Google’s In-House-Built Office Has One Downside That’s Massively Hindering Work
By Mikelle Leow, 08 Mar 2024
Image via Google
Google’s Bay View headquarters, “the first campus” built by the company, was supposed to be a Silicon Valley utopia—a collaborative, eco-friendly marvel designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) and Heatherwick Studios in 2022. Nestled at NASA Ames with a canopy roof mimicking dragon scales, it prides itself as a beacon of sustainable innovation, even generating its own carbon-free energy. But here’s the glitch in the matrix—the Wi-Fi has been a nightmare for months.
Google may be synonymous with internet connectivity, but many Bay View employees, most of whom are artificial intelligence engineers, have been struggling to get a decent Wi-Fi signal at the fairly new, high-tech HQ. As such, they’ve been forced to tether their laptops to ethernet cables or find pockets of stronger signal, sometimes even venturing outside.
Image via Google
While the site boasts open floor plans for collaboration and courtyards for interaction, unreliable Wi-Fi throws a wrench into those plans. The disconnect between the architecture’s ambitious design and the frustrating internet situation is stark. Staffers, promised an “adaptable and healthy workplace… where you can feel connected to people,” grapple with a work-from-anywhere-but-the-office scenario within the office itself.
Image via Google
For a tech behemoth like Google, where online interaction is the lifeblood, this issue significantly impacts productivity and collaboration. One engineer laments to Reuters, “You’d think the world’s leading internet company would have worked this out.”
Image via Google
Google has acknowledged these woes and promises a fix within weeks. In the meantime, some employees have reportedly received laptops with stronger Wi-Fi chips, while others are encouraged to take a stroll outdoors or camp at a nearby café for undisrupted work.
Image via Google