Empty Spaces The Blogclassic Teams



The best offices have common spaces where employees actually want to spend their free time. Check out these ideas to help make your break room a more relaxing, engaging, and recharging place.

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  • The best offices have common spaces where employees actually want to spend their free time. Check out these ideas to help make your break room a more relaxing, engaging, and recharging place. Your team works hard, so it’s only right that you give them a great place to relax, regroup, and enjoy a few moments of down time.
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Your team works hard, so it’s only right that you give them a great place to relax, regroup, and enjoy a few moments of down time. So, whether you call it a staff break room, staff lunchroom, or employee lounge, what matters most is that it’s an area where your employees are able to truly enjoy a break.

What are the best things you can add to your office common space? The truth is, every workplace is different, and every team has different interests. If you’re really keen to make your staff lunchroom a place that everyone enjoys, then you need to ask your coworkers what they would like to see in it.

That being said, there are a few key items that can really take your break room to the next level. Keep reading to learn about all the things that can help to encourage your team to rest, socialize, and recharge on their work breaks.

Empty Spaces The Blogclassic Teams


10 Great Additions to Any Office Break Room or Common Space

1. Office Library

Promote learning and development at your organization by adding a bookshelf or library to your common space. Employees will naturally seek out things to do on their breaks, so why not give them an opportunity to improve their skills? All you need to do to create your office library is set up a bookshelf and fill with different skill-based books that your team might find interesting. For ideas on what books to fill your library with, check out our blog post: 10 Best Reads on Leadership from Outback’s Leaders.

2. Snack Bar

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Creating a snack bar with healthy food items can help give employees the pick-me-up they need on their breaks. Not only is offering free snacks to employees a great workplace perk, but it also can help them stay productive. A study by the British Journal of Health Psychology showed eating healthy snacks made employees feel more creative, happier, and engaged.

Try stocking your snack bar with the following healthy items for the best results:

  • Bananas, apples, or other fruit
  • Baby carrots, sugar snap peas, or other veggies
  • Nuts
  • Protein Bars
  • Jerky
  • Granola
3. Beer Keg

Many companies have embraced the trend of making free beer available in their employee lounge. But is drinking at work really such a good idea?

This won’t be right for every office, but adding an office beer keg to your break room may provide some benefits if you trust your team to treat it responsibly, such as:

  • It’s a workplace perk that can help to make your office seem trendy, progressive, and fun.
  • According to academic research, individuals who are drinking often display greater creativity and problem solving skills.
  • Studies show light alcohol can help make your team happier and friendlier, which can be a great boost to your team building and positive workplace culture.

Google, a famously forward-thinking company with a well-known penchant for having a great company culture, took this one step further. They transformed their staff lunchroom at their Dublin head office into a full-on Irish pub.

4. Coffee Station

For many teams, coffee is the lifeblood that gets them going in the morning, and keeps them productive throughout the day. If you want to create the ultimate coffee station in your staff lunchroom, try adding a few of the following items:

  • Custom Mugs – Create a custom mug for every employee in the office to use. This can be a great welcome gift for new employees.
  • Glass Jars – Use large mason jars to store your coffee, sugar, and other garnishes like cinnamon.
  • Pastries – What goes better with coffee than a small cookie or croissant? Make these available at your coffee station to take it to the next level.
  • Decorations – Add some small touches, like a vase with fresh flowers in it, or special napkins for employees to use with their coffee.
5. Comfortable Seating

On breaks, some employees like to sit down, while others like to rest their heads. Try to have enough seating for everyone in your office to use the staff break room at the same time. Some seating options you may want to consider include:

  • For Resting – Couches, hammocks, or sleep pods
  • For Eating – Chairs, benches, and picnic tables
  • For Staying Active – Exercise balls, yoga mats, and stationary bikes
6. TV + Netflix
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Employees are often looking for an escape on their work breaks, but you might be hesitant to add a TV to your office common space because you think it will be too distracting. As long as your staff break room is separate enough from where employees are actually doing their work though, a TV with a Netflix account attached can be a great addition! You can even encourage employee bonding by hosting events like movie nights or sports viewing parties.

7. Quiet Rooms

Not everyone wants to socialize on their breaks. Try adding quiet rooms to your office common space so introverted employees who are interested in mindfulness and meditation can rest and recharge. These are spaces that promote peaceful atmospheres to help employees manage their stress and well-being.

The best quiet rooms feature:

  • Dim lighting so that employees can close their eyes
  • Couches or reclining chairs to rest on
  • Soundproofed walls to reduce noise levels
  • Yoga mats for employees interested in meditation
  • Special scents, such as lavender, to promote a sense of calm
8. Team Photos

Don’t leave the walls blank in your employee lounge – fill up the empty space with team photos that showcase just how much fun your team is to work with! Don’t have any team photos? Make sure to snap a few pictures the next time you’re having one of these events:

  • Company BBQ’s
  • Awards Celebrations
  • Corporate Retreats
  • Team Lunches
9. Workout Equipment

Regular exercise has a lot of benefits, including lowering stress levels, improving mood, and boosting confidence. But did you know it can also increase productivity? Add some gym equipment to the common space in your office, and you can encourage employees to stay fit on their breaks.

The best workout equipment for staff break rooms could include:

  • Dumbbells
  • Treadmills
  • Medicine Balls
  • Pull-Up Bars
  • Resistance Bands
  • Yoga Mats

One great example of a company that offers exceptional workout equipment in their staff break room is Nike. Believe it or not, their Beaverton, Oregon, offers a full swimming pool, yoga rooms, and a full gym. While you certainly don’t need to install a pool, a few items of exercise equipment can definitely help take your employee lounge to the next level.

10. Recreation Activities

Playing games or activities can be a great way to encourage employees to bond, take part in a friendly competition, and connect. Make your employee lounge more exciting and engaging for employees by adding some recreation activities. Try incorporating a mix of cerebral and physical things to do so there is something for everyone.

The top recreation activities for staff break rooms:

  • Ping Pong Table
  • Board Games
  • Basketball Hoop
  • Jigsaw Puzzles
  • Foosball Table

If you’re looking for some fun and easy indoor team building activities that you can enjoy right in your office break room, check out five of our favorites:

  1. Getting to Know You – There’s no greater way to help colleagues get to know each other better than with this social scavenger hunt team building activity! Your colleagues will need to learn more about each other in order to tackle photo and video challenges that require them to find people who match specific criteria.
  2. Corporate Escape Rooms – There’s only one way out with this team building activity that turns your employee lounge into a full-on escape room: work together to find clues and solve puzzles before time runs out. We offer two exciting escape room themes – Jewel Heist and The Mummy’s Curse – which we can bring right to your office!
  3. CI: The Crime Investigators – When your office break room becomes the scene of a mysterious crime, your team is the only hope of solving it in this engaging and collaborative exercise. They’ll have to put their heads together and think analytically to find and interpret evidence and decipher clues in order to crack the case.
  4. Code Break – If your work group likes brainteaser challenges, then they’ll love this activity! Code Break divides them into teams and puts them up against a challenging series of puzzles, riddles, and trivia questions. Whichever team earns the most points once time expires will be crowned the winner!
  5. Clue Murder Mystery – You’ve probably never heard of a man named Neil Davidson. But when he is found murdered, your employee lounge turns into police headquarters and team become detectives who will need to come together to solve the mystery of who did it. They’ll need to analyze clues, solve challenges, and figure out who had the means, motive, and opportunity to commit this deadly crime. But it won’t be easy – it’s a real whodunit!


Transform Your Office Environment

Check out 50 Ways to Improve Your Office Environment for a free checklist of more easy-to-implement ideas, or get in touch to learn about how we can help you build a more positive workplace culture with team building and training programs.

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Comments

I'm just trying to produce a basic example, but can't remove the white space between header, section and footer. I've been viewing this through Chrome and Edge.

Is there a standard way of fixing the code below? What am I doing wrong?

Below is my index.html file....

<!DOCTYPE html><html> <meta charset='utf-08'> <head> <title>GP work in progress</title> <link href='normalize.css'> <link href='main.css'> </head> <body> <header> <h1>MY FIRST WEBSITE</h1> <h2>GP</h2> </header> <section> <p>Hello!</p> </section> <footer> <p>© GP 2016</p> </footer> </body></html>

Below is my main.css file......

body { margin: 0; padding: 0;}

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header { background-color: red; margin: 0; padding: 0;}section { background-color: silver; margin: 0; padding: 0; width: 100%}

Spaces

section p{ margin: 0; padding: 0;}footer { background-color: yellow; margin: 0; padding: 0;}

Any help will be greatly appreciated.

Gary

There are multiple solutions detailed at Mastering Margin Collapsing but here is a quick and easy one. Simply apply a little padding to the containers to contain any child element margins.

Here an updated version of the HTML.

Here is the updated CSS with the proposed fix.

Try it out and let us know if you have any questions. ^_^

Cheers!

It looks like the margin from h1, h2 and p are extending past the borders of header, footer and section. You have a number of options here:

1) Clear the margin from h1, h2 and p

2) Apply an overflow setting to the containers header, footer and section

3) Add border or padding to the containers to stop the child element margin from exceeding the container's boundary

I think my favorite would be the overflow fix. Overflow has fixed soo many things for me over the years. ^_^

Thanks for listing all these options.

This would probably be more in the CSS section but anywho...

The problem is not with the sections themselves but actually with the heading and paragraph tags. The margins of them are extending beyond the height of the sections. Normalize.css sets the properties to be more consistent among browsers but a margin still applies.

Try applying a 'reset' consisting of

Hi guys,

Empty Spaces The Blogclassic Teams Must

A big thank for your time and for resolving my problem. All solutions suggested have fixed the issue.

I'll have to read up on the CSS overflow setting.

Empty Spaces The Blogclassic Teams Involved

Thanks again guys! ;)

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