A fake VR product made strung-out workers think they were in nature — and people wanted to buy it
Imagine during work, when you're feeling the walls are caving in on you, that you can just run to the woods. No packing, no cars, no bosses. Just five minutes on the clock to walk up a mountain and hear the wind against the trees.
Somewhere, a disembodied voice asks you if you feel a connection to the nature around you.
At Toronto's IIDEX, a design and architecture conference, futurist Stuart Candy let crowds demo the NaturePod, a mock (read: not a real product) virtual reality program that lets strung-out workers take a simulated walk in the woods.
It's so close to being believable that people actually bought into it. And that was the point.
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Candy tells Tech Insider that Interface wanted to help make something that would be a conversation starter. For a company that has its roots firmly set in interior design, funding this mock product would be a way of virtually stepping outside its usual boundaries.
"There's a lot of research coming out that's quantifying the health, productivity benefits contributed by biophilic design intervention," said Nadine Gud, director of sustainability strategy at Interface. "That's all about how you recreate the experience of being in nature inside the built environment."
And while the goal for Interface was to facilitate a positive discussion about bringing nature into the workplace, the actual act of sticking yourself into a simulated natural environment had dystopian underpinnings. Like, would you even feel comfortable resorting to doing that?
In a truly dystopian scenario, people might not even go outside anymore for their break — companies could invest in some sort of VR project that takes the trouble out of giving their employees vacations, adequate breaks, and proper access to mental health benefits. That sort of future is terrifying to think about, but even moreso is a present that's enabling it.
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