Give Mitch the basement office furthest from the Senate floor. Make him walk. Just when he gets back, make him turn around and walk back by calling a vote. Do it often.
I'd love this too, but those offices are pretty much set in stone. The Speaker's office hasn't changed since Gingrich, for example. I stumbled upon an old Capitol office layout from 2000 and decided to read up on them over lunch yesterday. I know, super exciting topic. What's crazy is how many offices leadership actually occupy in the Capitol:
CDIR-2000-10-01-CAPITOL.pdf (govinfo.gov)
Take Peolsi, she gets:
HB–5, 13
H–127, 128
H–209, 210, 220, 227, 228, 229, 232A, 233, 236, 230, 231, 232.
H–326, 327, 333, 334, 335
H–419A, 419B, 419C, 419D, 419E
The Senate calls them hideaways. They are divied up by seniority and don't change much unless someone retires or dies. The layout is old and doesn't reflect the recent renovations.
And they also have offices in the external House/Senate office buildings