vote up 53 vote down star
35

We are designing our office right now and want to know what stuff you guys really care about or started loving in your office.

So -

What are your must-haves for a developers office? What things can't you live without?

flag

70 Answers

1 2 3 next
vote up 0 vote down

Lava lamps indicating the build state of your sourcecontrol repository/Integration Server.

Green/Blue everything is ok. Orange/yellow warning tests failed, build took stangely long Red Build failed Nobody leaves office till at least orange

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I think temperature control would be nice for a developer. In my office there is a part of it that has a lot of machines, servers and test equipment running. So, they need the AC low to keep the area at a decent temperature. However, this makes the rest of the floor hover around 64 degrees. Then they just turn off the vents to our area and the temp goes up into the 80s.

We are currently in a temporary situation, hopefully the new building will have AC control partitioned to each area of the building as an uncomfortable temperature can be very distracting.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

"Open" Internet access.

"Fast" Internet access.

Currently we have content filtering on our internet connection, when trying to search an error or do research on some functionality I am not familiar with, the content filter literally takes a huge amount of productivity out of me. To get around this, I just simply setup a VPN to my house, but this isn't a healthy workaround for your developers. We use the web, we use it a lot, so let us.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Instead of two monitors I would suggest one huge monitor. At the moment I have a 24" monitor for about EUR 400. I like it a lot.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Many good answers already posted. Already have many of the items already listed. For me personally the next thing needed is a book case. Too many books for the sagging hutch above my desk.

A bit old school I guess as the Web has many quick answers in electronic form. But there is some good stuff under copyright that I find useful for explaining the whys of development process to my coworkers (or myself again).

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

No matter what the layout (individual offices, cubes, bullpen):

  • plenty of sound-absorbing material is a must.
  • natural light
  • sufficiently adjustable office furniture (doesn't have to be the really high-end stuff)
  • big monitors
link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Laundry room. (No, I'm serious.)

I actually convinced my employers to add a laundry room to their big buildout and it worked out great. Lots of people rent apartments and don't have an in-unit washer/dryer setup. Instead of having to deal with a laundromat, they can do their laundry at work when they're waiting for code to compile, or whatever. This means more of their free time outside of work is spent on things other than basic chores.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

Fidget/stress toys. Research has shown that utilizing parts of the brain other than the one that's your primary focus can boost over all utilization and increase creativity and thus productivity.

So, things like the Slinky, the Hoberman Sphere or any of Erno Rubik's puzzles, or for work environments where such things are frowned upon, the venerable stress ball, can be a real help.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

If your group includes classically trained mathemeticians or basic scientists (e.g. Physics, chemistry, etc.) a blackboard (not a white board) is essential. Most people in these categories were taught to think on blackboards and the tactile association is really important.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down
  1. Good Oxygen supply as Oxygen stimulates brain. I've seen some offices even use Oxygen supplied artificially.
  2. Candy jar or Candy vending machine for energy boosting.
  3. The option of "Work From Home Policy", say 2-3 days per week.
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down
  • Development laptops. I really like to be able to take my laptop over to a coworkers desk and show him a problem or bit of code, rather than email a screen shot or call him over.

  • A public area with no walls and lots of seating to collaborate. Ideally comfortable couches and tables and whiteboards.

  • Private cubicle or cubby type space with walls that is quiet. Equipped with wired internet, laptop docking station, external display.

  • Something I would have LOVED to have at my last job: Move the product and project managers close tot he development team, in similar seating. In other words, if your shop does a "no cube walls" thing, then the managers should always be visible too. No offices. From my experiences, the "lack of communication" is almost always developer <-> manager, not developer <-> developer.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down
  1. The obvious, a good chair a good machine and a good monitor.
  2. A window, doesn't have to be right next to me but I have to have some way to see the outside or it gets too depressing after just few hours.
  3. A flexible electricity phone and network wiring scheme, so that different people can put their monitors in different positions, add an extra monitor or even one or more extra computers without having cables on the floor.
  4. Good lighting, my current office has numerous florescent tubes and at any given time at least one of them is buzzing or flickering.
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

A mobile phone signal jammer.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down
  1. Blazingly fast computers with quad core CPUs and tons of memory.
  2. A 64bit Operating system to support the tons of memory.
  3. 4 walls and a door (office not a cube)
  4. Whiteboards in every office.
  5. A bookshelf
  6. A desk with solid cable management and enough space for 2-3 monitors
  7. A high quality office chair like an Aeron. Yes they cost more, but people can stay seated for 8 hours at a time with no back pain. It's worth it.

Also make sure to provide solid dev and staging servers for deployment. Too many companies skimp on this. Also provide devs with whatever developer tools/software they need to get their job done. Don't be cheap when it comes to your devs.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down
  • Available and open break out areas with white boards and noteboards.
  • Project rooms where the walls can be covered in notes and retained.
  • Allowance to work from home.
  • Open all hours. i.e flex-time.
  • NO politics
link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Silence is golden.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down
  • Free Soft Drinks (This is very popular at our company)
  • Flexible Work Hours
  • Relaxed Dress Code (Comfortable developers work better)
  • Public Developer Library
link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down

free breath mints for the coffee drinkers!

In all seriousness, if you drink strong black coffee, you should be cognizant of the non coffee drinkers around you. This can be more intrusive than someone wishing to chat when you are busy, or other ambient noises. It also makes pairing quite difficult. If you don't think so, imagine pairing with someone who just ate a ton of garlic at lunch. Thats what it can be like for a non coffee drinker.

Just something to be aware of...

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

I'll reiterate what many others have said above me.

  • A great chair
  • The biggest monitor you can afford (or dual monitors)
  • A great keyboard is a must IMHO.
  • Lighting. More natural lighting the better.
  • iPod

Not necessarily in that order.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Lava Lamps

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

A bar will be great!

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Most of everything here, plus:

A way to obtain Diet Coke in quantitative supply. It's all right if I have to leave my desk or even go outside to get it - in fact, it's preferable.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

A couch to sleep on when working on those projects till 3am and where you have to be back at your desk by 8am so you dont bother going home .. Ive spent may nights resting my head on my folded hands on my desk ...and waking up with my hands still sleeping :(

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Dual matching monitors, Cinemassive makes some great ones. Noise canceling headphones or individual office space. Do Not Disturb signs. Flexible building access hours. Corporate Wifi. Laptops with Docking Stations. For the entire office a printable color whiteboard like this one from panasonic. A couch or open area with pinball, air hockey, Wii||Playstation||X360, 42+ inch LCD, Conference room w/ projector, kitchenette with stove & sink, Refridgerators, Free Soda & Coffee, That's what I do if I had the money.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

A good kettle, a water filter if the water's bad, and good quality tea!

Also as previously mentioned, a quiet workspace, with a comfortable seat is essential.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down
  • Space for the developers to put their personal stuff on. I.e. actually leave a bit of the wall and the desk free for developers to but figurines, posters, photo frames, whatever... on.
  • A lockable cabinet.
  • A Window. Windowless offices with only artificial lights are not good.
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Here are my personal favourites in no particular order...

  • Multiple monitors, (at least 2)
  • Good lighting (no glare on my monitor)
  • Comfortable chair (very subjective, padding and back support is essential)
  • Space to organise and store paperwork/documentation
  • Whiteboard + digital camera (for storing important whiteboard stuff when you need to wipe it)

Docta

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down
  • enough power routed to my office/cube so I don't short out my neighbors when I plug in 2 monitors, mulitple pcs, misc dev hardware, and then start a long compile and data export. with a bad power setup, your office will be on fire and not expandable.
  • big battery backup, so when my neighbor shorts me out, I will be good to save.
  • coffee grinder preset to grind out beans ready into a coffee filter basket.
  • pump coffee carafes. low power, portable for meetings.
  • snack machine set to just enough to make me not buy snacks, but not feel ripped off if I do. Also keeps slothful snackers from always walking off with otherwise free food.
  • heat / cooling system properly calibrated and labeled. nothing like having dudes make the office hotter when they think it's making it cooler.
  • 8gb+ ram and 4 cpu machines for faster compiles.
  • an inventory system with a scanner so moves are painless
  • multiple working video conferencing units with large displays.
  • beer tap, good beer. make fridays fun.
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

It has to have ergonomical designs, the chair, lighting, monitors all the way. If you design a office with ergonomics in mind, it costs far less than what you would spend modifying it later.

A place to lie down. A power nap of 15 minutes is better than

  • A cup of cofee
  • A sugar laced drink/soda
  • 10 trips to loo (5 to wash your face)
  • Bugs introduced because you were feeling sleepy.
link|flag
vote up -2 vote down

junk food! when you go for a break it's good to load your system with crappy but highly stimulating food. hehe.

link|flag
1 2 3 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.