ASIC Physical Design Engineer

Jane StreetNew York, NY

About The Position

We are looking to hire an ASIC Physical Design Engineer to help us design, test, and deploy advanced hardware. As part of our Ultra Low Latency team, you'll have the opportunity to collaborate with people in areas across the firm, including trading, networking, and research infrastructure. This isn't a traditional PD role. We're a small team where everyone works across the chip design process, and we expect our PD engineers to lead with physical design expertise but think like chip designers. You should be comfortable owning a PD flow end-to-end, but also able to read and write RTL and reason about design decisions that cross the front-end/back-end boundary. If you've spent your career exclusively in PD, this probably isn't the right fit— but if you've worked across the stack, either because you started as an RTL designer and moved into PD, or because you were on a smaller team where you had to wear multiple hats, we'd love to talk. We're big believers in the ability of tools to improve the productivity, reliability, and day-to-day joy of hardware engineering. That's why we created Hardcaml, a hardware development toolchain embedded in OCaml. We don't expect you to know OCaml (we'll teach you here), but we are looking for hardware engineers who are excited about the advantages that better tools can bring, and are willing to try new things as a result.

Requirements

  • Hands-on experience building and running modern physical design flows (e.g., floorplanning, place and route, timing closure, physical verification, power analysis).
  • Broad enough experience across PD to own a flow end-to-end and know where the risks are.
  • Ability to read and write RTL and understand how front-end design decisions affect physical implementation—and vice versa.
  • Think about physical design in the context of the overall chip, not just as a downstream consumer of a netlist.
  • Interest in using software engineering techniques to improve the hardware design process.
  • Experience programming in a high-level language (Python, C++, Haskell, etc.).

Nice To Haves

  • Experience exclusively in PD might not be the right fit, but experience across the stack (e.g., started as RTL designer and moved into PD, or worked on a smaller team wearing multiple hats) is preferred.
  • Willingness to learn OCaml.

Responsibilities

  • Design, test, and deploy advanced hardware.
  • Collaborate with teams in trading, networking, and research infrastructure.
  • Lead with physical design expertise and think like chip designers.
  • Own a PD flow end-to-end.
  • Read and write RTL.
  • Reason about design decisions that cross the front-end/back-end boundary.
  • Use software engineering techniques to improve the hardware design process.
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