Photos of Apple’s £3.5bn new headquarters posted online

Apple employees have revealed stunning new images of the firm’s $5 billion (£3.5 billion) ‘spaceship campus’ in California. 

The behind-the scenes photos reveal the site’s enormous curved glass walls up close, as well as its leafy green internal grounds which feature 9,000 trees, two miles (3.2 km) of running tracks, as well as an orchard and meadow. 

Much of the large construction equipment seen in previous images has disappeared as it is no longer needed. 

The building will eventually house 12,000 employees in a giant ring-shaped campus designed to blur indoors with outdoors. 

Apple employees have revealed stunning new images of the firm’s $5 billion (£3.5 billion) ‘spaceship campus’ in California. The behind-the scenes photos reveal the site’s enormous curved glass walls up close. The glass used on the campus and seen in this image is ‘the largest piece of curved glass in the world’, according to the company’s chief designer Jony Ive

Although its still under development, parts of the futuristic Apple headquarters are now being used by staff.  

Captions written by staff alongside their online posts frequently reference the site’s futuristic design, which has earned it the nickname ‘Apple’s spaceship campus’.

Commenting on one image taken of the site’s stunning curved interior windows, Instagram user eugandeug wrote: ‘Welcome to the future’.

Alongside a picture they took of the campus’swhite staircases, Instagram user wiltordle wrote: ‘Ground control to Major Tom’. 

Apple received temporary occupancy permits five of the site’s 12 sections in December, with the firm expecting to receive permits for the remaining seven section by March, according to a January report from Venture Beat.

The entrances of the campus have been described as having a 'regal feel'. Alongside this picture taken of the campus's white staircases, Instagram user wiltordle wrote: 'Ground control to Major Tom'. The building will eventually house 12,000 employees in a giant ring-shaped campus designed to blur indoors with outdoors

The entrances of the campus have been described as having a ‘regal feel’. Alongside this picture taken of the campus’s white staircases, Instagram user wiltordle wrote: ‘Ground control to Major Tom’. The building will eventually house 12,000 employees in a giant ring-shaped campus designed to blur indoors with outdoors

Pictures of the firm's innovative new campus, which is closed to the public, capture the doughnut-shaped site's enormous curved glass exterior that let you peek into the first floor

Pictures of the firm’s innovative new campus, which is closed to the public, capture the doughnut-shaped site’s enormous curved glass exterior that let you peek into the first floor

A view from inside the 'spaceship'. Captions written by staff alongside their online posts frequently reference the site's futuristic design, which has earned it the nickname 'Apple's spaceship campus'

A view from inside the ‘spaceship’. Captions written by staff alongside their online posts frequently reference the site’s futuristic design, which has earned it the nickname ‘Apple’s spaceship campus’

Much of the large construction equipment seen in previous images has disappeared as it is no longer needed. Officially known as 'Apple Park', it is believed some staff moved into the Cupertino campus as early as April last year

Much of the large construction equipment seen in previous images has disappeared as it is no longer needed. Officially known as ‘Apple Park’, it is believed some staff moved into the Cupertino campus as early as April last year

Officially known as ‘Apple Park’, it is believed some staff moved into the Cupertino campus as early as April last year.

The building was the brainchild of Steve Jobs, who came up with the design months before his death in 2011.

The parklands offer walking and running paths for employees, plus an orchard, meadow and pond within the ring’s interior grounds.

The park includes a 100,000-square-foot (9,300-square-metre) research centre for staff, secure research and development facilities and more than 9,000 trees.

Apple received temporary occupancy permits five of the site's 12 sections in December, with the firm expecting to receive permits for the remaining seven section by March. Shown here is one of the stunning entrances to the building

Apple received temporary occupancy permits five of the site’s 12 sections in December, with the firm expecting to receive permits for the remaining seven section by March. Shown here is one of the stunning entrances to the building

The building was the brainchild of Steve Jobs, who came up with the design months before his death in 2011. This image shows the campus' limestone staircase with a carved, recessed handrail 

The building was the brainchild of Steve Jobs, who came up with the design months before his death in 2011. This image shows the campus’ limestone staircase with a carved, recessed handrail 

The park includes a 100,000-square-foot (9,300-square-metre) research centre for staff, secure research and development facilities and more than 9,000 trees

The park includes a 100,000-square-foot (9,300-square-metre) research centre for staff, secure research and development facilities and more than 9,000 trees

David Muffly, dubbed ‘Apple’s tree whisperer’, last year revealed the incredible lengths Apple went to in a bid to fulfil Jobs’ vision – even buying a Christmas tree farm in Nevada.

The process of moving more than 12,000 people will take over six months on top of construction of the buildings and parklands which has taken Apple several years

The process of moving more than 12,000 people will take over six months on top of construction of the buildings and parklands which has taken Apple several years

Muffly said the biggest challenge was finding enough trees, especially as the number rose from Jobs’ original 6,000 to the current goal of 9,000.

When Jobs presented his plan to the Cupertino City Council in June 2011, he said that Apple would add to the 3,700 existing trees for a total of 6,000 – but this proved impossible, so new trees had to be brought it.

The process of moving more than 12,000 people will take over six months on top of construction of the buildings and parklands which has taken Apple several years.

Before his death in 2011, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs set out to create one of the most futuristic buildings ever created.

‘Steve was exhilarated, and inspired, by the California landscape, by its light and its expansiveness,’ his spouse Laurene Powell Jobs said in an interview last year.

‘It was his favourite setting for thought. Apple Park captures his spirit uncannily well.’

‘He would have flourished, as the people of Apple surely will, on this luminously designed campus.’ 

To ‘honour his memory and his enduring influence on Apple and the world’, the 1,000-seat theatre at Apple Park will be named the Steve Jobs Theater, Apple said last year.

The entrance to the auditorium is a 20-foot-tall (6-metre) glass cylinder, 165 feet (50 metres) in diameter, supporting a metallic carbon-fibre roof, and opened last year for the launch of the iPhone X.

WHAT ARE THE KEY FEATURES OF APPLE’S NEW $5BN SPACESHIP HQ?

Apple’s new $5 billion (£3.5 billion) campus in Cupertino, California, appears as a giant glass doughnut near the 280 Highway and will eventually house 12,000 Apple employees.

It features two miles (3.2 km) of jogging and cycling trails, with more than a thousand bikes kept on site at all times, which staff can use to make their way around.

The Spaceship, officially known as Apple Park, has 360-degree curved glass fronted walls and central courtyard as well as a 1,000-seater auditorium, a gym and 300,000 square feet of ‘research’ space.

The Apple campus will have 360-degree curved glass fronted walls and central courtyard as well as a 1,000-seater auditorium, a gym and 300,000 square feet of 'research' space. Pictured is the most recent image of the site, taken on January 13

The Apple campus has 360-degree curved glass fronted walls and central courtyard as well as a 1,000-seater auditorium, a gym and 300,000 square feet of ‘research’ space. Pictured is the most recent image of the site, taken on January 13

Apple Campus 2 additionally has underground parking hidden from view, meaning 80 per cent of the site can be covered by more than 9,000 trees.

The site was previously owned by Hewlett Packard and the majority of the area is currently covered in asphalt.

Elsewhere underground, the site’s Steve Jobs Theatre auditorium will be where Apple’s CEO Tim Cook presents the companies keynotes ahead of product launches.

This auditorium is covered with a circular glass pavilion that will also be an access point for employees and guests.

Natural gas will, primarily, provide the building’s power and the local energy grid will only be accessed in emergencies.

The glass structure has also been fitted with solar panels. 

The circular, four-storey building is around a mile in circumference and a third of a mile wide and was recently described by the San Fransisco Weekly as a ‘massive glass doughnut’.

The building stays eco-friendly using natural ventilation that works instead of air-conditioning for 70 per cent of the year, low energy LED lighting where natural light doesn’t reach, and on-site recycling.

Drone footage of Apple Park released in September 2017 revealed the incredible landscaping inside the giant ring. Apple Park contains over 9,000 native and drought-resistant trees, and is powered by 100 per cent renewable energy

Drone footage of Apple Park released in September 2017 revealed the incredible landscaping inside the giant ring. Apple Park contains over 9,000 native and drought-resistant trees, and is powered by 100 per cent renewable energy

The Steve Jobs Theater is situated on top of a hill — one of the highest points within Apple Park — overlooking meadows and the main building.

‘Steve’s vision for Apple stretched far beyond his time with us,’ Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a speech at the tehatre during Apple’s latest product launch event last September.

‘He intended Apple Park to be the home of innovation for generations to come.’

‘The workspaces and parklands are designed to inspire our team as well as benefit the environment.

‘We’ve achieved one of the most energy-efficient buildings in the world and the campus will run entirely on renewable energy.’

The campus’ ring-shaped, 2.8 million-square-foot main building is clad entirely in the world’s largest panels of curved glass, and the firm’s fanatical attention to detail is seen throughout.

‘Steve invested so much of his energy creating and supporting vital, creative environments,’ said Jony Ive, Apple’s chief design officer.

‘We have approached the design, engineering and making of our new campus with the same enthusiasm and design principles that characterise our products.’

‘Connecting extraordinarily advanced buildings with rolling parkland creates a wonderfully open environment for people to create, collaborate and work together. 

‘We have been extremely fortunate to be able to work closely, over many years, with the remarkable architectural practice Foster + Partners.’

The Spaceship, officially known as Apple Park, has 360-degree curved glass fronted walls and central courtyard as well as a 1,000-seater auditorium, a gym and 300,000 square feet of 'research' space. Pictured is the site i September 2017

The Spaceship, officially known as Apple Park, has 360-degree curved glass fronted walls and central courtyard as well as a 1,000-seater auditorium, a gym and 300,000 square feet of ‘research’ space. Pictured is the site i September 2017

The parklands offer two miles of walking and running paths for employees, plus an orchard, meadow and pond within the ring's interior grounds

The parklands offer two miles of walking and running paths for employees, plus an orchard, meadow and pond within the ring’s interior grounds

Since Apple unveiled its plans in 2011, the move-in date has slowly receded.

Jobs’ initial projection was 2015, but this spring now seems most likely, according to people involved in the project.

More than £800 million ($1 billion) was allocated for the interior of the main building alone, according to a former construction manager.

The campus is something of an exception to the trend of radically open offices aimed at fostering collaboration, said Louise Mozingo, a professor and chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning at University of California, Berkeley. 

Its central office building – a massive ring of glass frequently likened to a spaceship – could be a challenge just to navigate, she noted.

When Jobs presented his plan to the Cupertino City Council in June 2011, he said that Apple would add to the 3,700 existing trees for a total of 6,000 – but this proved impossible, so new trees had to be brought it.

Underground, the site's Steve Jobs Theatre auditorium will be where Apple's CEO Tim Cook presents the company's keynotes ahead of product launches

Underground, the site’s Steve Jobs Theatre auditorium will be where Apple’s CEO Tim Cook presents the company’s keynotes ahead of product launches

‘It’s not about maximizing the productivity of the office space, it’s about creating a symbolic center for this global company,’ she said. ‘They are creating an icon.’

Technology companies have long favoured generic office parks, but the Apple Campus 2 marks a new chapter in Silicon Valley architecture. 

The main building – which boasts the world’s largest piece of curved glass – is surrounded by a lush canopy of thousands of trees.

Little remains from the cement-laden campus Apple acquired from Hewlett-Packard, though the iPhone maker preserved a century-old barn that remained intact.

But what was most striking to those who worked on the project was Apple managers’ insistence on treating the construction of the vast complex the same way they approach the design of pocket-sized electronics.

Apple said it will take six months to move all 12,000 staff into the $5 billion (£4 billion) 2.8 million-square-foot campus, which features a 1,000 seat auditorium named the Steve Jobs Theatre

Apple said it will take six months to move all 12,000 staff into the $5 billion (£4 billion) 2.8 million-square-foot campus, which features a 1,000 seat auditorium named the Steve Jobs Theatre

Apple’s in-house construction team enforced many rules, including a strict ban on any vents or pipes being reflected in the glass.

And guidelines for the special wood used frequently throughout the building ran to some 30 pages, reports suggest.

The company’s keen design sense enhanced the project, but its expectations sometimes clashed with construction realities, a former architect said.

‘With phones, you can build to very, very minute tolerances,’ he said. ‘You would never design to that level of tolerance on a building. Your doors would jam.’ 

The Steve Jobs Theater (artist's impression) is situated on top of a hill — one of the highest points within Apple Park — overlooking meadows and the main building. Opening later this year, the entrance to the 1,000-seat auditorium is a 20-foot-tall glass cylinder, 165 feet in diameter, supporting a metallic carbon-fibre roof

The Steve Jobs Theater (artist’s impression) is situated on top of a hill — one of the highest points within Apple Park — overlooking meadows and the main building. Opening later this year, the entrance to the 1,000-seat auditorium is a 20-foot-tall glass cylinder, 165 feet in diameter, supporting a metallic carbon-fibre roof

Apple’s novel approach to the building took many forms. 

Architect German de la Torre, who worked on the project, found many of the proportions – such as the curve of a rounded corner – came from Apple’s products.

The elevator buttons struck some workers as resembling the iPhone’s home button; one former manager even likened the toilet’s sleek design to the device.

But Mr de la Torre ultimately saw that Apple executives were not trying to evoke the iPhone per se, but rather following something akin to the Platonic ideal of form and dimension.

The circular, four-storey building will be around a mile in circumference and a third of a mile wide and was recently described by the San Francisco Weekly as a ‘massive glass doughnut’

The circular, four-storey building will be around a mile in circumference and a third of a mile wide and was recently described by the San Francisco Weekly as a ‘massive glass doughnut’

‘They have arrived at design principles somehow through many years of experimentation, and they are faithful to those principles,’ Mr de la Torre said.

Early in construction, Apple managers told the construction team that the ceiling – composed of large panels of polished concrete – should be immaculate inside and out, just as the inside of the iPhone’s audio jack is a finished product, a former construction manager recalled.

Each of the thousands of ceiling panels had to win approval from both Apple’s in-house team and the general contractor, once at the shop and then again at the construction site.

Apple's current headquarters are pictured in Cupertino

The futuristic new campus is very different to the old design

Technology companies have long favoured generic office parks, but the Apple Campus 2 (right) marks a new chapter in Silicon Valley architecture. Pictured left is Apple’s current Cupertino campus

Covering 175 acres, Apple's 'Campus 2' headquarters will replace its current offices at 1 Infinite Loop (pictured)

Covering 175 acres, Apple’s ‘Campus 2’ headquarters will replace its current offices at 1 Infinite Loop (pictured)

‘The things you can’t see, they all mattered to Apple,’ the former construction manager said.

One of the most vexing features was the doorways, which Apple wanted to be perfectly flat, with no threshold. The construction team pushed back, but Apple held firm. 

‘We spent months trying not to do that because that’s time, money and stuff that’s never been done before,’ the former construction manager said. 

Signage also required a delicate balancing act, as Apple wanted all signs to reflect its sleek, minimalist aesthetic, but the fire department needed to ensure the building could be swiftly navigated in an emergency.

HOW APPLE MADE STEVE JOBS’ VISION FOR ITS NEW CALIFORNIA ‘SPACESHIP’ CAMPUS A REALITY

Apple Park, the company’s brand new £3.5 billion ($5 billion) headquarters, will soon house 12,000 employees.

The building was the brainchild of Steve Jobs, who came up with the design months before his tragic death in 2011. 

The incredible lengths Apple went to in making Jobs’ vision a reality, from buying a Christmas tree farm in Nevada to buying so many local trees it caused a shortage, have been revealed.

While the office itself boasts elaborate glass canopies, a two-story yoga room, a 4,000-person café with four-story glass doors, and even patented pizza boxes to prevent food from getting soggy, the parkland surrounding it is just as impressive.

David Muffly, the expert dubbed ‘Apple’s tree whisperer’ has revealed the incredible lengths Apple went to in a bid to fulfil Steve Jobs vision – even buying a Christmas tree farm in Nevada.

Muffly said the biggest challenge was finding enough trees, especially as the number rose from Jobs’ original 6,000 to the current goal of 9,000. 

When Jobs presented his plan to the Cupertino City Council in June 2011, he said that Apple would add to the 3,700 existing trees for a total of 6,000 – but this proved impossible, so new trees had to be brought it.

David Muffly, the expert dubbed 'Apple's tree whisperer' has revealed the incredible lengths Apple went to in a bid to fulfil Steve Jobs vision - even buying a Christmas tree farm in Nevada

David Muffly, the expert dubbed ‘Apple’s tree whisperer’ has revealed the incredible lengths Apple went to in a bid to fulfil Steve Jobs vision – even buying a Christmas tree farm in Nevada

Jobs hoped to recapture the lost feel of an area that was once mostly open spaces and fruit orchards.

‘The landscape design of meadows and woodlands will create an ecologically rich oak savanna reminiscent of the early Santa Clara Valley,’ Apple said in its original proposal. 

‘It will incorporate both young and mature trees, and native and drought tolerant plants that will thrive in Santa Clara County with minimal water consumption. 

‘The thoughtful and extensive landscaping will recall Cupertino’s pre-agricultural and agricultural past.’

800 of the healthiest and most attractive trees were 'boxed' so they could be stored in a corner of the construction site

800 of the healthiest and most attractive trees were ‘boxed’ so they could be stored in a corner of the construction site

Apple’s tree strategy involved first preserving the best trees already on the site for replanting later.

According to planning documents, Apple removed 3,616 trees from the land before construction could begin.

Muffly and his team  selected and stored 800 of the healthiest and most attractive of those trees and ‘boxed’ them so they could be stored in a corner of the construction site. 

A report from the city’s consulting arborist, Michael Bench, included photos of a couple of trees from the site being readied for transplantation to these large boxes, and revealed how they were moved.

The pain painstaking process was revealed in an October 2013 report.

‘The pipes are driven under the root ball using a pneumatic hammer. 

‘A large I-Beam will be bolted to these pipes on the 2 sides where they extend past the root ball. 

‘When it is time to transplant the trees, cranes will affix cables to the I-Beams to lift and move the tree. 

‘The root balls are being irrigated and will continue to be irrigated on a regular schedule for up to 5 years.’

Developers working on San Francisco’s new Transbay Transit Center train station are having a hard time getting trees for the new 5.4-acre green rooftop City Park. 

Patrick Trollip, the lead landscaper on the transit project, told the San Francisco Chronicle that Apple has become their biggest obstacle because the company keeps buying all the trees at landscaping centers along the coast. 

In a cluster of East Bay nurseries, Apple has been growing more than 4,600 trees, which are nestled in large, wooden boxes

In a cluster of East Bay nurseries, Apple has been growing more than 4,600 trees, which are nestled in large, wooden boxes

‘Buying trees is a surprisingly cutthroat business. 

‘And it’s been especially challenging to locate desirable specimens because Apple has been buying up 3,000 trees for its new Cupertino headquarters. 

When Greenspan and Trollip found a tree they fancied they would ‘tag it’ with a locking yellow tag, so that nobody else — like Apple — could get it. 

Eventually all the tagged trees were moved to a nursery in Sunol, where the transbay project team leased 4 acres.’  

 



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