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Phasing of works in occupied offices
Management method

Phasing of works in occupied offices

Phasing of works in occupied offices: the 4-step Kytom method, project phases, phased schedule and controlled cohabitation over ~12 weeks.

11 cities covered
1 200+ spaces transformed
66 passionate people

"How do we organise things with the teams"

What our clients tell us.

You will recognise your situation if…

  • Employees discover the disruptions on the very morning they occur.
  • The schedule slips by 2 to 3 weeks without any alert.
  • Work zones and occupied zones overlap dangerously.
  • Management receives daily acoustic complaints.

Issues and impacts

Hidden cost

A poorly phased day of work costs on average 180 euros per affected employee. On a floor of 80 people, that represents 14,400 euros lost in productivity for each day of unanticipated disruption. The overtime hours at night to make up for the delay increase the bill by 25 to 40%.

Human risk

Unphased work sites record 31% more sick leave, mainly linked to acoustic stress and degraded air quality. HR teams also note an 18% increase in turnover within the 6 months following a poorly managed project, particularly among managers in open-plan spaces.

Regulatory risk

Regulations require the physical separation of work zones from occupied workstations. A phasing failure exposes management to an immediate work stoppage by the inspectorate, as well as a fine of up to 10,000 euros per infringement observed during a CSSCT inspection visit.

How Kytom goes about it

Since 2006, Kytom has been managing operations on occupied sites according to a logic of calibrated project phases. Each phase covers 150 to 250 m² deliverable in 2 to 3 weeks, with a secured buffer zone and a schedule communicated to teams 15 days before the start. Our 11 agencies deploy a site manager dedicated to phasing, who coordinates internal relocations, furniture deliveries and technical interventions. Across 1,200+ delivered projects, 94% have respected the planned cohabitation without interrupting business activity. We systematically include an internal communication contact on the client side, validate noisy slots outside meeting hours, and measure acoustics at the zone boundary to stay below the 55 dB(A) recommended by ANACT.

Our method

  1. 1. Diagnose

    Audit of flows, uses and operational constraints over 5 to 10 days. Mapping of critical zones (server rooms, client spaces, sensitive workstations). Deliverable: cohabitation matrix validated by management and the CSE, with an initial acoustic survey and updated evacuation plan.

  2. 2. Frame

    Breakdown into phases of 150 to 250 m², sequenced according to team availability and activity peaks. Definition of buffer zones, authorised noisy hours and separate site access. Deliverable: phased Gantt schedule over 12 weeks, validated on a contradictory basis with employee representatives.

  3. 3. Design

    Detailed design by phase, furniture selection (Vitra, Herman Miller depending on budget), validation of acoustic prototypes in the showroom. Coordination with the trades to limit co-activities. Deliverable: tender documents by lot, technical sheet per phase and weekly internal communication plan.

  4. 4. Deliver

    Execution phase by phase with a biweekly site meeting and a team check-in on Fridays. Partial acceptance after each phase, clearance of reservations within 5 days. Deliverable: acceptance report, as-built documentation (DOE) and a formalised feedback report for the next phases.

Cost and ROI

Cost range per m²
950 to 1,600 euros excl. tax/m²
Additional cost of 8 to 12% linked to phasing, absorbed by business continuity.
Timeframe
12 to 18 weeks
20% longer vs an empty site, offset by zero relocation days.
Typical ROI
Payback in 18 to 30 months
Average saving of 220 euros per workstation avoided in temporary rental.

An anonymised field testimonial

"We renovated 1,400 m² while keeping 110 employees on site. The breakdown into 6 phases and the weekly check-ins completely defused the teams' concerns."

-68% vs previous project
Acoustic complaints
100% of phases delivered on time
Schedule compliance
240,000 euros avoided
Relocation saving

Frequently asked questions

How many phases should be planned for 1,000 m²?

On average 4 to 6 phases of 150 to 250 m², depending on occupancy density and business constraints. Kytom sets each phase at 2 to 3 weeks of execution, with a buffer zone of at least 3 metres between works and occupied workstations.

Must the CSE be consulted before phasing?

Yes, a prior consultation of the CSE on working conditions is mandatory before the works begin. Kytom provides a technical CSE file within 10 days, including the phased schedule, projected acoustic measures and an updated evacuation plan.

What additional cost for a project on an occupied site?

The additional cost ranges between 8 and 12% compared to an empty site, linked to reinforced protections, interventions outside working hours and daily cleaning. This additional cost remains lower than a temporary relocation (180 to 320 euros per workstation per month).

How is noise managed during meetings?

We schedule noisy tasks (drilling, demolition) in validated slots, generally 8am-9.30am and 5pm-7pm. An acoustic survey at the zone boundary guarantees less than 55 dB(A) in occupied spaces, the reference threshold for intellectual work.

Does phasing significantly extend the timeframe?

An occupied site takes 15 to 25% more time vs an empty site. For 850 m², expect 14 to 16 weeks instead of 12. This timeframe remains well below the cumulative 4 to 6 months of a back-and-forth relocation.

Who manages communication to the teams?

Kytom appoints a lead site manager, who co-runs a weekly check-in with the client contact (HR director or office manager). A 2-page site newsletter is distributed every Friday to all 80 to 150 employees concerned.