The new office is.. a petrol station

A car pulls into the petrol station where British cyclist Bradley Wiggins and a van collided near his home, Chorley in northern England November 8, 2012. Tour de France and Olympic time trial champion Wiggins spent the night in hospital with minor rib injuries after a collision with a van near his home in Lancashire, northern England on Wednesday. REUTERS/Phil Noble (BRITAIN - Tags: SPORT CYCLING ENERGY)

A car pulls into the petrol station where British cyclist Bradley Wiggins and a van collided near his home, Chorley in northern England November 8, 2012. Tour de France and Olympic time trial champion Wiggins spent the night in hospital with minor rib injuries after a collision with a van near his home in Lancashire, northern England on Wednesday. REUTERS/Phil Noble (BRITAIN - Tags: SPORT CYCLING ENERGY)

Published Mar 26, 2015

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London - Freeway service station car parks may be bleak, but they are increasingly popular with business people looking for a quiet place to work, according to academic research.

Working from a parked car offers commuters more space and tranquillity than working on a train, the study indicates. In comparison, business people complain that train carriages and planes are noisy and cramped.

Sociologist Dr Donald Hislop and psychologist Dr Carolyn Axtell analysed almost 700 forms handed out on intercity trains in the East Midlands, an M1 motorway survey station in the Midlands and a regional airport in southern England.

Loughborough University's Dr Hislop and Dr Axtell, of the University of Sheffield, said “significant variations” in noise and lack of space “inhibited people's ability to work” on trains and planes.

They found that while 42 per cent of respondents in trains, 29 per cent at the airport and 13 per cent on the planes worked “quite a lot” or a “great deal”, 66 per cent did the same at a service station car park or building.

In their paper, published in the journal Work, Employment and Society, the academics also discovered that commuters prefer pen and paper on trains and planes but reverted to laptops and smartphones at airports and service stations.

The Independent

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