flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Office noise significantly reducing employee concentration, productivity, and creativity

Codes and Standards

Office noise significantly reducing employee concentration, productivity, and creativity

Workplace distractions cause some to choose to work remotely.


By Peter Fabris, Contirbuting Editor | May 7, 2019

Courtesy Pixabay

Workplace distraction is making it difficult for employees to get their work done, according to a new report released by commercial flooring company Interface.

Noise negatively impacts a majority (69%) of global employees’ concentration levels, productivity, and creativity. The finding comes from a survey of more than 2,000 adult workers in the U.S., U.K., and Australia by Radius Global Market Research.

For about half of the respondents, noise levels in an office would impact their decision to accept a job. Some 16% of those surveyed choose to work remotely due to unsolved noise problems. Top distractions include conversations among employees, phone conversations, phones ringing, and people walking around.

Open work environments seem to be part of the problem. Nearly one-third (32%) of employees surveyed report working at an assigned desk or workstation in an open environment. Only 31% of all respondents indicate that employers provide private spaces for phone calls or conversations.

“The best designs are those rooted in solutions specific to company culture, environmental aspirations, and respect for individual user choice,” says Chip DeGrace, vice president of workplace applications, Interface.

Related Stories

Sponsored | Resiliency | Jan 24, 2022

Norshield Products Fortify Critical NYC Infrastructure

New York City has two very large buildings dedicated to answering the 911 calls of its five boroughs. With more than 11 million emergency calls annually, it makes perfect sense. The second of these buildings, the Public Safety Answering Center II (PSAC II) is located on a nine-acre parcel of land in the Bronx. It’s an imposing 450,000 square-foot structure—a 240-foot-wide by 240-foot-tall cube. The gleaming aluminum cube risesthe equivalent of 24 stories from behind a grassy berm, projecting the unlikely impression that it might actually be floating. Like most visually striking structures, the building has drawn as much scorn as it has admiration. 

Codes and Standards | Jan 24, 2022

N.Y. governor calls for ban on natural gas in new buildings

Action follows New York City’s ban.

Codes and Standards | Jan 19, 2022

EPA may expand product lineup that can earn WaterSense label

Would include systems that enhance water quality at the tap.

Codes and Standards | Jan 19, 2022

Canada’s Trudeau seeking building codes changes, net-zero emissions building strategy

Prime minister also wants net-zero electricity grid by 2035.

Codes and Standards | Jan 18, 2022

Greater emphasis on building materials needed to achieve net-zero carbon offices

Engineered wood, straw, and bamboo can be keys to achieving goal.

Codes and Standards | Jan 17, 2022

AISC seeks comments on draft earthquake standard for steel buildings

Includes new limits for cross-sectional slenderness of steel columns based on latest research.

Codes and Standards | Jan 12, 2022

California’s wildfire building code significantly reduces structural loss

As other states consider upgrading their codes, Golden State provides useful model.

Codes and Standards | Jan 12, 2022

Regulator holding back climate-friendly, energy-saving equipment deployment, critics say

Heat pumps, solar power could be made more accessible for low-income communities in Massachusetts.

Codes and Standards | Jan 11, 2022

Cost hikes drive nearly one million renters out of homeownership qualification in 2021

Household income needed to pay a mortgage rose to $62,872 from $55,186.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021