Behind the Glass Curtain
Google’s new headquarters balances its utopian desire for transparency 
with its very real need for privacy.
http://www.metropolismag.com/cda/story.php?artid=2123

By Jade Chang
Posted June 19, 2006

Corin Anderson does not work like most of the world: his office is a 
glass tent, which he shares with two other people. His desk hides behind 
a complex Rube Goldberg-esque maze, built by Anderson out of a toy 
called the Chaos Tower, a sort of theme park for marbles. Each day he 
sits in the midst of figurines, Legos, and stuffed animals, eyes fixed 
on his computer screen and earphones strapped on, for hours at a 
stretch. When he wants a snack, he walks to the fully stocked 
micro-kitchen, maybe breaking open a bag of organic potato chips or 
grabbing a handful of trail mix. Twenty percent of the time—with his 
employer’s full approval—he works on projects of his own devising that 
are only tangentially related to his job. And strangest of all, come 
nightfall he often has no desire to go home, preferring to get dinner, 
gratis, in one of the employee cafés, followed by a few hours playing a 
strategic card game with some colleagues in a small meeting room.

Anderson is a software engineer at Google, which might make him one of 
the most valuable human-resource commodities in the world. Larry Page 
and Sergey Brin, the maverick cofounders of thecompany, are fanatical 
about at least two things: preserving Google’s geek Shangri-la culture 
and changing the way the world searches for information. (They must be 
at least mildly interested in a third—making money—but any talk of cash 
is considered distinctly un-Googley.) In early 2004, as they were 
preparing to announce the hotly anticipated IPO that would make them 
both billionaires, Page and Brin knew that their search engine needed to 
stay fast and relevant, which meant their stable of engineers had to do 
the same. They were already attracting top talent, skimming the cream 
off each season’s fresh crop of PhDs. So they turned their gaze inward, 
hiring New York workplace consultant DEGW and the L.A.-based design firm 
Clive Wilkinson Architects to reexamine and redesign the Googleplex, the 
company’s Mountain View, California, headquarters.

A tall, jovial Brit by way of South Africa, Clive Wilkinson is best 
known for his genre-busting ChiatDay offices, the first in a Frank 
Gehry-designed building fronted by a pair of Claes Oldenburg binoculars 
in Venice, California, where ad agency meetings took place in the 
“boardroom”—at a long meeting table made of surfboards. The space was a 
collection of vibrant, eclectic open offices that loosen up the concept 
of work, designed for creative people much like Wilkinson and his team. 
He has also created a new campus for the Fashion Institute of Design & 
Merchandising that feels more like a boutique hotel than a school.

At entry level the Googleplex—where the core of the engineering group is 
housed along with (or so it is rumored) the cofounders’ top secret 
offices—feels like another signature space for creative types. The 
buzzing open space was conceived, designed, and built out in just under 
a year in one of Google’s existing buildings. Wilkinson imagined it as a 
“town square,” an urban meeting point fed by visitors coming in from the 
lobby, flanked by cafés and dominated by a grand central staircase that 
encourages people to sit on its steps with outlets for laptops. At 
lunchtime the high-ceilinged space is crowded with groups of coworkers 
eating together in front of a whiteboard at least 20 feet long, where 
Googlers keep adding to a jokey operational flowchart. (The steps to 
building a space elevator, something that the cofounders have been 
advocating half seriously for years, include “Hire rogue scientists” and 
“Hire Richard Branson.”) A couple of guys in Google T-shirts wrestle 
with each other, someone whizzes past the window on an electric scooter, 
and everywhere people are sipping on fresh coconuts punched with straws.

The convivial atmosphere was something the cofounders, who were very 
involved with the design process, wanted to foster. For Wilkinson, who 
is accustomed to clients demanding revolutionary work spaces, this was 
nothing unusual. However, after spending time with Page and Brin and the 
Google engineers that would occupy the building, Wilkinson realized that 
he was dealing with a distinctly different species of personnel. “We’ve 
always worked with people who were a mix of left and right brain,” 
Wilkinson says, “but engineers are very left brain. They might work in 
teams, but they require a high level of concentration; they sit in front 
of the computer and crunch formulas in the most extraordinary way.” 
Despite the fun, “it’s a very demanding work culture,” says Andrew Laing 
of DEGW, who has done workplace research studies with other technology 
companies such as Microsoft. “It’s designed almost as a living 
environment—it’s much more like being at a university than being in a 
conventional work environment.”

The learning curve was steep for Wilkinson’s entire team. “I started to 
feel like physical space was almost too primitive a world for these 
people,” says Alexis Rappaport, a principal in Wilkinson’s office. The 
cofounders were convinced that their physical space was important, but 
their approach to it had always been pragmatic. Google’s frugal, 
slapdash approach to its offices was a point of pride; the fast-growing 
company would expand into the abandoned offices of another defunct tech 
outfit and settle in hermit crab-style, reusing furniture and floor plans.

In the beginning the designers and the engineers had a difficult time 
adjusting to one another. Page and Brin were less interested in the 
aesthetics of the space—for a time they lobbied for Google’s signature 
lava lamps and toys—than in circulation and flow. Like their engineers, 
the cofounders were all about solutions—a series of fixes that happen 
fast and smart. Wilkinson sometimes felt like he was speaking a 
different language, one more concerned with an overarching vision eager 
to explore conceptual ideas. His team also had to adjust to the reality 
of the engineers’ workday, which is more anchored to a computer than 
those of their usual range of clients.

Initially Google wanted Wilkinson to work like an engineer, asking both 
his firm and the Chicago-based Environments Group to come up with full 
schematic designs for the space in hopes of incorporating the best 
elements of the two, an approach the company often takes when solving 
engineering problems. But instead they ultimately settled on only one 
firm, after their advisors convinced them that their original strategy 
wasn’t the way to get an optimal design. “Most engineers focus so much 
on how things work and how they’re going to work for them,” says 
advisory team member Mary Davidge, a workplace design consultant who has 
overseen corporate headquarters and campus planning for other advanced 
technology companies, such as EBay, Yahoo!, and Apple. “The way the 
space is going to look and feel is often not as important to them. 
They’re also often less willing to let the designer design it. They’re 
used to developing solutions.”

When Wilkinson realized that the engineers needed to see clear-cut 
reasoning behind design decisions, he began to present his plans as a 
series of solutions, and then Google became receptive. They were 
especially fond of a typology of work spaces that Wilkinson’s office 
developed. “We tried to create a whole variety of experiences,” 
Rappaport says. After examining the ways that employees actually used 
their space, the architects came up with a list of 13 different zones 
and arranged them from hot (“clubhouse”: pool table and lounge area) to 
cold (closed workrooms), depending on the level of interaction they 
encourage. Each floor of the building was divided into five or six 
flexible neighborhoods separated by “landmarks,” the shared public 
spaces that are the center of Google life. There are kitchens full of 
snacks, lounges with pool tables and comfortable seating, and libraries 
of stacked plywood box shelves filled with books and games that Googlers 
have brought in from home and based on, Wilkinson says, “the idea of the 
village library as the repository of thought.” On either end of the 
floor is a structure that looks like a cross between a tree house and a 
guard tower, used for meetings and offices. In the center atrium, 
overlooking the grand staircase, is a group of larger, more luxurious 
meeting rooms. Other small meeting rooms take the shape of yurts—another 
Wilkinson creation—which look like little padded igloos and are easily 
assembled or torn down.

The solution de resistance, though, is the glass tents. Page and Brin 
knew their engineers needed quiet to concentrate on programming, yet the 
company was also dedicated to packing three or four people into an 
office, a configuration that the cofounders liked from their Stanford 
grad-school days. They wanted to achieve that without resorting to an 
impersonal warren of cubicles or a hierarchical system of corner 
offices, which would have belied their mostly flat management structure. 
Despite the priority on concentration, face time is valued, along with 
the sort of serendipitous encounters that might stimulate new ideas 
between engineers not working closely together.

Page and Brin are also fanatical about air quality and preservation of 
natural daylighting but insisted on having offices alongside almost all 
of the windows. Wilkinson’s group designed an ingenious system of tented 
glass offices that allows daylight to stream through the window-side 
offices and into the center of the floor while preserving acoustic 
integrity. The white canopies are made of an acrylic-coated polyester, 
quilted together with polyester-fiber fill. They help reflect light into 
the rest of the office and are topped by a neat unobtrusive unit that 
contains lighting, HVAC, sprinklers, and an air diffuser. At intervals 
panels of glass are glazed in color combos that identify each office 
neighborhood.

“In the beginning there was a lot of open office,” site architect Ruben 
Smudde says. “By the end it was a lot of closed office.” In its early 
years Google was an unusually open company. The algorithms behind its 
search engine were published as an academic paper, the entire fledgling 
company was a Stanford engineering department PhD project, and Page and 
Brin—dubbed the “Google guys”—always spoke freely to journalists. But 
after a few questionable moves—including an interview with Playboy given 
during the SEC’s mandated pre-IPO “quiet period”—the company began to 
close ranks while still trying to maintain a veneer of openness. “Don’t 
Be Evil” is Google’s informal motto, but a recent spate of Evil 
Empire&-style moves—caving in to the Chinese government’s demands that 
they censor certain Web sites, enabling ads that seemed to “read” your 
Gmail, placing long-term “cookies” on your hard drive that retain 
information on your searches—have made its longtime supporters wary and 
has drawn so much bad press that Google can seem almost paranoid in its 
interactions with the outside world. Yet sometimes they’re unexpectedly 
candid. In a recent interview with Time, CEO Eric Schmidt said, “We try 
very hard to look like we’re out of control. But in fact the company is 
very measured. And that’s part of our secret.”

That mix of openness and control is reflected in the Google campus, a 
dichotomy that Wilkinson’s team was quick to intuit. “As we learned more 
about the company and realized that this building was mostly for 
engineers, we knew we wanted to do a very clear, clean space without it 
being labeled as a tech space—not something that’s all metal, for 
example. We were creating a framework for everyone to make their own 
space,” Smudde says. The framework would be meticulously designed, and 
the engineers would provide the veneer of beautiful chaos. “What was 
brilliant about Clive’s design is that it’s a bright white, light space 
that becomes almost a neutral background for all the stuff they were 
going to throw at it,” Laing says. “If you’d designed a space that tried 
to be Googley, it would have been too much.”

When the engineers first moved in, there was some debate over whether 
the space had actually achieved Googleyness. “At first some of them 
hated the space,” Wilkinson says. But that was because, Laing says, 
“people didn’t fill it up right away, and it felt a bit empty and 
unevolved. Google likes the buzz and the crowdedness. They love the 
intense interaction that happens when people are in the same space. It’s 
not a very mature company—and I mean this in the best of ways—where 
people are off doing their own things.” Now the space is full—the 
bookshelves are crowded and each office bursts with extras. If the 
Googleplex exploded, the employees would have a hard time digging 
themselves out of a shower of pirate flags, action figures, T-shirts 
with funny sayings, leis, ironic signs, a fringed leather vest, 
thousands of game pieces, and giant Lego people. Much of it was acquired 
when the company launched a contest for the best office soon after 
moving in. Each group was given a small budget, and thematic frivolity 
ensued.

Anderson’s office, of course, took one of the top prizes. In many ways 
he is Google’s ur-engineer. His desk merits a stop on the office tour. 
He is the first (and only) employee suggested as a potential 
interviewee. He embodies all of the traits that Page and Brin see in 
themselves: positive and supersmart, with a PhD from a top school and 
the conviction that Google is changing the world for the better. The 
early dictum of the Web was that all information wants to be free. It is 
a utopian vision of the Internet that many engineers still hold onto 
with a fervent college student sort of idealism. Google may not be able 
to keep information entirely free, but it can still try to create a 
workplace utopia—a world beyond worlds where everyone is smart, and 
invention and necessity coexist. The impulse is both beautiful and 
endlessly arrogant, an adolescent’s willful dream. Any utopia in the end 
is a form of benevolent dictatorship. Though the cofounders wanted an 
office that encouraged a work-life balance, it can be argued that this 
is just a twenty-first-century version of the company town, where work 
and life become hopelessly intertwined. But Google the company is being 
forced into maturity—by the IPO, by the fact that Web pages that don’t 
appear on Google might as well not exist, and by its sheer size, power, 
and influence. Hiring DEGW and Wilkinson was the act of a company toying 
with the idea of growing up. Deciding, as Google did, to complete just 
this one building rather than implementing the campus-wide master plan 
that they originally asked for was a decision to grow up on its own 
terms. For Google it’s another in a long line of rebellions that just 
might work.



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