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Dyson robot vacuum

Our DNA

Efficiency: it’s in our DNA.

It was the motivation behind James Dyson’s first bagless vacuum cleaner. And as we grow, it drives us. Not just in our inventions. But in our buildings, our people and the communities we’re part of.

James Dyson

"Having an idea for doing something better and making it happen – even though it appears impossible. That’s still my dream."

James Dyson

Chief Engineer

Dyson café with English Electric Lightning jet

Innovative spaces.

We surround ourselves with ingenious innovations. Some are inspirational, reminding us to strive for the impossible – like the English Electric Lightning fighter jet in one of our staff cafés – but others are functional. Such as the solar panels and ground source heat pumps that contribute towards a 100% renewable electricity supply at our Malmesbury HQ.

Sketch of Dyson campus

Building the future.

Engineering icons inspire us. In 2017, we announced our second UK technology campus at Hullavington in Wiltshire.

We could use this space to build any old office. But instead, we're restoring the ex-airfield's former aircraft hangars, upgrading and rethinking their original structure so they work better for the people inside them. Just like our machines.

Dyson café

Chopping energy usage.

Our headquarters in Malmesbury are being modernized too. And we're taking the opportunity to reduce our environmental impact while we can. First up are our restaurants, where we’ve replaced gas hobs with induction units – negating the need for air conditioning, and powered by 100% renewable electricity. It’s an approach we hope to apply to all future Dyson sites.

School children performing an experiment

Solving the skills gap.

Engineers are the world's problem-solvers. To tackle 21st century challenges like air pollution, we need more of them.

The James Dyson Foundation is Dyson's charity. Its mission is to inspire a new generation of engineers. It provides money, materials and mentorship so that young people can get hands-on with problems – and learn how to solve them.

Bus icon

Reducing harmful emissions.

We’ve started installing electric car charging ports in our staff car parks, to encourage ownership of zero-emissions vehicles.

We provide bus shuttles for the busiest commuter routes, and everyone at our headquarters, nestled in the English countryside, can also access a campus-wide lift-sharing scheme. Fewer cars means fewer pollutants in the air we breathe – and fewer traffic jams.

Employees in training

The engineer in everyone.

Not everyone at Dyson is an engineer – but we encourage everyone to think like one. To take things apart and put them back together again, better.

Whatever your field of expertise – be it marketing, customer service or financial wizardry – we want you to challenge assumptions, and tackle the inefficiencies others ignore.

Horse sculpture made of Dyson parts

Waste not, want not.

To ensure our machines keep performing, year after year, we submit them to rigorous testing. And when the tests are complete, we’re left with lots of perfectly good components that we'd rather not send to landfill.

So some get re-used in further tests. Some get recycled around the campus – like vacuum cyclone casings reimagined as stationery pots. And some are donated to a nearby charity for use in their projects, fostering creativity and a passion for engineering in our local community.

Engineer's sketchbook

Resolute. Relentless.

We believe there is always a better way. So our engineers never stop working on new ideas, hidden in the depths of our research centres in Wiltshire, Malaysia and Singapore.

The brief? To solve the problems that others choose to ignore. And when they’re ready to share what they’ve created, you’ll hear all about it.

Next

The future of engineering