The corporate spirit of Splunk, the international data software company, is innovative, passionate, disruptive, open, and fun. When it came to designing their new, 180,000 SF headquarter in San Francisco, Splunk called on an interior architecture firm they knew who, not unlike themselves, could drill down and analyze the choreography and patterns of people and information. In doing so they would provide a workspace that professes and nurtures their dynamic culture. The new headquarters features unexpected furnishings, fun custom finishes, and distinctive surprises.
In addition to the colorfulness, there are serious functional considerations in the design. The design firm addressed acoustics that suit Splunk’s particular needs, and designed conference rooms, collaborative spaces and quiet areas that respond to the ways their employees use them. The open floorplan and huddle spaces with white boards foster their collaborative culture and creativity while the education rooms and customer briefing center showcase their culture and creativity.
The team wanted to break the mold when it came to wayfinding and design, so they let each of the floors take on their own identity. Wielding Splunk’s San Francisco pride as a concept, the city grid combined with branding elements led to the organization of the plan with Market Street; the major thoroughfare and the caret (>); Splunk’s logo. Each of the seven floors has a unique theme based on San Francisco through the Ages: from the Gold Rush and Victorian eras through Prohibition, The Bridges, Film Noir, Beatnik, the Summer of Love, and the 70s to today.
The new LEED Gold space, at 270 Brannan Street in the SOMA District houses over 1,000 staff, and sits adjacent to Splunk’s existing headquarters at 250 Brannan. The two buildings will connect at the third (The Bridges) floor to create one large downtown urban campus.
Photography: Jasper Sanidad
Splunk Headquarters
Category
Work - Large
Description
Location: San Francisco
Design Team: Revel Architecture & Design
Pankow
Patcraft, Miliken, Shaw, Interface, Armstrong, IPE
Herman Miller, Northwood CRI
Buzzi, Filz Felt, Flavor Paper, Carnegie Xorel, Heath Tile
Camira Blazer, Maharam, Luna, Designtex, Anzea
Gammalux, Floss, Prutential, Finelite, Poulsen, Artemide, Lightology
Montbleau
Armstrong, Tectum
Charles Salter & Assoc
Role: Metal worker
Company Name: Romak Iron Works
Role: Operable Partitions
Company Name: Skyfold
Role: Solid Surface Countertops
Company Name: Caesarstone