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Workers are learning to love the cubicle
This is an excerpt from an article. To view full article, click here.
[Photos: Pair, +Halle, KI]
By Nate Berg
It took more than 50 years, but the cubicle may finally be having its moment.
Designers invented the now-commonplace workstation in the late 1960s as a way to combat the noise and lack of privacy in open-plan offices lined with rows of desks. The semi-walled cubicle was an idealistic solution to an inherently human problem: people want privacy when they work, but not so much privacy that they shut out the world. They want to be able to focus, but not at the expense of connection.
The concept was great, in theory. The execution, however, left many workers feeling isolated in a sea of monotonous cubes. But in the post-pandemic era—when employees are returning to offices that are half-filled and buzzing with video-call noise—the prospect of even a half-private space is increasingly attractive.