Reinventing the wheel to end the “privilege” of work from home, and being proud of the bullshit they make up to justify it
This is an improvement. At most companies, you only get a private office at the organizational president level or above. Offices are so hideous and abusive because of “open office” floorplans; even cubicles have been mostly eliminated and replaced by workstations, offering no privacy or sound dampening. Offices are abusive environments.
But this? I’ll happily accept a private dedicated office. And many workers do not want to work from home: they don’t have room to have dedicated office space, or have trouble enforcing “this is work time” with their families. This addresses that.
It’s also stupid in a couple of ways. First, it doesn’t address the one benefit of company office space: the ability to meet face-to-face. Video conference is not the same. Second, it doesn’t address the environmental impact of commuting, which I personally feel is what WFH advocates should be focusing on: collaborate with environmental activists and put pressure on large corporations on the environmental front. You can debate the relative merits is WFH; productivity decline, loss of value of in-person meetings; loss of value of hallway conversations; whatever. But what’s unassailable is the fact that commuting is terrible for the environment, even in places where public transportation doesn’t suck - and it sucks on most of the US.