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Reopening Day is Almost Here. Are You Ready?
How to exceed the high health and safety expectations of your occupants as they return to
your buildings.
By Tony Piucci, SVP of Enterprise Sales Solutions, ABM
With vaccination rates rising in the United States, cities opening up, and the stock market and
economy showing signs of recovery, the long-awaited return to offices is inching closer to a
reality. Here are factors to keep in mind as you prepare your buildings and teams to welcome
more people back to your buildings.
Summer and Fall for Expected Return
Commercial real estate and corporate clients around the country are telling us that they will
continue to focus on summer and fall to start bringing more people back to offices. These dates
reflect trend surveys, although some leading tech companies, including Google, Microsoft and
Uber recently announced that they are accelerating partial reopening to the early spring. Across
the board, companies are monitoring infection and vaccination rates and are surveying employee
confidence before setting firm dates.
Hybrid Work
Most organizations expect to bring people back in phases and use hybrid models with people
splitting time between remote and in-office work. A higher percentage of staff are forecast to
work permanently from home. The 2021 Microsoft Work Trend Index outlines employees' strong
preference for flexible work options to reduce commute times, spend more time with families and
work and remain highly productive from any location.
Day One Safety
In ABM studies and in speaking with clients, it is clear that people will be returning to work with a
high sense of personal caution. They will be looking for cues that their workplace is taking visible
and consistent measures to create a safe environment. This includes:
- Mask policies
- Social distancing
- Temperature scanning
- Hand sanitizing stations
- Frequent cleaning and disinfection
- Fully staffed cleaning teams seen throughout the day
Phased approaches will help control the number of people in the office. This will ensure that
building and office protocols are stable, and create employee confidence that the workplace is
safe. Because people will be returning in phases, this process of ensuring day-one safety will
repeat throughout the year.
Planning for Unknown Unknowns
Nothing about the pandemic has been predictable. Even threats of a fourth wave of infection are
currently impacting reopening plans around the country. However, as offices open up and
children return to schools, the coronavirus will remain active in the population. Variances in both
vaccination rates and corporate policies mandating vaccinations means that risk of viral spread
will remain.
There will be no way to definitively know when a person has unknowingly spread COVID-19 in
your building. By taking both preventative and cleaning measures you can help control viral
spread and maintain occupant confidence by making disinfection and cleaning of high-touch
areas a part of daily cleaning. If your building has an outbreak, it is critical to have teams ready to
respond and follow the CDC guideline that recommends disinfection of "indoor community
settings where there has been a suspected or confirmed case of COVID-19 within the last 24
hours."
Assessing and Mitigating Risk
No two facilities are alike, so no two approaches to building wellness can be alike. ABM has
developed fact-based site audits for high-touch surfaces and a Healthy Building Risk Assessment
for indoor air quality. Clients are using these tools to establish benchmarks and priorities for
cleaning and disinfection along with needed improvements to HVAC systems to help manage
viral spread and ensure overall building wellness.
The New Era of Total Building Health
As people return to their offices and normal lives, they are also entering into a new era of what is
expected in building health. Safer spaces now mean safer people. Building health is now
something that needs to be approached both strategically and holistically. The goal is to create a
healthy environment that includes everything from public spaces to high-touch surfaces, cleaning
protocols, air quality, filtration and ventilation. These are health and safety measures that
employees and tenants see as vital for today's pandemic and beyond.
By Tony Piucci, SVP of Enterprise Sales Solutions, ABM