How's that home office working for you?
When Minnesotans were told to stay home in March, workers hastily set up workspaces at home, many assuming it was a short-term fix and they'd soon go back to business as usual. Now, as life in the pandemic era grinds on, many of those makeshift offices are showing their shortcomings.
Even professionals have struggled with the transition.
"It was pretty chaotic the first week," said Sarah Cronin, owner of Simply Inspired Home Organizing.
As a professional organizer, her business was already home-based, but now she's home all the time, coaching clients virtually. And her husband, an engineering project manager, and their four school-age children all need workspaces at home, too.
"It took us three weeks to figure out this situation," Cronin said. Her husband, who has to be on video calls all day, eventually took over her lower-level office.
Cronin, who has more flexibility, now works at the family dining table, a space she shares with three of their children. She marked the table with masking tape to delineate each workstation, and equipped each child with a bin for their school supplies, stored on the nearby china cabinet, so they can quickly clear the table for family meals.
Interior designer Sue Hunter, owner of Home for a Change, moved her office from a spare bedroom to her dining room after the stay-at-home order. "I spend more time at home now — I can't go down [to showrooms] to choose fabrics," she said. "I moved my office to a sunny spot to make me feel better."