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Archive for April 12th, 2009


When I got my first job in 1972 at Refinería Panamá, S.A., a subsidiary of Texaco Inc., our office was organized in a large room with several desks neatly placed against each other to maximize space.  Only the honchos had their own offices with one or two windows facing, either a street or the nearby ocean. The ocean window was the big  job trophy.

The number of windows, palm trees, or pictures on the wall exposed how high you stood in the company’s hierarchy.  I was down on the basement with the rest of my peers.  My place was one of the many desks tightly packed in one big well illuminated room.  In that sitting arrangement,  everybody listened to your phone calls and saw what you were doing.  There was no privacy whatsoever.  It was the perfect labor organization dating back to the era of American engineer, Frederick Taylor, the father of Scientific Management at the turn of the century.

These large rooms with veritable fields of desks, slowly gave way to the cubicles, which introduced some privacy to the workplace.  If you wanted to talk to your next door co-worker you had to peek over to his cubicle.  It was a funny scene.

I remember working for a large call center in Panama called Sitel, which had hundreds of cubicles.  When you entered the huge operating floor, you saw literally hundreds of cubicles organized in neat rows with one person inserted in his own cubicles like a bee or ant inside his or her cell.

Over at Wired they’ve put together a brief history of the modern workspace, complete with diagrams of how offices have been laid out over the last century. It’s not only a fascinating look at how our work spaces have been arranged, but fun way to see how your present workspace falls into the spectrum of office design.

Below is the evolution of office design in the United States:

  • Taylorism (Circa 1904)
  • Bürolandschaft (Circa 1960)
  • Action Office (1968)
  • Cube Farm (Circa 1980)
  • Virtual Office (Circa 1994)
  • Networking (Present)

Can you share with us, what is your seating arrangement at your present job?  Good Day.

Source:  Evolution of Office Spaces Reflects Changing Attitudes Toward Work – Wired Magazine

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Last Sunday I had to get out of the house because of the extremely hot temperatures.  It was boiling inside.  In an attempt to get some fresh air, I drove over to Balboa Heights which is located beside Ancon Hill. It was a nice change of temperature, with a soft breeze blowing  from the North-East.  Ahhh… it felt so good!

I have driven many times through Balboa Heights and looked up at the Royal Palm trees surrounding the Gorgas Hospital, but never really saw them.  This time I noticed these elegant tropical trees and saw them.  Perhaps for the very first time.

Let me stop for a moment and explain about these tall and slender tropical trees.  The scientists of the world know this tree as “Oreodoxa Regia”. The name “Oreodoxa” originated from two Greek words that mean “mountain” and “glory” and the word “Regia” means “regal”.   The other names of this tree in English are “Mountain Glory”, and “Bottle Palm”.

Commonly known as  Royal Palms, the genus was named after Roy Stone, a U.S. Army engineer, in memory of the work he did in road building in Puerto Rico during the capture of the island.  It contains some of the most recognizable and commonly cultivated palms in tropical and subtropical regions.

Royal palms are widely planted for decorative purposes throughout their native region, and elsewhere in the tropics and subtropics. They are considered by many to be the most beautiful palm in the world.

With smooth light gray trunks that looks as if they had been cast from concrete resembling cathedral pillars, there is not a more impressive palm with which to line a boulevard.  Such is the case of the double row of Royal Palm Trees located at El Prado Boulevard in Balboa.

The Florida Royal Palm (Roystonea elata) is native to the cypress swamps of south Florida. It is disappearing from the wild but nice stands can still be seen at the Royal Palm Visitors Center near Homestead, Florida in the Everglades National Park. The Cuban Royal Palm (Roystonea regia) is native to Cuba where it grows wild, specially in the Province of Santa Clara.

The Florida Royal Palm grows from 50 to 100 feet tall and has a beautiful crown of pinnate leaves sometimes over 20 feet diameter. The gray trunk of the Florida Royal palm develops an elongated bulge that sometimes rises to the middle of the tree.

The grace and beauty of a Royal palm makes it a popular tree along the streets of many cities. Often they are used in the islands of large parking lots or in medians along the highway.  Nothing says “tropical” like the majestic Royal palm.

The name says it all, Royal Palm! Truly an aristocrat of the plant kingdom, this palm makes a memorable impression wherever it is grown. Massive and symmetrical with a smoothly sculpted trunk this palm looks almost artificial, like a denizen of an idealized Disney landscape. But it is real and lends a distinctive air to parkways and boulevards all over South Florida and the Caribbean.

When I saw the neat rows of Royal Palm Trees flanking the road of Balboa Heights, I stopped the car and took some pictures.  This is how my camera captured these giant pillars of smooth light gray color reaching for the blue sky.  Here we go.

Photograph of Florida Royal Palm Trees located in front of Gorgas Hospital at Balboa Heights, Panama City, Panama.  (Credit:  Omar Upegui R.)

Photograph of several Florida Royal Palm Trees located in front of the Gorgas Hospital at Balboa Heights, Panama City, Panama. (Credit: Omar Upegui R.)

View of the top of several Florida Royal Palm Trees contrasting with the deep red tile roof of the Gorgas Hospital.  (Credit:  Omar Upegui R.)

View of the top of several Florida Royal Palm Trees contrasting with the deep red tile roof of the Gorgas Hospital. (Credit: Omar Upegui R.)

Photograph of several slender Florida Royal Palm trees in front of the Gorgas Hospital.  Notice how two palm trees lean towards each other to exchange a tropical kiss.  (Credit:  Omar Upegui R.)

Photograph of several slender Florida Royal Palm trees in front of the Gorgas Hospital. Notice how two palm trees lean towards each other to exchange a tropical kiss. (Credit: Omar Upegui R.)

In this photograph you can appreciate the impressive cylindrical shape of the trunks as they stretch upwards as if to touch the sky.  In the middle of the leaves, you can see a leaf that looks like a spear pointing straight up.  The Gorgas Hospital building in the background adds beauty to the composition.  (Credit:  Omar Upegui R.)

In this photograph you can appreciate the impressive cylindrical shape of the tree trunks as they stretch upwards as if wanting to touch the soft blue sky. In the middle of the leaves, you can see an elongated bulge that looks like a spear pointing straight up. The Gorgas Hospital building in the background adds beauty to the composition. (Credit: Omar Upegui R.)

Not only did I got a breath of fresh air driving to Balboa Heights that hot Sunday afternoon, but I also got to capture one of the most beautiful tropical trees on this side of the world.  Good Day.

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(Credit:  Omar Upegui R./Michael Moore)

(Credit: Omar Upegui R./Michael Moore)

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