‘We Were the Petri Dish’: Facebook’s Shift to Remote Work Leaves Neighbors in a Lurch

The company’s Menlo Park headquarters have shaped the city. So too would an exodus of employees.

Sarah Emerson
OneZero

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The Facebook “like” sign is seen at the entrance to the company’s main campus in Menlo Park, California (October 23, 2019). Photo: Josh Edelson/Getty Images

Facebook may be an online platform, but its physical presence is firmly rooted in Menlo Park, California, where its sprawling headquarters and iconic “1 Hacker Way” address are emblematic of the company’s past and future. Since 2011, Facebook has played a dominant role in the small city, and its ongoing expansion there will mark the largest development Menlo Park has ever seen.

It was a surprise, then, when Zuckerberg announced on Thursday that Facebook could become a remote workforce in the coming decade, a decision spurred by the coronavirus, which has shuttered technology campuses across the nation. Fifty percent of Facebook employees may be working remotely in five to 10 years, he estimated — a massive shift from the company’s previous emphasis on an on-site workplace that sees 6,000 people shuttled along 80 routes to its Bay Area campuses each day. Soon, employees will be able to apply to work remotely on a permanent basis, and new job openings will be made available to remote workers beginning this week.

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Sarah Emerson
OneZero

Staff writer at OneZero covering social platforms, internet communities, and the spread of misinformation online. Previously: VICE