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HETEROTOPIA WORK. Correlation between the domestic built environment and home offices during COVID-19 confinement
Author(s) -
María José Araya León,
Axel Alonso García,
Ricardo Guasch,
Alberto T. Estévez,
Javier Peña
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
strategic design research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.24
H-Index - 3
ISSN - 1984-2988
DOI - 10.4013/sdrj.2020.133.25
Subject(s) - happiness , context (archaeology) , perception , covid-19 , work (physics) , productivity , exploratory research , built environment , applied psychology , psychology , social psychology , architectural engineering , engineering , sociology , geography , economics , civil engineering , economic growth , medicine , mechanical engineering , disease , archaeology , pathology , neuroscience , infectious disease (medical specialty) , anthropology
The new COVID-19 context has transported work to a domestic setting. These new locations, heterotopic, do not always adequately respond to user needs.This paper explores the relationship between the domestic built environment and certain elements that shape it, the perception, emotional state and productivity of the users.A pilot case study was carried out with 11 volunteers who evaluated their home offices for seven work days using physical environment tools, two tests -fixed data and daily evaluation-. Also, environmental parameters of the territory were monitored.Among the main findings, we observed that the perception of size does not relate to actual size; a balcony is associated with happiness and calm. We have verified how biophilic elements promote well-being. Happiness and calm are related to hight and low levels of lux. There is a tendency of happiness associated with collaborative tasks, and calm with individual ones. This article opens up a path for exploratory research on resilient situations in which physical barriers force people to seek creative solutions and offers tools to empower users. Current trends in data-driven design and teleworking support research proposals like this one, with a focus on well-being, productivity.

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