Why the home office is dying
Thanks to Wi-fi and laptops, work is bleeding out across the entire house
Zac Atkinson keeps
a desk in the corner of the living room of his one-bedroom apartment in Studio
City, California. Not that he uses it much: The work-from-home television
writer migrates from couch to kitchen table and back again as he churns out
scenes for animated children’s programmes. “The folks from the generation
before me tend to have more of an office,” says Atkinson, 32. “Most people I
know end up sitting on the sofa, and half the time the TV is on when they’re
working.”
Not long ago, someone telecommuting might
have needed a desktop computer, a printer, a landline, and a fax machine (plus
filing cabinets to store pay stubs, bank statements, and bills). Today more
people than ever work from home, but laptops and Wi-fi function just as well
couchside — or, hey, by the pool — as deskside, and chances are you’re neither
sending nor receiving a ton of faxes. This helps explain why “the bigger, more
ornate home offices that we once did have kind of gone away”, says Tim Shigley,
a home remodeller in Wichita. “People started saying, ‘Do I need a home office?
I have other things I want to buy.’”
The home office has lost
enough cachet that, as of the end of August, the share of listings on real
estate site Zillow that make special mention of one decreased by 20 per cent
from the previous year across the US, according to data compiled for Bloomberg
Businessweek. Those rooms might still exist, but the numbers at least signal
that real estate agents see them as less of a selling point than they once did.
This shift leaves the
home-building industry contending with diverging trends. Sixty per cent of
employers let workers telecommute, up threefold from 1996, according to 2016’s
annual survey by the Society for Human Resource Management. But roaming the way
Atkinson does has its appeal: If you’re expected to answer an email at any
hour, why not burn the midnight oil in bed, Netflix on pause?
So builders are
compromising. Current home design tends toward open-floor plans, with an
emphasis on flexible spaces and workspace nooks, says architect Paul Adamson,
who operates out of the San Francisco Bay Area. Modern homes are also built
with more wall outlets to allow for nomadic charging, and some even come with
built-in USB ports, says Jeremy Wacksman, Zillow’s chief marketing officer.
This style is especially
appealing to younger buyers, who are already accustomed to living off Starbucks
Wi-fi. A 2016 survey by John Burns Real Estate Consulting shows that while half
of prospective buyers still say a home office is important or very important,
younger ones care less about a dedicated workspace. In southern California, for
example, only a quarter of buyers born in the 1990s want a formal home office,
says Pete Reeb, a principal at John Burns.
There’s still one good reason to keep that wooden behemoth with the family photos: the tax benefits. Owners — and even renters — can write off insurance, utilities, and other home office expenses.
There’s still one good reason to keep that wooden behemoth with the family photos: the tax benefits. Owners — and even renters — can write off insurance, utilities, and other home office expenses.
Source | Business Standard | 9 December 2016
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Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Manager @ Library
Khaitan & Co
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