These days the majority reputable organisations have a human resource management strategy simultaneously serving the needs of employees as well as more corporate interests. Good human resource teams will spend much of their time considering how best to keep staff inspired and proud of their work – preoccupations that many a workforce is appreciative of and ready to respond to. However, it is sometimes the case that HR teams fail to see how improving just the very simplest of factors can make the working day more pleasant and productive. One such easily addressed but commonplace issue in the workplace is the climate: when it is too hot or too cold employees are less able to carry out their tasks efficiently but with the implementation of brise soleil, glass louvres and external louvres, inefficiency – and with it unhappiness – can be rapidly reduced.
To give a brief description of these unusual terms, brise soleil are systems serving to shade buildings from the outside by blocking the direct entry of sunlight. Their practical benefits thus speak for themselves – they keep anyone inside the building from getting hot and bothered. And further to this, the shading devices in question add modernist appeal to a place; they were championed by the iconic French architect Le Corbusier who famously wanted to make ‘machines for living’. Glass louvres, meanwhile, offer the similar benefit of better ventilation while also reducing energy costs otherwise squandered on expensive air conditioning and radiators. To any staff charged with the job of reducing their company’s carbon footprint the glass louvre option will be highly attractive as louvres help satisfy the kind of green policies governments are trying to implement worldwide. Finally, external louvres consist of elegant panels that can be added to any commercial or public building using steel or aluminium brackets. The visual effect is akin to an up-to-date awning while the physical effect for workers is a comfortable and consistent indoor temperature that even hours of intense sun hardly change.
In sum, brise soleil, glass louvres and external louvres promise to be the architectural features of the future; a future characterized by improved conditions for workers, greater respect for our environment and more responsible levels of spending on energy. Hopefully, long working days spent sweating over desks, heat-induced headaches and avoidable stress will be consigned to the past.
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http://www.maplesunscreening.co.uk/
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