The Walkstation

Oct 20, 2007 20:36


American workers are fat--and it's our employers' fault. According to The Marlin Company’s just-released 2007 workplace poll conducted by Harris Interactive,

just 36% of workers in 2004 said their company was “very active” or “somewhat active” in offering information about exercise and healthy eating, 22% fewer than in 2007. The number of employees whose companies were “not at all” or “not very active” has dropped from 63% in 2004 to 41% in 2007. Meanwhile, it seems that companies have not made the same strides to discourage junk food consumption. In the 2004 survey, 84% of workers whose companies had vending machines said their workplace vending machines were stocked with snacks, such as potato chips, cookies, and candy bars, a difference of just 9% over 2007.

Yeah! I'd be Ashley Olsen if it weren't for that damn Snickers bar singing an aria at me from the kitchen vending machine. Whoever put that there is the one to blame for my creeping weight gain. If only they'd replace the oily, sugary snacks with a basketful of raw cabbage--well, hello, America's Next Top Middle-Aged Model.

So what's the answer, other than planting an IED in the snack-food dispenser? Steelcase and Dr. James Levine of the Mayo Clinic think they've got one: the treadmill cubicle.

You read me right. It's called the Walkstation.

Would I want to exercise at my desk while, say, interviewing a CEO on the phone and scribbling notes? More importantly: could I pull it off without collapsing in a humiliating heap? If you want to give it a whirl, go to 4 Columbus Circle on Oct. 25, where the Walkstation will be on display. Says here there'll be refreshments. Wonder if I can walk 1 mph, type, and talk on the phone without getting nougaty Snickers crumbs on my dress.

Source: Work in Progress

hardware

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