|
Designing a Home Workplace
by Neal Zimmerman
When I first started working from home
in 1994, I began in what I now call a "first-step home workplace." I
commandeered a den on the first floor of our house and moved in
office furniture and computer equipment I already owned, shuffling
them around to achieve the best fit given the existing conditions of
the room.
I considered this to be a temporary
move. At the time, working out of the house was still regarded by
many (including me) as something less than serious.
But a strange thing happened when I got
home — I discovered that I was netting more income in less time with
less aggravation. This caught my attention. Not surprisingly,
literally millions of other people were on the road to a similar
discovery.
Leaving the Office
Tiresome and expensive commutes from
home to work, environmental concerns, and new-age electronic tools
have prodded and encouraged many of us to reinvent how, as well as
where we work.
We are finding home workplaces to be
financially and spiritually successful ventures, leading to a
different and better personal lifestyle. Many people love working at
home, because in addition to saving time and money, they get a huge
bonus of personal freedom, which can be invested in relaxation or
the achievement of personal goals. They can also spend more time
with their children and spouses or provide care for elderly parents.
This article is excerpted
from At Work at Home: Design Ideas for Your Home Workplace by
Neal Zimmerman, with permission of the publisher, The
Taunton Press. >>>
|
|
Double French doors provide light and spacious
entry to a studio, once a toolshed, remodeled by Keith
Roberts. Photo: Randy O'Rourke
This beautifully crafted one-room art studio was
once a simple toolshed with no veranda. Photo:
Randy O'Rourke
Click on thumbnail
images to view full-size pictures.
| |