG, many people have doubled up waiting for LKG2 to
come on line.. I suspect that not too soon after that happens we'll
be doubling up again..
mike
A former owner of a 5x7 office.
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362.6 | Office of the future? Nah, bullpen of the 50's! | NCADC1::PEREZ | The sensitivity of a dung beetle. | Wed Aug 12 1987 01:18 | 35 |
| re .4
> the time -- so I'd say you SWS folks may just have to live with it, since
>your job is to be at customer sites.
SAY WHAT?
Haven't I been hearing for the last 2 years how some large percent
of our software business is SUPPOSED TO BE PROJECTS?
We haven't been attacked by the bullpen mentality here in MPO. Yet!
I had the misfortune to be in Kansas City for a project where they
used "The Project Room". This was an incredibly oppressive room
where they interned the project team. No walls, no cubes, NO privacy,
smokers fouling the air, conversations disrupting everyone, etc.
SUCKED!
When you ask about "real offices" the answer is "You want walls
or a bigger raise"? I HATE cubes, but I hate this bullpen crap
a whole lot more.
> If you're working on a project, you should have the same accomodations we have
>in Engineering (or better):
>
> 10x10 office, three full desk-size tables, bookshelves all around (big enough
> to hold the equivalent of at least three-four VMS doc sets), full size four
> drawer filing cabinet, terminal, telephone, chair, and guest chair.
Nice dream! Can I have a job with you? What we have are 8X8 foot (OR
SMALLER) cubes, tables (you're kidding -- where would you put them),
maybe a doc set (if you yell enough to get one, and your mean enough to
keep it), filing cabinet (if you find one to steal), etc. And I
suspect ours are some of the better accomodations.
D
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362.7 | I'd prefer to face the execution-squad! | ISOLA::BREICHNER | | Wed Aug 12 1987 09:25 | 23 |
| Guess this all depends what kind a job you do AND what kind a PERSON
you are. The first might be easy to define and to defend. The latter
however might not always get due consideration by the planners.
Since my many years with DEC I have mostly lived in open space type
environment (when I had residential type jobs, otherwise I couldn't
care less where I would fill in my expense claim on). I really like
it, cause it facilitates communication, teamwork etc... On the other
hand some people really prefered offices, mainly in engineering
because of noise etc... Finally I still stick to open space with
cubicles for some minimal privacy. In case you need to isolate
from time to time, you would use one of the conference rooms or
a vacant manager's office. I have seen in one case, where everybody
was confined into closed offices, that the "ambiance" and style
of work (poor communications, poor teamwork) sufferd from this
arrangement in the long run. I understand however that managers
do mostly require closed offices due to obvious confidential
conversations: JPR's, interviews....
However over here (Valbonne) it is an unwritten rule that a manager
leaves his/her door wide open when not doing "confidentials".
RE: .0 I sure would hate to be in a corner, facing a wall and
turning my back to my co-workers ! Who's invented that arrangement
should deserve working in it !!
Fred
|
362.8 | A door? What's that? | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Wed Aug 12 1987 10:09 | 8 |
| >> I understand however that managers
>> do mostly require closed offices due to obvious confidential
>> conversations: JPR's, interviews....
This is not true everywhere - on my floor in the mill the only
doors exist on conference rooms (which is where we do the
'confidential' activities). Managers/supervisors have basically
the same office arrangement as everyone else.
|
362.9 | Dec is different | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Wed Aug 12 1987 12:09 | 18 |
| As in all things DEC from DEC is different. I personally
prefer a private office but haven't had one since my first
job at DEC.
I do not believe that bullpens are condusive to creativity,
learning,or anything. I also think they are stressful.
As for "private" managers offices how about a manager that
gives JPR etc in the middle of a bullpen in full sound of
different groups?
I do believe that since people have to be at their job a
significant part of their lives they shoudl have so some
control over it. I for one would trade my Panda/microvax etc
for an office that had walls and doors thus reducing the decibel
level by around 50db. By the end of the day my teeth hurt
from the noise. That can't be productive!
|
362.10 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Aug 12 1987 13:23 | 13 |
| > As for "private" managers offices how about a manager that
> gives JPR etc in the middle of a bullpen in full sound of
> different groups?
That's what conference rooms are for. Any manager who would give an employee
a JPR where it can be overheard is a jerk -- even if it's a good review. The
employee should have the opportunity to say what he wants to say.
I think the best way to handle a JPR is to meet the employee in a conference
room, present the JPR and then leave for a while to give the employee time to
read it with no pressure to rush, then come back to discuss it.
/john
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362.11 | Fat chance! | YUPPIE::COLE | I survived B$ST, I think..... | Wed Aug 12 1987 13:31 | 5 |
| Re: John's comments on facilities for project people
I wish someone from engineering would talk to the folks laying out the
Southern Area SIC Delivery center. There the Project Managers are in a
bullpen!
|
362.12 | | THE780::FARLEE | So many NOTES, so little time... | Wed Aug 12 1987 15:08 | 18 |
| "office of the future" reminds me of a currently ongoing
discussion in the Vogon News about euphamisms...
Personally, I am in the Western area SWS (Santa Clara).
I am a resident, and have never had a desk, much less
an office at any DEC facility. The customer has graciously
given us desk space here (there are about 30 DEC residents here)
this consists of: 2 to 4 specialists per cubicle (not office).
one desk, one table, one phone, and one terminal per person.
One conference room (equipped with real doors!) for the building
(and usually booked solid). Privacy is accomplished with
ear-plugs or walkmen. This is a fairly large project.
I believe that the facilities needed to be productive depend
not only on the job being performed, but on the person. I can
"tune out" the rest of the world fairly well, but some folks
here give up and work very late hours just to get some quiet...
The conditions described by John Covert sound like heaven...
if only I wouldn't have to leave California...
|
362.13 | non-field folks can do okay even in CA | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | All Hail Marx and Lennon (Bros. & Sisters) | Wed Aug 12 1987 16:44 | 11 |
| re:.12
> The conditions described by John Covert sound like heaven...
> if only I wouldn't have to leave California...
Actually, I know of a DEC facility in CA (not far from you) with
full-height window offices, balconies for some, and open halls
where you hang around and chat (but big enough for cubes).
Good work if you can get it... but they might shoot me if I let on.
(And it's not easy work to get!)
|
362.14 | workspace designers don't understand the needs of the workers | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Aug 12 1987 19:39 | 17 |
| I remember a few years ago this so-called "architect" was rearanging
the area that I and several other programmers worked in. He wanted
to remove the cube walls and just have half-wall dividers. He felt
that this would "improve communication between members of the team".
I was adament that I wanted walls because I felt that the
"communication" that he was trying to foster was really a distraction
from someone that needed to concentrate (ever tried reading a crash
dump with a dozen people "communicating" within earshot?) Exasperated,
he finally said to me, "I just don't understand you software types; the
guy I carpool just like that. Why, he even drags his fileing cabinet
in front of his office. Just what is it that you people do that needs
so much concentration?" I asked him how he could possibly design
work areas for people whose job needs he didn't understand. I got
my walls.
Deb
|
362.15 | | BISTRO::WLODEK | Stankiewicz, network cagades. | Thu Aug 13 1987 05:02 | 29 |
|
Are there any internal rules on how an office should look like ?
What some of you describe are unworkable conditions, that would
simply be illegal in most European countries.
If I get the French labour laws right, one must have at least 7
sq. meters space and a window ( that is for a 'cadre' and all
soft people are 'cadre').
Any Swede or German knownig the rules ?
Besides the legal requirenments, the argument I heard in Sweden
was, "salaries are THE cost these days ( it used to be computers)
of running any computer operation ( software house or consulting
bureau) so, in order to get higher productivity, working conditions
must be good. Having good working conditions for well paid programmers,
consultants simply makes sens."
The major problem of software houses ( SWAS ) is to keep people.
Good working conditions are one of the prerequisites of it.
DEC has an honorable ambition ( at least in Europe ) to be ahead
of the market place as far as emploee relations are concerned.
These are not empty words , I've seen several good examples of it.
All new DEC facilities I've seen ( Stockholm, Gotheborg, Utrecht,
Munich, Valbonne, Paris ) are as good as John Covert's office or
far better.
We don't have swiming pool, yet....
|
362.16 | | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Thu Aug 13 1987 10:52 | 9 |
| There is a common theme in all the problems described here. The people
charged with laying out office space simply don't bother to ask
the occupant what sort of office they want or need!
The attitude seems to be "I'm the facilities expert. I'll TELL you
what you really need." Implied also is that, given the chance, we'd
all opt for ridiculous luxuries.
|
362.17 | Had it then! | STEREO::BEAUDET | | Thu Aug 13 1987 13:13 | 6 |
| 20 years ago I was in the "office of the future". I shared it with
4 others. It was the most common configuration at the time. I guess
we just didn't realize how futuristic we were at the time!
/tb/
|
362.18 | Haven't we done this once or twice before? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Thu Aug 13 1987 14:57 | 12 |
| The problem is that after 15 years of experience with offices for
Software Specialists that still need to get those so-called experts
involved and then refuse to expose the floor plan until its too late to
change.
Aren't there any real models to follow?
The 8th floor of Penn Plaza was worked out with plenty of participation
from those who'd be living with it. It's close to perfect.
More than anything else, having five foot partitions enclosing an area
of no more than four people is the key.
|
362.19 | its a front office mirage from where I sit | ATLAST::BOUKNIGHT | Everything has an outline | Fri Aug 14 1987 11:21 | 33 |
| Down here in Charlotte, SWS/E (E stands for engineering) lives in
a facility hosted by the Charlotte District. The building is called
WAREHOUSE grade space. We have a group of people numbering about
40 normally that work generally full days in the office, only
occasional trips. We currently work in an area with NO windows in
the working area, only some front building windows for the entrance
area (one secretary's area, a conference room, and a training
room/large conference room area.
We went through this "office of the future" bit with a local design
firm over a year ago as part of the district's plans to move to
quarters that were more OFFICE than WAREHOUSE in nature. We worked
diligently with the designers to try to get our requirements into
the plan as best we could. The plan produced seemed to be a reasonably
acceptable plan.
However, we were told to project our growth and build that into
the plan. We did, and have in this last year already exceeded our
growth estimates. What this seems to have done is increase our "burden"
to the plan by increaseing the amount of SQ FT needed, and the higher
costs of OFFICE space vs WAREHOUSE space are now coming into play.
It does not look like we get to move.
Part of the problem that got highlighted in this process was the
fact that someone is not able to come to grips with the fact that
there are organizations growing up in the field with "engineering"
type environment requirements while the rest of the field continues
thinking in terms of "sales/support" type environment requirments.
So we end up getting shortchanged in space and equipment. From what
I have seen, "office of the future" is only a "front office" concept
and not to be applied to the "back room."
Jack
|
362.20 | right to light | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Aug 14 1987 12:16 | 14 |
| > If I get the French labour laws right, one must have at least 7
> sq. meters space and a window ( that is for a 'cadre' and all
> soft people are 'cadre').
> Any Swede or German knownig the rules ?
I don't think we have any Swedes or Germans regularly reading this file, but
maybe when Ora (who is from Finland but works in Munich) gets back he can be
more specific:
In Germany it *appears* that the law is that you cannot be more than one desk
away from a window. Every German office building I've ever been in seems to
implement this.
/john
|
362.21 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Tue Aug 25 1987 09:09 | 33 |
| As a writer/course developer, I also have an "ideal office". Desk,
counter and table, 5 bookshelves, bookcase, file cabinet, and terminal
stand. No window, though.
When I first came to this group, however, I was doubled up with
someone until a cube opened up. I divided the cube with 2 tall
file cabinets. When sitting at my desk, I had to assume a complicated
acrobatic position to be able to open my file drawers since I only
had enough room for my chair to swivel. No one could sit and talk
with me very easily. However...I much preferred the visual privacy
to physical comfort. I told my manager that I would be happier
sitting in a closet than being visually distracted by even one other
person. And much, much more productive.
Why don't planners ask employees what they want? People are different,
and there are many cost effective ways to arrange space. Some people
thrive in a bull pen while others would wither and die of
non-productivity and overstimulation. I would be doing all my work
at home on my own time and putting in my hours in the bull pen in
order to qualify for the paycheck.
If I were ever in a situation where I were asked to sit in open,
communal work space, and was not allowed to subdivide it for visual
privacy, I would leave DEC.
(Related issue - has anyone ever done anything in a private cube
which they would not feel comfortable doing in public? I'm thinking
of things like adjusting stockings, using a toothpick or dental
floss, taking medication, and a few other things. If I ran to the
rest room every time I did something like that, it would also
affect my productivity.)
Holly
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362.22 | "no exit " | MDKCSW::PARTEE | A cool drink of water before I die,please | Wed Aug 26 1987 13:05 | 22 |
|
Office of the future ==> Frustrations of the Future
# Dealing with a death in the family or telling your loved one
something especial would demand a private place; Office of the
future has no private places. Unless DEC constructs a "private
booth (enclosed box like a telephone booth) where we like our
great predessor Clark Kent (Superman) could dash into the booth,
take care of internal things and come out a better person.
# To complement the changing environment, I feel that we should
be trained to work 'closely together'. Ever tried to take a
yard dog and have it into a house pet???
# The term "working together" will take on a whole new meaning.
Jean-Paul Sarte has a book (play) called "NO EXIT". The setting
of the play sounds very much like Office of the Future. Sarte's
conclusion is that (I quote) 'People are hell'.
rob
|
362.23 | Office space in Salem, NH | SEDJAR::BELDIN | | Fri Dec 18 1987 12:00 | 59 |
| >
> This plan is bothering us because there is no visual privacy.
> We have 5 1/2' high cubes now and more shelf space. They do
> not seem to like this in St. Louis, but I should not speak
> for them.
>
> Is this configuration being implemented in other places than
> the central area? What kind of space do other SWS and SWE
> people have? And what would you think if the office of the
> future would come to your site?
I know that this is an old note, but it will serve its purpose to
get it off my chest....
Yes, here in Salem we have the "office of the Future". The
planners went out and bought lots of carpets (no padding) and about
50% fewer cubicles than what were needed. What happened? Seems like
file cabinets and bookcases proliferated as people attempted to
re-create the walls that they had lost.
Time went on and in true Manufacturing spirit, people had to be
moved out of one place and into another, sort of like the Army. My
office soon soon had another occupant, who had equally, if not more
manuals than I had. In our 10x10 office (maybe 10x10 - we have
"stretched" the walls) , we have:
o Two uVax workstations on vt220 stands and printer
o Two phones
o Two desks
o Two file cabinets
o 4 chairs
o a single folding table set up in the middle, and another one
against a wall ( give it away and you lose it)
o TONS of manuals
It doesn't take much effort to realize that this leaves very little
room for human occupants. We decided to maximize the space inside the
office, by leaving a very small doorway. People over 200 pounds need
not even try to enter.
What makes matters worse is that there are offices within the area
that are completely empty - "turf wars" prevent us from getting any
more space, even though our group has more than doubled in size in two
years. To add insult to injury, there are offices within the facility
that have the most beautiful, color-coordinated walls, drop ceilings
and luxurious conference rooms. However, even though they share the
same roof, they report to different management, so they get to play
under different rules.
I'd like to hear from a facilities planner on this situation. Is
this just another way save money by buying fewer walls? Does anyone
have any FACTUAL studies that show that PERFORMANCE, and PRODUCTIVITY
INCREASE in "bull-pen" workplaces AND that STRESS DECREASES?
Thanks for the time to get on a soapbox...
Rick Beldin
|
362.24 | no study required :-} | COLORS::FLEISCHER | Bob, DTN 226-2323, LJO2/E4a | Mon Dec 21 1987 13:00 | 13 |
| re Note 362.23 by SEDJAR::BELDIN:
> Does anyone
> have any FACTUAL studies that show that PERFORMANCE, and PRODUCTIVITY
> INCREASE in "bull-pen" workplaces AND that STRESS DECREASES?
If your work output remains approximately constant as the cost of providing
your work space decreases, then by definition the productivity of the capital
invested in the work space has increased.
You ARE producing as much output as before, right?
Bob
|
362.25 | From the Pink Palace | VCQUAL::THOMPSON | Famous Ex-Noter | Mon Dec 21 1987 13:32 | 22 |
| > To add insult to injury, there are offices within the facility
> that have the most beautiful, color-coordinated walls, drop ceilings
> and luxurious conference rooms. However, even though they share the
> same roof, they report to different management, so they get to play
> under different rules.
This is one of the difference between Manufacturing and Engineering
management. The groups with the nice offices are engineering groups.
The rules are the same though. You get what you pay for. Engineering
paid big bucks for the 'pink palace' because they felt that that's
what it takes to get high quality people/work.
> I'd like to hear from a facilities planner on this situation. Is
> this just another way save money by buying fewer walls?
You don't need to hear from a facilities planner. Ask your cost
center manager why you've got cheap crowded offices. Space wars
are won by people willing to pay for the space. Ash him/her why
they or their management are unwilling to spend money taking care
of their people.
Alfred
|