Mock Research Proposal
Coronavirus had redefined the way people now live, work, and socialize. For this reason, people had to strictly follow safety measures so that pandemic ends soon, which has forced them to stay at home and rethink how they should spend their lives with the sources of earning they used to have. The purpose of this report is to propose a method for reusing the office buildings that have been standing empty since the advent of the current pandemic due to increased working from home.
Recently, the pandemic has changed the way our lives operate. A survey of the precious flu spreads in the world conducted in 2016 suggested that virus spreads occur mostly in offices among well-developed strong adults (Richtel, 2020). It has already been predicted that when the pandemic is over, the workers would be allowed to work from home, making the office buildings only the meeting places for clients (Humberd, Salon & Latham, 2020). It is well-established the offices' needed tasks to be completed that can be done online and virtually, though relationships in firms should be retained with one-to-one meetings, especially with clients. Physical proximity to interactions and building mutual trust are revamped in today's world. If office buildings are kept vacant for long, tax revenues would fall, which is needed to pay community servicers like trash pickers or road repairs (Schwan, 2020).
Years before this pandemic arrived, there had been several pieces of research that supported the reuse of empty office buildings. In Fairfax County, Virginia, Washington, the state law had approved the reuse of empty office buildings for living apartments, schools, co-working spaces, or food storage chambers (Fairfax County, 2017). It was proposed that the board's new use should be approved so that they do not disturb the surrounding neighborhood peace and must follow the specific guidelines for the rebuilt or renovation.
However, there are opportunities and risks for converting an office space into a living one. The most feasible solution for transforming the empty office buildings seems its reuse as houses since more low-income citizens find it difficult to search for a new affordable home in Corona times (Day, 2020). The city development, reuse of the abandoned buildings, hard housing market conditions, and sustainability for the reduction in CO2 emissions are the major drivers for the conversion of the empty office buildings into living spaces so that social welfare is maximized (Remoy & Voordt, 2015). Commercial buildings like office constructions could be more feasible for housing since they have conducive open-space or transforming into housing and has low rentals, especially for hard financial times faced by low-income aggregates of the population. The risks include financial feasibility, damage to neighboring structures, functional adaptability of the building itself with its measurements, legal constraints, and the difference in price expectations of the building rentals by the re0developers and the owners. There is little viability for open space that these vacant buildings provide for converting them into housing. It requires a long public process for its conversion, and the appropriateness for plumbing, kitchen, and wooden structures is to be figured out soon (Berg, 2020).
Methodology
The research methodology that I propose for this study would be the case study method. This method would provide investigating the phenomenon within the context of particular exploration. Various data sources would be researched to adopt several lenses for scrutinizing the problem. The empty office buildings and their conversion into the housing apartments can be studied with this research design so that the procedure, the difficulties that are undertaken during the conversion, and challenges...
References
Berg, N. (2020, July 17). Coronavirus had emptied out office buildings. Could they help solve the housing crisis? Fast Company. Retrieved from https://www.fastcompany.com/90528263/coronavirus-has-emptied-out-office-buildings-could-they-help-solve-americas-housing-crisis
Bergold, J. & Thomas, S. (2012). Participatory research methods: A methodological approach in motion. Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 13(1). http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs1201302
Day, N. (2020, July 29). Unused buildings will make good housing in the world of Covid-19. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/unused-buildings-will-make-good-housing-in-the-world-of-covid-19-142897
Fairfax County. (2017, December 6). Converting empty office buildings into new uses. Retrieved from https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/news2/converting-empty-office-buildings-into-new-uses/
Harrison, H., Birjs, M., Franklin, R. & Mills, J. (2017). Case study research: Foundations and methodological orientations. Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 18(1). http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs1701195.
Humberd, B. Salon, D. & Latham, S.F. (2020, July 24). The office is dead! Long live the office in a post-pandemic world. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/the-office-is-dead-long-live-the-office-in-a-post-pandemic-world-138499
Jamshed, S. (2014). Qualitative research method- interviewing and observation. Journal of Basic and Clinical Pharmacy, 5(4), 87-88. DOI: 10.4103/0976-0105.141942
Kaur-Gill, S. & Dutta, M.J. (2017). Digital ethnography. In C.S. Davis & R.F. Potter. The international encyclopedia of communication research methods (pp. 1-10). New Jersey: Wiley.
Paterson, B.L., Bottorf, J.L. & Hewat, R. (2003). Blending observational methods: Possibilities, strategies, and challenges. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 2(1), 29-38. https://doi.org/10.1177/160940690300200103
Richtel, M. (2020, May 4). The pandemic may mean the end of the open-floor office. The New York Times. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/04/health/coronavirus-office-makeover.html
Schwan, H. (2020, September 12). Pandemic brings commercial pause. Milford Daily News. Retrieved from https://www.milforddailynews.com/story/business/real-estate/2020/09/12/will-office-buildings-become-ghost-towns-because-people-will-continue-to-work-from-home-experts-disa/42892117/
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