How will office blocks work above ground floor where neither the elevators or stairs allow social distancing and have obvious hotspots where people will be pushing buttons or opening doors?
One solution is to wear biohazard suits in public areas. Any in stock on Amazon yet?![]()
Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.
More fingers than teeth
xoggoth is a fount of knowledge
Remain two metres apart and close “communal spaces” ?
How does that work with toilets? Guess people will have to go back to dark ages and crap out the window.
bloggoth
If everything isn't black and white, I say, 'Why the hell not?'
John Wayne (My guru, not to be confused with my beloved prophet Jeremy Clarkson)
Double Godlike!
BR14 is always on top
Entropy is NOT what it used to be.
Inertia, however........................
Double Godlike!
BR14 is always on top
Entropy is NOT what it used to be.
Inertia, however........................
Nervous Newbie
GmartSuy has no reputation
Depends on the size of the office i'd imagine, small start up/ agencies could probably get away with it but those offices in large buildings will most definitely need some sort of rota in place to limit the amount of people in the office.
More fingers than teeth
darmstadt is always on top
Germany might, possibly, have it sorted:
Germany’s labour minister Hubertus Heil is working on legislation that would give employees the right to work from home, even after the current crisis when social distancing will be no longer needed.
“Everyone who wants to and whose workplace allows it should be able to work in a home office, even when the coronavirus pandemic is over,” Heil told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.
About 25% of Germans are now estimated to be working from home, up from about 12% normally.
Heil said he would table legislation later in the year to enshrine the right to work from home in law, even full-time if that is what employees want.
Finance minister Olaf Scholz, like Heil a Social Democrat, expressed approval for the idea.
“The past weeks have shown how much is possible in the home office, this is a real achievement that we should not just abandon,” he told the paper.
“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”