ADVERTISEMENT

Companies are selling $229 desktop shields, moveable partition walls, and screens, and it shows how office culture is bending a knee to the pandemic. Here's what the workplace could look like.

Office supply companies are selling products to improve distancing in the workplace as some white-collar workers gear up to return.

Kirei office design partition
  • Employers might have to install protective barriers in the form of desktop shields, partitioned walls, and screens.
  • When you go back to work, there will likely be screens separating you from your coworkers sitting in front of you, beside you, and also walls providing cover from hallways and passersby.
  • Here's what it could look like.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories .
ADVERTISEMENT

In the thick of the COVID-19 pandemic, much of the future remains uncertain, including how office employees will reenter the workplace if they even do.

Companies are migrating to work-from-home policies, and a future of remote work is already having all sorts of implications, like an exodus of city dwellers to suburban and rural areas as proximity to corporate offices is no longer essential.

But that doesn't mean office culture is dead. Many white-collar workers will likely start returning to the office as reopening phases roll out across the US.

ADVERTISEMENT

And when they do, experts say that employers will need quick solutions to implement healthy distancing protocols.

Office furniture and supply firms are offering products like $229 clear desktop shields , panels, and partitions as companies scramble to refashion their existing workplaces.

Here's what the office could look like.

ADVERTISEMENT

Poppin

Social distancing in communal areas is the most straightforward way to help with that, and that includes the office.

Poppin

ADVERTISEMENT

Among the recommendations is to install transparent shields or other physical barriers to separate employees when distancing isn't an option.

Poppin

ADVERTISEMENT

Poppin

Poppin is also offering trays and other accessories that simplify setting up sanitation stations.

Disinfectant products, soap, and hand sanitizer will be a must at various points throughout the workplace.

ADVERTISEMENT

Kirei

Many companies don't have the capital to retrofit offices with wholesale changes.

"The fundamentals of real-estate economics we don't suddenly have the cash to buy three times more space," Melissa Hanley, the CEO of the design firm Blitz, told Business Insider in May. "So if we're going to engage in social distancing, we have to think about it in a different way."

ADVERTISEMENT

Kirei

ADVERTISEMENT

Kirei

There are three different modular systems to choose from, and the panels are made from recycled plastic bottles, according to the company.

Teknion

ADVERTISEMENT

Teknion

ADVERTISEMENT

Teknion

Teknion

ADVERTISEMENT

Teknion

Teknion

ADVERTISEMENT

Workstations could also simply be reoriented to cut down on face-to-face setups.

Teknion

ADVERTISEMENT

Teknion

ADVERTISEMENT

Teknion

"We don't go through something like this as a global society without things shifting about how we come together," David Galullo, the CEO of Rapt Studio, told Business Insider in May.

See Also:

ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: news@pulse.ug

ADVERTISEMENT