Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control

The office environment has changed rapidly due to the recent COVID-19 outbreak. Companies consider various types of remote work environments to contain the spread of the virus. Among them, a satellite office is a type of remote work environment where a number of employees are allocated to their near...

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Main Authors: Seungbeom Kim, Yooneun Lee, Byungchul Choi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-07-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/14/8008
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spelling doaj-834ece24a5e54a6cb9351b19ad3683212021-07-23T14:08:28ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-07-01138008800810.3390/su13148008Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection ControlSeungbeom Kim0Yooneun Lee1Byungchul Choi2College of Business Administration, Hongik University, Seoul 04066, KoreaDepartment of Engineering Management, Systems, and Technology, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH 45469, USACollege of Business, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Seoul 02450, KoreaThe office environment has changed rapidly due to the recent COVID-19 outbreak. Companies consider various types of remote work environments to contain the spread of the virus. Among them, a satellite office is a type of remote work environment where a number of employees are allocated to their nearest office. The benefits from satellite offices are twofold: The significant reduction of travel distance also reduces the amount of carbon emission and fuel consumption. In addition, dividing employees into smaller groups significantly reduces the potential risks of infection in the office. This paper addresses a satellite office allocation problem that considers social and environmental sustainability and infection control at work. In order to evaluate the effect of different satellite office allocation, quantitative measures are developed for the following three criteria: carbon emission, fuel consumption, and the probability of infection occurrence at work. Simulation experiments are conducted to investigate different scenarios of regional infection rate and modes of transportation. The results show that adopting satellite offices not only reduces carbon emission and fuel consumption, but also mitigates business disruption in the pandemic.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/14/8008satellite officesustainable facility locationinfection controlrisk managementcarbon emission
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seungbeom Kim
Yooneun Lee
Byungchul Choi
spellingShingle Seungbeom Kim
Yooneun Lee
Byungchul Choi
Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control
Sustainability
satellite office
sustainable facility location
infection control
risk management
carbon emission
author_facet Seungbeom Kim
Yooneun Lee
Byungchul Choi
author_sort Seungbeom Kim
title Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control
title_short Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control
title_full Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control
title_fullStr Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control
title_full_unstemmed Adoption of Satellite Offices in Response to a Pandemic: Sustainability and Infection Control
title_sort adoption of satellite offices in response to a pandemic: sustainability and infection control
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-07-01
description The office environment has changed rapidly due to the recent COVID-19 outbreak. Companies consider various types of remote work environments to contain the spread of the virus. Among them, a satellite office is a type of remote work environment where a number of employees are allocated to their nearest office. The benefits from satellite offices are twofold: The significant reduction of travel distance also reduces the amount of carbon emission and fuel consumption. In addition, dividing employees into smaller groups significantly reduces the potential risks of infection in the office. This paper addresses a satellite office allocation problem that considers social and environmental sustainability and infection control at work. In order to evaluate the effect of different satellite office allocation, quantitative measures are developed for the following three criteria: carbon emission, fuel consumption, and the probability of infection occurrence at work. Simulation experiments are conducted to investigate different scenarios of regional infection rate and modes of transportation. The results show that adopting satellite offices not only reduces carbon emission and fuel consumption, but also mitigates business disruption in the pandemic.
topic satellite office
sustainable facility location
infection control
risk management
carbon emission
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/14/8008
work_keys_str_mv AT seungbeomkim adoptionofsatelliteofficesinresponsetoapandemicsustainabilityandinfectioncontrol
AT yooneunlee adoptionofsatelliteofficesinresponsetoapandemicsustainabilityandinfectioncontrol
AT byungchulchoi adoptionofsatelliteofficesinresponsetoapandemicsustainabilityandinfectioncontrol
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