The Stories Behind Home Office Desks
The desks Duke鈥檚 colleagues use at home are as unique as the employees
![Clockwise from top left: Tapitha Jamison's salvaged desk, Regina Schwartz and her hand-me-down tables, Vera Luck's repainted desk and Donald Tait's custom work surface.](/sites/default/files/legacy-files/styles/story_hero/public/Desk%20collage%20HERO.jpg?itok=r19lCkK5)
In a room on the second floor of Donald Tait鈥檚 home, there鈥檚 a wooden desk that hugs a corner. It has a large flat surface and, with sleek curving legs, offers plenty of open space underneath. Tait, a family medicine doctor with Duke Primary Care Knightdale, said the desk is exactly what he pictured for the room. That鈥檚 because he built the thing himself.
With help from his father, he took two pieces of oak-veneered wood, stained them, joined them together and added legs, creating a large, custom piece of furniture.
鈥淚 love it,鈥 said Tait, who lives in Wake Forest and joined Duke from Santa Fe, New Mexico last summer. 鈥淚t has more sentimental value than something you could buy at the store. It鈥檚 kind of cool when you can walk into a room and say 鈥業 built that.鈥 There鈥檚 a story behind it.鈥
With many Duke employees fully remote or splitting time between campus and home offices, finding the right desk or work surface has been a common challenge. Finding one that helps your work style and physical well-being isn鈥檛 always easy. For employees such as Tait, who spends most of his time working in his clinic but does work from home on occasion, having a desk that鈥檚 functional, comfortable and includes a cool backstory is a thrill.
There are plenty of cool desks on Duke鈥檚 campus, including one that belonged to celebrated author But from second-hand treasures to repurposed pieces of furniture, colleagues who are working remote have some pretty neat desks, too.
Surprise Workspace
After she was fully vaccinated in March, Regina Schwartz, flew to Germany to visit family members she hadn鈥檛 seen since the pandemic began. With flights originating from Washington, D.C., she used the trip as an opportunity to visit old friends in Virginia.
Her friends were new parents and looking to reduce the clutter in their home, so they suggested that Schwartz, a Duke Radiology research fellow, take a pair of small tables back to Durham. While driving home with the unplanned additions to her home furnishings, Schwartz thought of ways the tables might come in handy.
鈥淚 basically had just moved into a new apartment, so I was guessing that they might fit in my home office and free up the dining room table I had been working on,鈥 Schwartz said. 鈥淏ut I wasn鈥檛 entirely certain how I was going to arrange them.鈥
Fast forward a few months, and Schwartz has a remote work set-up she loves. The two tables sit in a corner of her home office, providing a tidy, comfortable space for her two monitors, work documents and Artemis, a friendly 3-year-old cat. She adopted Artemis during the pandemic, and the cat enjoys curling up by her feet.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great because I can both stand and sit,鈥 Schwartz said. 鈥淎nd sometimes I need both workstations at the same time, so by having them in a corner, I can pivot between the two. And I feel I鈥檓 more productive with a cute little kitty sitting there.鈥
Personal Touch
In 2018, Vera Luck came across a Craigslist post about office desks that a retiring accountant was looking to get rid of. With their boxy, modern lines and ample surface and storage, Luck, director of foundation relations with Duke Alumni Engagement and Development, felt one of the desks would fit perfectly in her home.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 need one for work at the time, but I wanted a place to put my personal papers and things,鈥 Luck said.
After spending $50 on one of the desks, Luck set about personalizing it. She replaced the hardware and painted it a shade of very dark blue called 鈥淪tarless Night.鈥
鈥淚 researched and learned to put primer on first,鈥 Luck said. 鈥淭he primer alone looked terrible. But I felt better once I put a few coats of paint on top of it. It鈥檚 not perfect, there are some flaws, but I鈥檓 happy with how it turned out.鈥
When the pandemic began, Luck traded her workspace in downtown Durham for her bedroom, where she gained a new appreciation for her hand-painted desk.
鈥淚 like it because it鈥檚 very basic and functional,鈥 Luck said. 鈥淚t has a big surface, so I have plenty of room for papers, monitors and whatever I need.鈥
A Lucky Curbside Find
During the pandemic, Duke Cancer Institute Grants and Contracts Administrator Tapitha Jamison has spent her workdays sitting at a sturdy desk made of shiny blond wood and with plenty of storage space and legroom.
鈥淭hat desk has been nothing but comfort for me,鈥 Jamison said.
Her affection for the desk is related to more than just its looks of functionality. For her, it goes back to when she found the desk, or perhaps, when the desk found her.
In 2018, before she found her spot at Duke, Jamison was studying for a master鈥檚 degree in global operations and supply chain management, part of her goal of charting a new career path. At the time, she didn鈥檛 have a great spot in her Durham apartment from which to work.
But one day, on a walk around her complex, she saw a desk sitting on the curb, waiting to be hauled to the landfill.
鈥淚 just remember seeing this beautiful wooden desk,鈥 Jamison said. 鈥淚t was durable, while it may have had a stain here and there, everything was intact.鈥
Jamison got help from two maintenance workers, who brought the desk into her home, and before long, it was the setting for the march to her masters鈥 degree.
And when the pandemic kept her away from her Hock Plaza office, the desk once again came in handy as her remote work home base.
鈥淗aving the right environment is so important,鈥 Jamison said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not comfortable, or if everything is cluttered, it鈥檚 going to have an effect on what you do.鈥
Do you have a desk with a cool story? Tell us about it in the comments of the Facebook post below.
Send story ideas, shout-outs and photographs through or write working@duke.edu.