Google came to Nelson in 2010 looking to design 20,000 
SF of office and kitchen/café space. This modest 
beginning rapidly grew into a 1200-person, multi-
building ‘campus’ located in the MIT Kendall Square area 
of Cambridge, MA. Paramount to the project’s success 
was the connection of 3 buildings surrounding a parking 
garage with 2 purposefully built infill buildings forming 
the nucleus of Google’s campus. Google’s corporate 
design strategy includes creating spaces that reflect each 
location’s history and character. Visioning sessions held 
with ‘Googlers’ resulted in a master plan concept based 
on Boston’s iconic MBTA transportation system, the “T”. 
Each building is assigned a color coded 'line’ and each 
floor a ‘stop.’  Inspired and guided by the stop’s 
surrounds, the goal was to create a Boston/Cambridge 
office. Highlights include a Red Line “Kendall Square” 
stop as the main entrance.  Visitors arrive inside a Red 
Line subway car, setting up the overall campus 
experience.  Other stops include a micro kitchen with 
real canoes referencing boating on the adjacent Charles 
River. At “Charles/MGH” Red Line floor, the luxury 
Liberty Hotel riffs off of the former infamous Charles 
Street Jail, mixing lavish appointments with real jail cell 
doors.  A Back Bay Victorian row house library pays 
homage to the Green Line “Arlington Street” stop, but 
with a modern twist.  The historic “Park Street” floor 
offers an inspired cafe with rooftop garden views 
interpreted as the Boston Public Gardens.  And, at 
America’s first public beach - the Blue Line’s “Revere 
Beach” celebrates with a lighthouse and lounge. Nothing 
is too outrageous to picture, and one-size-fits-all 
workstations compliment an array of amenities fostering 
productive ‘alone’ time as well as collaboration. While 
innovation and creativity are crucial, Google’s metric 
focus insures that everything meets data-driven criteria. 
Google ha global commitment to sustainability and 
spaces are LEED Gold or Platinum Certified.