Rosie Haslem, Director at Spacelab, an architecture practice.
Our workplaces have always reflected our changing society. Consider Mad Men, the acclaimed US TV drama series, set in a New York advertising agency in the 1960s. The executive offices and drinks cabinets which are a constant throughout the series convey the general values of the era. And the evolution of the workplace design across the series reflects the changing attitudes of the sixties – as the repetitive grey cubicles and typing pools of the early series (and early sixties) make way for more open plan working and the introduction of computers, we get a sense of both the agency’s progress, and wider society’s progress. The world of work has gone through some even bigger changes since the era of Mad Men, particularly during the last two decades. The “job for life” is vanishing. The “gig economy” − a labour market characterised by short-term contracts or freelance work as opposed to permanent jobs – is growing. Technologies such as broadband and communication and collaboration software such as Skype, Zoom, Slack and Trello have made it easier to work flexibly outside the traditional nine-to-five work schedule. More employees are working remotely, from home, cafés or co-working spaces. How have these trends been changing the function, and look and feel of our workplaces?