
‘The ceremony of checking in and then also checking out goes a really long way in creating a balance, he said. 'If there's a way that you can travel to your work station – even putting that work station in a different part of the house or in a corner of an area that you don't particularly use – it goes a long way,’ he explains. 'I’m all about the versatility of pieces that allow you to work, and then close work off,' says Nate. The couple retrofitted a cabinet in their home to accommodate a workspace, and finds value in under-utilized or overlooked nooks and crannies of a home. Add a pair of lamps or a single lamp and you’re set up for your computer workstation.’ 'A console could easily go against a wall with a dining chair at it, or a desk chair. ‘We know so many people are trying to carve out a niche or carve out a space that they can leave their work things set up overnight – so that they're not packing their things away, and so the room doesn't look terrible,' Nate Berkus (opens in new tab) and Jeremiah Brent (opens in new tab) told Homes & Gardens.
