How can the zoo teach us to create more humane workplaces?
“The city is not a concrete jungle, it’s a human zoo,” wrote anthropologist Desmond Morris in 1969. He went on to point out that there is one place where you do find animals behaving unnaturally – when they are locked up in a cage. So why do humans lock themselves in offices – the most robust of cages – for the entirety of the working day?
Over the last century, zoos have replaced barred cages with enclosures designed to replicate the optimal habitat for every animal. Zoology guides the allocation of space and resources. Cross-disciplinary teams adjust the controlled environment to ensure that an animal thrives, not just survives.
Offices have evolved to a lesser extent. Many offices are still designed on the whims of an architect. Cost savings dictate the allocation of space and resources. Once workplaces are built, they are rarely adjusted to meet changing employee needs.
Why is it that some office spaces operate more like cages than like zoos?
Many companies still see workplaces as cost or overhead, rather than a strategic investment. They believe the work environment has a neutral impact on employees. This creates workplaces optimized for cost efficiency, not employee efficiency. Workplace strategy initiatives are rarely implemented unless they provide short-term cost savings.
The best workplace teams use inventive methods to provide work environments optimized for human needs instead of cost alone. Their vision for future workplaces accounts for the behavioral, psychosocial, and health outcomes of building design and operations. In this paradigm, the workplace is a strategic asset to attract and retain top talent.
A natural habitat
Effective workplace are designed around the fundamental belief that the built environment impacts its occupants. They include specific attributes such as proper ventilation, plants, and sunlight. Harvard’s Center for Health and the Global Environment found an 8% increase in productivity when ventilation is increased. Research has shown a 15% increase in productivity after plants were added to offices.
A 2018 study by the Department of Design and Environmental Analysis at Cornell found that optimizing exposure to natural light led to a 84% drop in symptoms of eyestrain and headaches. Companies like RGA automatically adjust lighting to match the sunlight outside and align with circadian rhythms.
From a zoology perspective, each of these features appear obvious. They are rooted in the belief that humans, like animals, possess an innate tendency to affiliate with nature, or “biophilia.” In the corporate real estate industry, this concept is relatively new. The WELL Building Standard, which validates building features that support and advance human health and wellness was founded in 2014.
Standards like WELL will become a requirement instead of a nicety if scientific research on productivity continues. Judith Heerwagen, author of Biophilic Design explained at The Future Office conference, “We spend millions on understanding what makes humans sick, we should be equally focused on studying what makes us well.”
We spend millions on understanding what makes humans sick, we should be equally focused on studying what makes us well.
– Judith Heerwagen, author of Biophilic Design
The anti-camera
Data collection from study participants is no longer enough to guide workplace decisions. Employers need to collect data on their own employees to adequately meet their needs. They need to measure how people use physical space if they are to design to the specifications of the people working in them.
Unlike in zoos, privacy and security concerns complicate monitoring humans at work. Short of installing a camera, there hasn’t been a way to accurately measure how efficiently a particular space is used and if it’s being used as intended.
Recent advances in computer vision and artificial intelligence have made solving this problem possible. Density provides a device and an analytics platform that can accurately count the number of people in a room without compromising their privacy. Collecting data on the interaction between people and place is a growing trend in the emerging property technology sector, or “proptech.”
Cross-department collaboration
After data is collected, communication between cross-functional teams dictates how well physical environments are designed and managed.
The European Association for Zoos Aquariums (EAZA), outlines the following example of an organizational structure:
EAZA recommends weekly meetings between zoo management from different departments to “keep everyone up to date… and give everyone the feeling they are involved in running the zoo.” Daily meetings are scheduled to report on the needs of each animal.
Zoo management explicitly does not use a siloed team to develop a one-size-fits-all approach to animal well-being. Collaboration allows the team to change the zoo environment to meet the needs of individual animals.
Most workplaces are structurally incapable of achieving this level of flexibility. Workplaces impact all major departments of an organization, but they are traditionally managed by only one: real estate.
Emerging workplace leaders are enlisting the help of multiple departments in their workplace strategy. Anthony Parzanese, Head of Workplace Innovation at Red Hat describes the need to “raise awareness and education around the collaborative partnerships between Real Estate, IT, Finance, and HR.”
Parzanese solidifies these partnerships through a shared company goal. “We need to help each department understand how much the workplace contributes towards talent attraction and retention.”
We need to help each department understand how much the workplace contributes towards talent attraction and retention.
– Anthony Parzanese, Head of Workplace Innovation at Red Hat
Ironic isn’t it, that to captivate the attention of humans at work, workplace teams must first look to animals in captivity.
This article first appeared in WorkTech Academy.