Originally published Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print view
Google scales back office plan
Google is cutting back on its plans to expand into a new campus in Kirkland, opting to sublease a third of its gleaming new complex overlooking Lake Washington.
Seattle Times business reporters
Google is cutting back on its plans to expand into a new campus in Kirkland, opting to sublease a third of its gleaming new complex overlooking Lake Washington.
The company still hasn't moved into the 7.2-acre spread on Sixth Street, which was largely finished last summer.
It's now planning to occupy just two of its three buildings when it moves its 500-plus engineers sometime next year from rented space in downtown Kirkland.
Google could still occupy the entire campus eventually if its growth approaches earlier projections. Last year, before the market turned, a manager said it should have 2,000 employees in the area by 2012.
Tech companies large and small are tightening belts to make it through a downturn that's crimping ad sales and forcing Web companies to reconsider optimistic growth plans.
Google's campus was started when the company was expanding its Seattle presence 100 percent a year. It's still growing here and elsewhere, but not as fast.
Chief Executive Eric Schmidt last month told investors the Mountain View, Calif.-based company would take steps to cut costs.
That led to a slowdown in hiring similar to one taking place at Microsoft and cutbacks in perks, such as Google's storied cafeterias and snack bars.
Microsoft and Google both say they're still hiring but more cautiously, while others in the industry, such as Yahoo, have undergone layoffs.
"The overarching point is we are definitely still hiring and there's no hiring freeze," spokesman Jane Penner said last week. She couldn't be reached Wednesday for comment on the office-space plans.
Cost-cutting so far hasn't overcome Wall Street concerns over market conditions. After two analysts cut their profit forecasts for the company Wednesday, Google's stock fell to $291, closing below $300 for the first time since 2005.
In Kirkland, Google recently listed one of the three buildings at Lakeview Plaza — a 63,000-square-foot facility — for sublease, according to several brokers and the online database Officespace.com.
![]()
The company had leased all three buildings of the 195,000-square-foot development in August 2007 in what was billed at the time as a major expansion of its Seattle operations.
Amenities include showers in the garage for bicyclists and a landscaped plaza with views of the lake.
Google took possession of all three buildings this spring.
The company originally intended to be ready to move in last summer, but more recently occupancy was pushed into early next year.
The broker representing Google could not be reached for comment.
Google is also vacating its current Eastside office — space it has rented near the Kirkland post office — and a smaller space it rented in Fremont, where a sales office is being consolidated with the company's Seattle engineering office.
Brier Dudley: 206-515-5687 or bdudley@seattletimes.com.
Eric Pryne: 206-464-2231 or epryne@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
More Business & Technology headlines...
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
Despite latest uptick, second half of year doesn't look that promising
Q&A : Right cable can work with old camcorder
Summer gas prices should stay put unless ...
Homebodies fuel boob-tube boomlet

Tribal Fireworks Rivalry
The Fourth of July marks a long-standing fireworks rivalry between two clans of a Native-American family in Suquamish.
Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling'
- Yakima teacher reprimanded for sending 5-year-old student home with bag of feces in backpack
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- 6 jurors swear a cop's wife swayed panel in Kent civil rights case
- Fire sends service providers scrambling
- Going to Gas Works Park? Good luck
- Woman accuses Sounders FC player Nate Jaqua of sexual assault, seeks more than $10 million
- Fourth of July festivals and fireworks in Seattle, the suburbs and beyond
- More than 1 million seek tix for Jackson memorial
- Rob Johnson's double in 11th powers Mariners past Red Sox, 7-6
- Palin resigning as Alaska governor
744 - Seattle Mariners at Boston Red Sox: 07/04 game thread
244 - Woman accuses Sounders FC player Nate Jaqua of sexual assault, seeks more than $10 million
97 - Reports: NKorean missile arrives at launch site
95 - Palin's Declaration of Independence
73 - Mariners score unlikely win over Red Sox in battle of bullpens
58 - Rob Johnson ties a club record as Mariners win 7-6 in 11 innings
54 - Hatred for the NBA runs deep, but don't take it out on the players
51 - Former NFL MVP McNair killed
39 - Man pistol-whipped after argument at nightclub
39
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- Going to Gas Works Park? Good luck
- Liven up Fremont's attempt to break a world record for a 'zombie walk'
- Merchant Marine veterans fight for recognition
- Lynnwood's City Bank gets tighter scrutiny
- Yakima teacher reprimanded for sending 5-year-old student home with bag of feces in backpack
- Retail Report | Pet-supply shops grow while other retailers fade
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling'
- Fire sends service providers scrambling
- Oregon woman obsessed with rabbits back in jail




