Principal Frontend Engineer

Code Metal
5hRemote

About The Position

Role: Principal Front-End Engineer Location/Time zones: US-based (East Coast preferred; Mountain works). Work setup: Remote (high-ownership, small team). Mission: Lead the front-end technical direction for a geospatial product used in a fragile/mission-sensitive deployment environment.

Requirements

  • 8+ years building and scaling front-end systems; deep React + TypeScript expertise.
  • Strong architectural judgment: you can balance “build fast” with “don’t paint us into a corner.”
  • Track record leading complex UI work (interactive, data-heavy apps; performance matters).
  • Experience working with design systems / component libraries (we’re using MUI; Tailwind is optional/uncertain).
  • Ability to operate in a fast-moving environment with minimal process overhead.
  • Excellent communication: you can align teammates around patterns and decisions without slowing delivery.

Nice To Haves

  • GIS / geospatial domain experience (Cesium, mapping frameworks, geo interactions, coordinate systems, etc.).
  • Experience with visualization libraries (not required; product is more geospatial + UI workflows than pure D3).
  • Backend familiarity (API design, debugging cross-stack issues).
  • Prior work on simulation platforms, gaming-adjacent UI paradigms, or real-time systems.

Responsibilities

  • Set front-end architecture and technical standards for a TypeScript/React application.
  • Design scalable UI patterns for complex geospatial workflows (Cesium) and surrounding app features.
  • Establish best practices for state management, component architecture, performance, testing, and maintainability.
  • Partner with engineering leadership to plan, prioritize, and deliver high-impact product work.
  • Mentor engineers through code reviews, architecture discussions, and practical implementation guidance.
  • Drive execution: this role is hands-on and coding-heavy, not a “pure strategy” position.
© 2024 Teal Labs, Inc
Privacy PolicyTerms of Service