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Businesses The Almighty Buck

Spanish Siesta Culture Lets Entrepreneur Turn Naps Into Gold (bloomberg.com) 45

An anonymous reader shares a Bloomberg report: There's little that's more Spanish than the afternoon siesta. As the mid-day sun goes up, businesses in small-town Spain pull down their shutters for a traditional nap. In big urban centers, modern business trends have ended that habit, leaving many Spaniards who work long hours exhausted. Now, Maria Estrella Jorro de Inza has found a way to bring back the siesta, making money while her countrymen nap. Bankers, lawyers and consultants catch up on their sleep at Siesta and Go -- Madrid's first nap-bar located in Azca, in the heart of the city's financial district that's home to firms like HSBC, Google and Deloitte. The concept is simple: for just 14 euros ($16) an hour, you get to unwind and take a power nap in a private bedroom before heading back to work. "It's funny that we're known for the siesta, but we haven't been professional about it," said De Inza, the nap-bar's 32-year-old founder. "We get a lot of men in suits who just want to relax and women wanting to take their heels off. Lunch break is the busiest time."
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Spanish Siesta Culture Lets Entrepreneur Turn Naps Into Gold

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  • I wish that more employers whose workers didn't do shift-work or didn't have to work closely with other people were more flexible about downtime during the day. There have been days when a quick 30 minute nap would've really benefited me, but I've seen coworkers get in trouble when discovered asleep at their desks.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      I liked the flexible hours I had in my previous jobs as long as I was working during the core hours and let people know the times I would be unavailable.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Friday June 30, 2017 @03:00AM (#54717963)

      I wish that more employers whose workers didn't do shift-work or didn't have to work closely with other people were more flexible about downtime during the day. There have been days when a quick 30 minute nap would've really benefited me, but I've seen coworkers get in trouble when discovered asleep at their desks.

      I believe there's been scientific study into showing that the siesta isn't just something cultural, but actually human. And afternoon performance does significantly improve after the siesta. It's also not strictly Spanish, for Italy also has it.

      There's a natural low in energy around 2pm or so.

      • Mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the Mid-day sun.

        In the warmer latitudes, especially before air-conditioning, the post-noon hours are the hottest, most uncomfortable time of day. Between post-prandial torpor and natural biorhythm, it's only natural to want to sleep until the heat has weakend. And then there's the UV exposure factor for outdoor workers. Despite the opinions of people from chillier climates, however, this doesn't have to mean working less - more evening time is employed (also note that winte

  • Finally... (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    ...a hotel that's pay by the hour. I don't know why nobody has ever thought of this before!

    • by lucm ( 889690 )

      I don't see how they make money, unless they have slaves to change bedsheets (or don't change bedsheets at all).

      And honestly I find it a bit unappealing. When they have their rush hour, it means that you get in a bed warmed by someone else, like a warm toilet seat during a busy event at the stadium. No thanks.

  • Man, there are days I'd actually pay $16 to crash out on a real bed at lunchtime instead of snoozing in the front seats of my vehicle in the parking lot. I may fold up rather well but it doesn't mean I wouldn't like to stretch out.
  • "We get a lot of men in suits who just want to relax and women wanting to take their heels off. Lunch break is the busiest time."

    Know what I mean?

  • One guy with a jackhammer out front can drive away all your business.
  • There are places like this in Japan, one a few minutes walk from my work place in Downtown Tokyo. It's basically sound proof, clean, even offers some tea etc. They are great.
    • There are places like this in Japan, one a few minutes walk from my work place in Downtown Tokyo. It's basically sound proof, clean, even offers some tea etc. They are great.

      I have stayed in the Capsule Inn in Roppongi several times. It is the best deal in Tokyo. There is a TV built into the ceiling of each capsule, so you watch it laying flat on your back. The best part is the hot tub in the basement. The water in the tub is nearly hot enough to make tea, which lowers the sperm count of Japanese men so much that they have one of the lowest birthrates in the world.

      List of countries by birthrate [wikipedia.org]

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I am spanish, and the nap thing is a thing of the past. We work 10-12 hour shifts, we are basically the slaves of Europe.

    We'd love to nap, though.

  • In the center-south of Spain with temperatures that can reach 40C in the summer it would be tough for farmers to work in the field during the hotest hours.
  • That's the burning question.

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