Please Remove Your Shoes Before Entering This San Francisco Headquarters
Pier 70 gets a homey makeover and a no-shoe policy.
-
CategoryDesign, Homes + Spaces, Makers + Entrepreneurs, Tech
Gusto, a San Francisco company that helps small businesses manage payroll, benefits and human resources, recently moved to Pier 70, a cavernous space that once housed the Union Iron Works machine shop. Industrial and immense (55,000-square-feet), the company leaders sought solutions to make the office more comfortable for its employees. And that included a no shoes policy.
“We want our office to feel like a home, to be comfortable and authentic,” said Josh Reeves, CEO and co-founder of Gusto, in a story for the San Francisco Chronicle. “We started Gusto in a house in Palo Alto and had a no-shoe policy there, and we all grew up in shoeless houses.”
The home theme is carried out in the cavernous central space, which ‘gusties’ refer to as a living room, albeit one appropriate for a giant. Groupings of couches, easy chairs and coffee tables alternate with rows of workbenches. Overhead loom the old gantry cranes complete with driver cabs, and a complex crisscross of pipes and beams, while huge arched windows bring in natural light.”
You can see more pictures of this clever transformation here.
Get to Know Surfboard Shaper Ryan Lovelace
Meet surfboard shaper Ryan Lovelace, the artist behind some of the internet’s most viral boards.
Modernist Designer Alexander Girard Gets a Colorful Exhibition in Palm Springs
It’s on view at Palm Springs Art Museum November 23 through March 1.
Joan’s On Third Owner Joan McNamara Talks Cooking With Kids
Plus, her delicious brownie recipe.