Crown Relocations is NZ’s leading moving company.

Bad offices are bad for your health

Bad offices are bad for your health!

And a lack of air conditioning is just the beginning

This month’s article in the FT opened with a blunt reminder that Lee Kuan Yew credited Singapore’s economic lift-off to two things: multi-ethnic harmony and air-conditioning. Sixty-six years later, the same lesson applies to every mid-size firm on a warming planet. When London racks up as many cooling-degree-days as Portland, Oregon but only a fraction of its AC penetration, the cost shows up in the ledger: productivity collapses above 21C, error rates climb, and heat-linked mortality is now four times higher in Western Europe than in North America.

Yet cool air is just the first. According to our 2025 global survey of 1,200 office workers77% rank “a quiet, individual place to focus” above every other perk, and 91% would willingly spend more days on-site if the environment improved. The message to leadership is simple: if you won’t fix the building, you’ll keep losing the people.

Four hidden costs of a “bad” office

  1. Physical health
    Heat exhaustion, dehydration and migraines rise sharply above 24C; asthma flares when humidity swings. A 2024 meta-analysis in Environmental Health calculates a 30% increase in sick-day incidence for every 2 °C above the comfort band.
  2. Cognitive load
    Cornell found that typists commit twice as many errors at 25C as at 21C. Layer in open-plan noise, shown by the University of Sydney to raise heart-rate variability, and memory retrieval slows by another 15%.
  3. Retention risk
    Replacing a mid-level knowledge worker now costs roughly one-third of their annual salary. Gartner’s 2024 report links voluntary turnover directly to “environmental dissatisfaction” once temperature, noise and lighting scores dip below the 50th percentile.
  4. Presenteeism
    Employees who sit at hot, dim or noisy desks still log hours, but output falls by up to 15%, according to PNAS. That quiet drag on deliverables rarely shows up in HR dashboards, yet it is the largest single hidden cost of a bad office.

What actually works

  1. Thermal comfort
    – Retrofit high-efficiency air-to-air heat pumps that cool in summer and heat in winter while slashing gas use.
    – Add desk-level fans and £150 sensor packs that ping facilities when CO₂ or humidity spike, catching cognitive dips before they snowball into missed deadlines.
  2. Layout
    – Re-zone open floors into “library” quiet zones, collaboration bays and phone booths. In our pilots, simple 1.4 m acoustic partitions lifted perceived privacy scores by 34% without adding square footage.
  3. Lighting & Air
    – Swap flickering fluorescents for tunable LEDs that mimic daylight; circadian-tuned lighting has been shown to improve sleep quality and next-day alertness.
    – Upgrade filters to MERV-13 and schedule quarterly duct cleans, the WHO credits these two steps with a 9% fall in respiratory complaints.
  4. Ergonomics
    – Issue sit-stand desks and external monitors to every full-time worker; a 2023 Cochrane review found a 20% drop in lower-back pain inside six months. Quick wins include laptop stands and keyboard trays.

Is there a plan?

Yes, we’ve broken it down into a 12-week program based on our experiences upgrading client offices. In a very truncated form, here it is:

  • Week 1 to 2: Run a two-question pulse survey on temperature, noise, light and pain points; map hotspots with cheap IoT sensors.
  • Week 3 to 6: Pilot one floor with upgraded AC, adjustable task lights and acoustic screens. Track attendance, IT help-desk tickets and self-reported mood.
  • Week 7 to 12: Scale what works, retire what doesn’t, and publish the results internally. Transparency turns facilities budgets into culture investments.

What’s our final word?

The climate has changed, and so have your employees’ expectations. Keeping people cool, calm and focused is now a board-level risk issue, not an after-thought. Start with air-conditioning if the data says you must, but don’t stop there. Audit the whole thing! Temperature, air, light, layout and ergonomics, and chip away at each layer until the office actively helps people do their best work.

Ready to see how your workspace scores? 

Download the full findings from our 2025 survey and book a consultation with a Crown Workspace expert today.

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