Imagine this:聽You walk into your office to find sunlight pouring in the many windows, every workstation with a standing desk, a cafeteria serving farm-to-table food, and a full-service gym that hosts daily spin classes and boot camps. 国产吃瓜黑料, a garden allows you to pick fresh mint for your afternoon cup of tea. It sounds like a parody from an episode of Silicon Valley, but thanks to an initiative set forth by the , utopian workspaces like this may soon be commonplace.
Over a five-year period, beginning in 2011, the agency helped analyze more than 3,000 studies published in various academic journals, looking at the variables that most impact physical, mental, and social health. The result was : a set of 63 strategies that companies can implement to make their employees healthier and happier.
In May 2016, the CDC selected the , a non颅profit dedicated to a design-based approach to healthier living, to enact the program. 鈥淭his started with the CDC trying to figure out how to prevent chronic disease,鈥 explains Joanna Frank, the center鈥檚 executive director. 鈥淏ecause we spend so much time in our offices, it鈥檚 a good place to try to change things that contribute to health problems.鈥澛
Currently, 31 private-sector buildings are using Fitwel. The more criteria that companies are able to apply, the better the rating they鈥檙e given.聽
Being part of the program isn鈥檛 cheap. Companies pay $6,500 to enter, then incur the obvious costs of upgrading facilities to meet the Fitwel standards. 鈥淏ut we鈥檝e seen it pay off,鈥 says Vin Ciruzzi, chief development officer for Alexandria Real Estate Equities, a corporate firm and one of the first companies to adopt the program. Alex颅andria鈥檚 five Fitwel-certified properties in New York City, San Diego, San Francisco, and Cambridge, Massachusetts, include organic gardens, fitness classes, and a restaurant run by former Top Chef contestant Brian Malarkey. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen tenant attraction, tenant happiness, and employees of companies pushing management to be in our buildings,鈥 says Ciruzzi.
鈥淭he research shows that these strategies impact health and that health impacts productivity,鈥 adds Frank. 鈥淢aking these changes is good for well-being鈥攁nd good for business.鈥