Some companies struggle to accommodate employees who really want to work from home. I’ll bet that The Great Exhibition, a creative studio in Stockholm with the painfully designed website that I’ve seen in years, doesn’t have to convince workers to work from the office. The new facility has a fully functional 200-foot long roller coaster inside.
Fast Company tells us about this new working environment that I hope will attract the attention of Neatorama CEO Alex Santoso, who will no doubt leap at the opportunity to put our firm at the forefront of entrepreneurial innovation. An in-office roller coaster enhances drone productivity by providing a form of rapid transit through an office complex.
Petter Kakracka, the founder of The Great Exhibition, says that he overcame naysayers who told him that “it’s not only impossible, it’s impractical, dangerous, and too expensive” to construct a creativity-generating tool appropriately named “The Frontal Lobe.”