Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Microsoft builds new offices for new environmen­t

- LAUREN ROSENBLATT

When Microsoft first started to build its Redmond, Wash., campus in the 1980s, it used three things to entice workers: free soda, a lax dress code and private offices.

As it scaled up, it prioritize­d those offices and designed star-shaped buildings to get as many window seats as possible. Now, in the age of the open floor plan, the sodas and flip-flop dress code have stayed but the offices are changing.

“As our teams were coming in, thinking about collaborat­ive workspaces, there was very little we could do with the [original buildings],” said Rob Towne, senior director of real estate for Microsoft’s Puget Sound region. “So they decided to tear them down.”

Microsoft is in year eight of a nearly 10-year project that saw it demolish 12 buildings to create 17 new ones, along with sports fields and a thermal energy center that powers its offices using heat from the Earth.

Microsoft started planning in 2015 and demolishin­g buildings in January 2019. Now, it’s gearing up to open the first of the new buildings in 2023, beginning a ninemonth rollout.

Towne said it was a multibilli­on-dollar project but could not disclose the specific cost. At its peak, there will be about 3,000 constructi­on workers on site.

“We want to create a space where people are really encouraged,” said Allen Nichols, director of developmen­t for the Puget Sound region. “We want to attract our employees to want to come to campus, to understand all the different flexible ways they can work and collaborat­e in the space and really draw people in.”

Microsoft fully reopened its offices at the end of February with a hybrid work model.

The new constructi­on sits on a 72-acre plot, part of Microsoft’s 520-acre campus. Looking at a model, Towne said “you can see the shift in our master planning efforts,” moving from a suburban campus with buildings spaced far enough apart to fit at least two lanes of cars to a dense, urban environmen­t served by walking paths.

The new buildings are only four or five stories high, a nod toward the company’s residentia­l neighbors, Towne said.

The constructi­on project includes a pedestrian bridge to help workers cross the campus, an outdoor plaza that can hold 5,000 people — where Microsoft is planning to host all-hands meetings or celebratio­ns for a class of interns — and an undergroun­d parking garage. That garage will be equipped with Wi-Fi so workers can use an app developed in-house to help them find a spot.

The campus also includes three new sports fields for softball, baseball and cricket, a favorite of CEO Satya Nadella.

Underneath the fields sit roughly 900 wells, part of Microsoft’s new thermal energy center, which generates power for the buildings on campus using those wells, tunnels and storage tanks.

“Sustainabi­lity is just the price of entry these days, but we need to figure out how to do it better,” Towne said.

Just as water is moving undergroun­d, Microsoft is also turning to tunnels to help get deliveries to the right building. The undergroun­d “backof-the-house” logistics hub includes a 30,000-square-foot kitchen and a network of tunnels that reach each building for deliveries.

Right now, humans help move the goods through that network. But Towne and Nichols said the company has its eye on self-driving tech in the future to help make the process more efficient.

Microsoft has roughly 50,000 people working in the Puget Sound area, and occupies 14 million square feet in the region. It has 120 buildings, and 75 of those locations are devoted to offices.

The Redmond campus is “a city in itself,” said Brian Collins, director of global workplace services.

Those offices once included four design elements: individual offices, corridors, kitchenett­es and conference rooms.

Now, Microsoft designs “neighborho­ods” that group teams of workers together, allowing some to choose a permanent spot and some to reserve desk space on an asneeded basis.

A new building for the marketing team, which Microsoft opened five weeks ago, has game rooms with Xboxes on one floor and air hockey on another, as well as several relaxation rooms, where workers can find a quiet place to work or a dark place to nap.

Borrowing a phrase from CEO Nadella, Collins said the design shift has moved Microsoft from a “know-itall” culture — where teams worked apart from one another and coworkers couldn’t benefit from brainstorm­ing or other conversati­ons that they simply overheard — to a “learn-it-all” mindset.

During the design process, Towne said there were a lot of emotions about moving away from the star-shaped buildings that prioritize­d privacy and space.

People asked if they could save one building and memorializ­e it as a museum — or at least save co-founder Bill Gates’ office.

But Microsoft is already starting to design for the next generation of workers, according to Scott Weiskopf, director of the company’s Center for Innovation.

Standing in The Hive, a nondescrip­t building about 5 miles from Microsoft’s Redmond hub where researcher­s plan and test new office designs, Weiskopf said his team is trying to understand how people will live and work in the future, in the physical, digital and cultural sense.

“So that kid who’s in high school, who’s going to be our employee, when they get here, how does it seem perfect to them?” Weiskopf said. “It’s fascinatin­g because you want to skate to where the puck is going, but nobody’s sure where the puck is going.”

 ?? (AP) ?? The Microsoft Corp. logo is displayed outside the Microsoft Visitor Center in Redmond, Wash. The company is in the process of rebuilding its headquarte­rs campus.
(AP) The Microsoft Corp. logo is displayed outside the Microsoft Visitor Center in Redmond, Wash. The company is in the process of rebuilding its headquarte­rs campus.

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