There’s nothing that separates people as the subject of working from home. On the one side, some people claim that telecommuting is fantastic, there’s no commute, no office politics, no clock-watching, no pointless group meetings, no boring chatter around the water cooler. On the other side of the argument, others say they simply could not muster up the self-control that’s vital to be a telecommuter. They might be a bit reluctant to send any clients to their home. There’s simply too many distractions to even begin the working day. Finally, the office is great because they want to escape home life.
Critics of home working now have something that may really make them think twice : the garden room. Garden rooms (or garden studios) are built in your garden, isolated from your house. A garden office offers you an opportunity to work in a quiet, free thinking environment, with the natural garden all around you, and a serene place to conduct group meetings.
The fact that the garden studio is separate from your house is a vital one. It offers you an opportunity to escape from domesticity to your business. Utilizing the net and VOIP, it’s uncomplicated to acquire a separate telephone number just for the garden studio.
Think about further plus points :-
- They’re environmentally friendly : the travel from household to garden expends only human footprints, not carbon ones
- You can conduct business at anytime. Creative juices don’t automatically flow from nine to five, so if you have an idea, or only desire to complete a project ahead of time, walk into your garden studio
- It’s a comfy, incandescent, natural environment. No sick building syndrome here. No glaring lights, grey walls and cubicles
Garden offices can recoup their costs in only a few years, and repayments on a loan for a garden office are often comparable, or cheaper than, office rental costs.











