
The Chinese company in Chengdu changed the forgiven pool into a temporary office. An employee from the Luban Decoration Group has shared a viral video that shows people working from the pool, according to the South China Morning Post.
The gym, swimming pool and office are on the same floor. Employees enter the pool office through glass doors. The original structure of the fund remains. Signs such as the “swimming area” and “deep water 1.55 m” are still visible. The company has been using it for two months.
Employees address their tables using ladies of the pool. The worker explained that the unusual arrangement was caused by a continued reconstruction.
Photos show tables arranged in five lines, each with eight workstations. There are floor sockets and extension wires.
One worker joked that it was like sitting in the film SCI -fi, when the pool stripes under the tables caused every space to feel like a diving tank, SCMP reported. While many found cold and unique settings, others raised serious fire safety concerns.
The lawyer pointed to the risks of blocked exits and missing measures for fire safety.
“This sunk office arrangement is really unique. If you try to relax, the boss just has to take a few steps and the whole office is in sight. It’s even more efficient than tracking cameras!” SCMP quoted social media users.
“The underwater office may look trends, but moisture could cause rheumatism. Sitting for hours in a deep end? My joints did not survive,” they came from another.
The toilet has become homes
In 2013, the BBC announced that some people in London changed old public toilets into homes and businesses to deal with rising real estate prices.
The report referred to Peter Tomlinson, who used his savings to turn the toilet near Oxford Circus for coffee and sandwich shop, spent over £ 100,000 (around £1 crore). Tomlinson even changed the old urinals to the table tops.
Architect Laura Jane Clark spent £ 60,000 (around £60 Lakh) To convert the toilet into a Crystal Palace into an apartment with one bedroom. Her living room was once a gentleman’s toilet. The service office became its bathroom.
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