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We will probably be moving within a year, so we have to make some decisions regarding office layout.

At the moment, our company is basically one big office.

When our developers can't bother to be disturbed at all, we all have our own headphones to mute the outside world.

Still, it seems a lot of people feel that private offices are no doubt the way to go.

From Joel's article Private Offices Redux:

Not every programmer in the world wants to work in a private office. In fact quite a few would tell you unequivocally that they prefer the camaradarie and easy information sharing of an open space.

Don't fall for it. They also want M&Ms for breakfast and a pony. Open space is fun but not productive.

Even though I can understand the benefit on productivity, does having a private office really result in more net productivity?

There seem to be plenty of companies that create wide open spaces and still maintain good productivity. Or so it seems. (I should mention many of them use cubicles, though)

What is your opinion on this? What does your company do? Is there some middle ground in this?

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46 Answers

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vote up 4 vote down

I have always worked in open spaces, I confess I love it. Ok, some time the noise it a problem, and some time we really need to concentrate because … a lot of reason, we all know them.

So if I were to create a new office I would still create a big open space, with a lot of windows and several, as much as possible, small working cubicles for individual and small groups. It’s good for work and meetings.

I think its import for all the employees in a company to flow around the office and talk to each other. It creates a strong group of people. And also people fell that there are no secrets, no close doors

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the best job I've ever had was open office - everyone in the company had an open desk, including the founders. I thought I would hate it but it was actually not a bad atmosphere.

That being said, I would still prefer a private office if possible.

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I work closely with another developer and we share an office. It's much better than when I worked in a cubicle, since I don't get sucked into other people's conversations as much. We have lots of little meetings as people come in to get some help on a problem. I can hear and see what the other guy is up to easily and he can keep track of what I'm doing.

But it does have downsides. We either have to have private conversations a few feet from the other person or go out to the hallway. If someone stops by for a social visit, the other guy has a harder time ignoring it. Every annoying personal habit is on full display to the other guy. So it would be nice to have the office to myself.

Realistically, it isn't going to happen though because of politics and money. Every site needs to come up with its own compromise between privacy and accessibility. No one answer could possibly fit all situations.

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vote up 5 vote down

Bah, it's hard to say, and even harder to measure. My current office is a (very small) bullpen, which can be a bit irritating some times. Normally I think it's better to work in close proximity to your teammates, but it's very hard to concentrate when phone calls and other stuff are going on. In the worst case, there have been up to three simultaneous phone conversations going in three languages. Talk about cross-chatter...

The problem I have with bullpens isn't that, though... with the right office, you can send such people elsewhere to go chat and let everybody else keep working. My problem is that bullpens inevitably lead to a bunch of guys sitting in a circle with headphones on, which always strikes me as being a bit asocial. Granted, you can always get your colleague's attention with a quick shout or wave, but it's still a bit strange from a strictly social perspective. I guess the alternative is that headphones in such situations could be outlawed, but personally, that would drive me nuts even faster than listening to three different languages being spoken at once.

At my last job we all had private offices, which wasn't so bad but certainly puts a bit more distance between colleagues. However, I feel much more focused in my current work environment, which I think is a feel of the "team spirit" kicking in. :) Mock me if you must, but I think that being around other people working is a subconscious motivator to step up one's own game.

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vote up 5 vote down

It depends on the team and the culture. I've worked in both places, and in both places I've been highly productive, but it was dependent on the team. With all due props to Spolsky, he's telling you what he's found works in their environment.

But the private office thing is usually about reducing distractions for those who should be heads down. If your office operates in a disturb-as-needed fashion on a day-to-day basis, and your team really needs to not be disturbed in order to be productive, then physical walls are not your issue. It's your culture.

In the end though, if it makes your team productive and happy, do it.

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vote up 3 vote down

Open offices can work very well so long as some effort is invested in establishing a good open office culture - keep your voice down, keep your music to yourself, choose a discreet ring tone, never leave your phone alone on your desk, keep a tidy desk...

If not done property, open offices can be hell. And I don't think cubicles help at all.

Personally, I suspect separate offices require more self discipline than many developers actually possess. I mean, let's be honest - it's far too easy to waste hours on stackoverflow, youtube or suchlike when no-one can see your screen. Spending some time on stackoverflow is good, of course, but all within reason.

I have tons of respect for Joel Spolsky, but beg to differ in this case.

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vote up 11 vote down

I'm currently working for a company that recently remodeled their offices, but apparently gave no thought to the layout other than "box, people, done". I sit in the middle of a pod of (loud) salespeople. Probably cuts my productivity by a third or half.

Fully private offices might be a bit of overkill, when I've been in semi-private offices it's been fine. But QUIET is very important.

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vote up 12 vote down

You don't even need a measurable net increase in productivity for an office to be useful. If offices make your developers happy, they're more likely to stay (since hardly any companies offer offices anymore) and that's another win for you. The ability to close the door and eliminate not only distractions but people actively competing for your attention, not to mention being able to play your favorite music without having to wear headphones are two big advantages to offices, at least in my opinion.

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+1 - working in a poorly designed space has really given me an appreciation for this, not to mention envy. – Steve B. Feb 11 at 22:48
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Yes. A happy developer is a productive developer is a developer who stays with you is a developer you don't have to retrain every year and really learns the nuances of your codebase and your business. And tells all her friends when you have openings -- good developers know other good developers. – Mike Kale Jun 22 at 3:40
vote up 35 vote down

No, IMO. I'm a fan of the 'bullpen' approach, where small teams of up to 6 are given their own large rooms.

These rooms should still have a door that closes and each programmer should have his own partitioned space along the edge of the room that's about as large and private as a traditional cubicle. There would also be space in the middle for team brainstorming sessions. This encourages information sharing but should still limit unnecessary or off-topic interruptions.

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In the absence of fully private offices, this is the best alternative. IMO. +1 – WildJoe Feb 11 at 22:57
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vote up 61 vote down

Headphones don't always work as a means of "muting" distractions, so write that off.

There's plenty of research out there (PeopleWare, f.ex., as Chris mentioned) that indicates that private offices help productivity. I also like them as something of a status symbol -- Joel doesn't just talk about the productivity aspects, there's also the hiring advantages of being able to say "and you'll get this private office over here to do your stuff" to prospective hires. This may not seem like such a big thing in the current economic climate, but top developers are always in demand, and productivity differences are larger between top and "average" developers than between cube farm / open plan and offices.

Don't discount the benefits of privacy on mental comfort and well-being. Plenty of people (myself included) get a bit twitchy about being "on display" all day, every day, and that's got to have an effect in lots of little, hard-to-measure ways.

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vote up 29 vote down

Yes, yes, a thousand times yes! Good programming is all about getting into a focused, flowing state of mind and it takes about 15 minutes to get into that state. Distractions are a huge time-waster for something like this and so anything that can be done to remove distractions is a must for programmer productivity.

From the other side of things, I once worked for a startup that had the "progressive" idea of having a completely open-air office, no cubes, no walls, just desks. It was the most difficult environment I've ever been in. At least once an hour there would be a loud conversation, sales pitch (from the sales dept who were across the aisle), or some such thing that would take me completely out of my groove.

The only exception to this is in the case of "extreme programming". I've been able to get a lot done if there are a couple of people over my shoulder commenting and correcting as I go or the other way around. In this case, the communal environment helps to create focus, but this is something that's hard to keep up and is best used when there's a "hard" problem that's going to require multiple eyes and brains running to get through it.

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re: "Extreme" or pair programming: your office should be big enough to allow that, and in cubeland if someone's commenting on your neighbours code, it's distracting you from doing what you should be doing. – womble Feb 12 at 2:06
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Having been moved from an office into cubicles recently, I can say I prefer the 'open door' office. It worked well for me for five or more years. I could close the door if I needed privacy, or to avoid disturbing neighbours because I was on a con-call (that's a danger in my job, with development offices in 3 US states plus India, though the calls to India are usually taken at home because of the time difference). Here in cubicle land, there are privacy rooms (I'm in one now - about to leave), but it is a nuisance to have to go find them. I definitely prefer the office.

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vote up 2 vote down

I think it largely depend on the type of work they need to do. I think that for some work it makes very little difference. Sometimes it can be helpful to have open space, with very creative heavy type of work... too much quiet can actually make it harder b/c you can't force creativity. Also if you have a coder working with a new library he may have a lot of very quick questions ("so just what is the name of our dot product function?")

If it's something that requires concentration, such as say coding a physics simulation, or other sort of heavy math, you can bet that any distractions will have a huge cost, not just in longer time to code, but in bug fixing later on.

Now for the subjective part of my answer: I think small coding rooms, with 3 or so programmers to a room work best for you average case. It's a good compromise of not too noisy but still have people nearby to ask quick questions, have occasional interactions, etc.

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For quick questions, there's the company IM chat room, which is less intrusive than a verbal question (if you're in the middle of something, you can easily ignore a chat room). It's those "quick questions" that screw up productivity so often, and they should be discouraged except when mentoring. – womble Feb 12 at 2:09
vote up 10 vote down

It depends on the individuals, of course. Some people are able to focus better when they have quiet and privacy. Other individuals will be tempted to goof off, and they'll do better when someone can see them surfing the net.

But this is kind of a moot question, because virtually no software companies provide offices for developers any more. Even Joel Spolsky admits that his years of advocating for offices have had little impact.

The last company I worked at where developers had offices was Borland. But their fantastic $120 million headquarters building was far too expensive for the company to maintain. They had to sell it in 2000, and adopt more mainstream accommodations.

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vote up 44 vote down

Junior engineers (<2 years out of college) should probably share a space with a more senior engineer, simply because they require more supervision than privacy. But once an engineer gets to the point of working independently, silence is golden.

You have to strike the balance between so much isolation that important communication is hampered, and enough silence that concentration can happen. I'd also submit that each engineer requires a space to stake out as his own - I once had only seven feet of linear desk and that was awful (think computer lab).

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Right little gaolers pet you are - 7 feet of linear desk, what I wouldn't bloody give for 7 feet of bloody linear desk . . . they only hung me the right way up yesterday . . . (seriously, I have 5' 6", yes I just measured it) – Binary Worrier Feb 12 at 9:12
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Putting a bunch of chatty junior devs in a room together is one way to guarantee that little will get done. – 1800 INFORMATION Feb 15 at 7:11
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vote up 22 vote down

PeopleWare - Bring back the door!

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