How to handle high-traffic areas in COVID-safe offices

One of the concepts that sprung up almost overnight during the pandemic was that of COVID-safe offices (or COVID-secure offices, to use the government’s original preferred term).

Like other indoor spaces, keeping offices COVID-safe is a combination of sensible hygiene by occupants, regular surface cleaning, interpersonal distance where possible, and plenty of good ventilation.

For the most part this is not very difficult to achieve:
• Avoid face-to-face seating plans
• Add physical barriers where distance is not possible
• Open windows and/or use air filtration

But what’s the answer to keeping offices COVID-secure in busy areas with poor ventilation, such as corridors, meeting rooms, lifts and stairwells?

Newly published research by the University of Cambridge has looked at answering this very question, with some practical conclusions that office managers can implement quickly and quite easily.

Redesigning open-plan offices

The research paper was written by Jiayu Pan, Tze Yeung Cho and Dr Ronita Bardhan, all of the University of Cambridge, and presented at the CIBSE Technical Symposium in the UK on July 13th-14th.

In the study, the authors looked at two open-plan floors of an office with quite dense seating, and about 180 desks on each floor.

As well as the open-plan desk areas, the floors had several features common to serviced offices:

• Meeting rooms and alternative working areas
• Kitchen areas with tea making facilities and seats
• Communal access to restrooms and printers

They modelled the movement of employees using planned ‘stops’ like stairs, lifts and desks, as well as ad hoc ‘interests’ like restrooms and kitchen areas.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the busiest areas proved to be the corridor, areas nearest the lift and stairs, and the nearest meeting rooms.

Sensible strategies to be COVID-safe

The researchers suggested a number of reasonable strategies to help make busy offices more COVID-secure, including:

• Separate flows of in and out traffic, especially where multiple lifts or stairways are available.
• Using more distant meeting rooms and multiple meeting rooms to spread out personnel.
• Back-to-back and side-by-side seating plans, rather than face-to-face across a desk with no barrier.

They especially highlighted corridors as a place where personnel are more likely to be densely packed at busy times.

Staggered arrival and departure times, reminders about social distancing, and hygiene precautions like hand-washing and alcohol gel could all help to alleviate this.

How serviced offices are COVID-secure

At The Serviced Office Company we are working hard to keep all our serviced offices COVID-secure, in line with changing guidance and best practice on hygiene and cleaning.

We give you the flexibility to lay out your seating plan the way you want it, whether that involves physical barriers between desks, or an unusual configuration to avoid employees facing each other directly.

Our on-site meeting rooms are cleaned regularly and we offer virtual office services so if you want to have more staff working remotely – or want to move to home-based working entirely – you can do so seamlessly while retaining a professional office address and contact details.

To find out more about any of our services, or if you would like to discuss any COVID-related concerns and how our serviced offices can help, please don’t hesitate to contact us today.

Can serviced offices save the post-pandemic world?

A newly published paper calls on city planners to “transform the city” and “save the climate” by applying the lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Diana Reckien, at the Department of Urban and Regional Planning and Geo-Information Management at the University of Twente, Enschede in the Netherlands, published her study in the journal Planning Theory & Practice.

She wrote: “SARS-CoV-2 achieved what climate change science and advocacy have not been able to achieve in more than 30 years… profound, system-relevant changes were possible in timeframes of days to weeks only.”

Worldwide CO2 emissions fell 6% in 2020, but as economic activity bounced back towards the end of the year, emissions increased 2% in December 2020 compared with the previous year.

Learning the lessons from COVID-19

Ms Reckien says there are four ways to tackle climate change and COVID-19 together:

  1. Re-greening cities
  2. Re-adjusting inner cities and office spaces
  3. Re-structuring neighbourhoods
  4. Re-moving transportation systems

Serviced offices can support these ambitions in a variety of ways:

  1. By embracing green areas, waterside locations and outdoor spaces.
  2. By reducing urban density and creating office spaces out of central business districts.
  3. By allowing decentralised, self-contained communities of residential, commercial and office space.
  4. By prioritising easy access via public transport instead of private vehicles.

The benefits of these strategies are clear for the environment, by allowing more natural greenery to grow, as well as reducing carbon miles for commuters.

But there are also advantages for a post-pandemic world with one eye still on infectious disease control, as there is less movement of the workforce on a daily basis, and less crowded workplaces with plenty of fresh air.

How SOC’s serviced offices in London and Manchester can help

The Serviced Office Company’s serviced offices in London and Manchester have been designed to meet as many of the above needs as possible, even in our locations that opened before the pandemic began.

We have always prioritised access to open air and natural surroundings, with our serviced offices in London overlooking the River Thames, and our serviced offices in Manchester adjacent to Salford Quays.

Public transport is a priority via the DLR Canary Wharf station in London, or the Metrolink in Manchester.

And our serviced offices in Manchester are located just outside the city centre, meaning there’s no need to head into the busiest business areas just to get to and from work.

Find out more

If you’d like to know more about our serviced offices in Manchester and London, including the new locations we have recently opened or have under development, please contact us and we’ll be happy to talk to you about all our premises.

As well as our well-appointed serviced offices, we also have on-site meeting rooms in Manchester and London, for when you need an extra private space for an interview, meeting or training session.

Finally, we have virtual offices in London and Manchester to give you a professional, physical contact address and telephone number, while you are free to work from home or anywhere else – ideal if you want to limit your time in a physical office after the pandemic.