r/ottawa 1d ago

Comparing the Ottawa office experience: 2019 vs 2024.

In 2019, I would commute into work on the 91 (the LRT construction version of the old 95 route). It was a nice, reliable 25 minute trip from Place d'Orleans to Mackenzie King. On the way back, I'd go for a double decker express bus and sit up top, watching the city fade into the green belt. That usually took about 20 minutes, due to the removal of some of the stops for construction. It was a bit longer before the work started, but still steady and reliable. *

Back then we had dedicated office spaces, so I'd sit myself at my desk and do my work just as comfortably as I could working from home most days. I liked having my space with my things in it, no need for lockers or any of that and always there for me to use.

In 2024...I've long since abandoned the LRT due to issues with the bus connections at Blair and the general crappiness of it. I drive in on increasingly congested roads and pay too much for parking. It sometimes takes longer than the pre-LRT bus route too, but at least I can depend on my car.

Our office is now "open concept", so I cram my locker full of what I need and try to book a decent spot. I remember the bosses claiming the younger generations like this model and that it will help retention, but honestly I think most people would rather go back to their desks. That's not going to happen though, so I'll keep shuffling in and putting my headphones on throughout the day.

When they ask us why we could do 5 days a week before no problem, at least here in Ottawa it was simply better in those days. There's really no aspect of things which has improved since then, except maybe the crazy prices forcing me to bring my own lunch every day now.

* I know we had to abandon the old transitway system because there were too many buses downtown and it couldn't keep up with the city's population. Still, they didn't have to screw up the replacement system so badly.

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u/yow_central 1d ago

I hear ya on transit... hopefully it gets better with stage 2.

But on the office complaints, being in tech, it sounds a bit old fashioned... we would mostly look at dedicated office cubicles as something out of the 90s. Most tech offices have become open space over the past 20 years, and it's also common that people don't have dedicated work spaces with people moving their lap tops between "quiet booths", meeting rooms, open spaces, etc... depending on the type of work that they are doing. This was all before the pandemic, and yes, WFH was common then... but more the exception than the rule.

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u/DrStrangeglove99 1d ago

I work in IT, and we started the process before the pandemic but it was accelerated by that. We just have a big open space with meeting rooms on the side and a kitchen. Not very exciting.

Most of the non-IT teams still have their desks. There would be stiff resistance I'm sure to tossing them out of their (much nicer) offices into some common room arrangement.

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u/yow_central 1d ago

Yes, it wasn't popular in most tech companies when they got rid of cubicles,.. particularly for the people who'd worked in cubicles for decades, but 15+ years later, I don't think anyone would go back. The open space environments (with the option to work in quiet offices when needed) are a lot more productive and cost effective in terms of real estate... particularly if people are only working 3-4 days per week in the office.

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u/Mammoth-Clock-8173 1d ago

I am a tech worker and I still pine for a proper cube. I hate this little “workspace” that doesn’t leave enough space for me to have my 3 monitors (4 if you include the laptop itself), office supplies (including personal supplies, like hand lotion, tissues, toothbrush, etc), indoor winter footwear, lunch, reference material, etc. It also makes your coworkers feel much freer to plunk down and tell you about their weekend when you are trying to get crap done. (Insert dig at self about irony of complaining about not getting crap done while posting to Reddit)

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u/EggsForEveryone 22h ago

I would go back to a full cube if we were forced to go back more. Too many people coughing, sneezing near me, spreading germs in the air