Experience in Building a Cooperative Distributed Organization: Lessons for Cooperative Buildings
Geraldine Fitzpatrick7
, Simon Kaplan6, 7
and Sara Parsowith6
| (6) |
CRC for Distributed Systems Technology (DSTC), The University of Queensland, St Lucia, 4072, Australia |
| (7) |
Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, 4072, Australia |
Abstract
This paper discusses a three-year experiment to build a distributed research group, equipped with state-of-the-art computing
facilities, spread over three cities in Australia. Despite the provision of the sorts of facilities to be expected in cooperative
buildings, such as high-speed networks and videoconferencing, significant synergy (i.e., closely-coupled collaborations) among
the distributed subgroups did not develop. This was not only due to the problems of distance, but was exacerbated by several
political and organizational issues. An important lesson is that successful ‘cooperative buildings’ will depend not just on
the technology but also on an appropriate managerial, organizational and political climate in which these resources can be
meaningfully exploited. The paper outlines the experiment, discusses why synergies did not emerge, and points to implications
for cooperative buildings and design paradigms based on the notion of pattern languages.
Keywords cooperative buildings - locales framework - social worlds - cooperative work - distributed workgroups - serendiptious interactions - organisational structure - patterns
This work has been supported by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) under grants F30603-94-C-0161 and
F30602-96-2-0264 administered by the US Air Force, and by the Cooperative Research Centres Program through the Department
of the Prime Minister and Cabinet of the Commonwealth Government of Australia. The views and conclusions expressed in this
document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the official policies, expressed or implied,
of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency or the U.S. Government. We would like to thank the members of IEU for their
openness, assistance and friendship during the course of this study.
References secured to subscribers.