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I recommend you to take a look at part II (entitled "The Office Environment") of the famous book Peopleware: Productive Projects and Teams(Second Edition). The authors described in great detail the importance of a furniture police policy and the appropriate use of space. One of the good statements of the book is transcribed here:

"Even if you managed to prove conclusively that a programmer could work in 30 square feet of space without being hopelessly space-bound, you still wouldn't be able to conclude that 30 square feet is adequate space. The noise in a 30-square-foot matrix is more than three times the noise in a 100-square-foot matrix. That could mean the difference between a plague of product defects and none at all."

And if you are curious about famous companies offices', go to Office Snapshots.

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I recommend you to take a look at part II (entitled "The Office Environment") of the famous book Peopleware: Productive Projects and Teams(Second Edition). The authors described in great detail the importance of a furniture police and the appropriate use of space. One of the good statements of the book is transcribed here:

"Even if you managed to prove conclusively that a programmer could work in 30 square feet of space without being hopelessly space-bound, you still wouldn't be able to conclude that 30 square feet is adequate space. The noise in a 30-square-foot matrix is more than three times the noise in a 100-square-foot matrix. That could mean the difference between a plague of product defects and none at all."

And if you are curious about famous companies offices', go to Office Snapshots.