Why Apple s New HQ Is Nothing Like the Rest of Silicon Valley

2017-06-27 10:11:13

Jennifer Magnolfi

June 26, 2017

I think we have a shot at building the best office building in the world were

the words Steve Jobs used to describe Apple s new headquarters in 2011. The

grand vision at the heart of his last project is now being unveiled as Apple

finalizes construction on Apple Park. Wired called the facility insanely great

(or just insane), and in many ways it is exactly that.

The sheer magnitude of Apple s new headquarters sets it apart from any other

technology workspace on the West Coast. Instead of many buildings spread across

a campus, the site features one master circular structure (2.8 million square

feet) called the Ring, designed to house 12,000 employees. (To get a sense of

its scale, the Ring s internal courtyard is wider than St. Peter s Square in

Rome. Its external wall would surround the Pentagon.) The four-story glass

building designed by Norman Foster seamlessly integrates a long and diverse

list of technical achievements from the enormous solar panel array on the

roof to hidden cable management mechanisms at the workstations all according

to Jobs s uncompromising design standards.

Yet one of Jobs s most significant directives was that 80% of the nearly

200-acre site would be devoted to parkland. In fact, blurring the boundary

between architecture and nature became the defining idea for the project. Old

concrete parking lots gave way to new green landscapes and a wooded preserve

populated with 9,000 indigenous California trees, including ornamental and

fruit trees, selected to resist drought and the threat of future climate

change.

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While many have awaited the opening of Apple Park with great anticipation, a

project of this scope and ambition inevitably isn t without its critics. In

that same Wired piece:

what began with aesthetic judgments of the digital renderings the Los Angeles

Times architecture critic called the Ring a retrograde cocoon has lately

turned to social and cultural critiques. That the campus is a snobby isolated

preserve, at odds with the trendy urbanist school of corporate headquarters.

(Amazon, Twitter, and Airbnb are all part of a movement that hopes to integrate

tech employees into cities as opposed to having them commute via fuel-gobbling

cars or numbing Wi-Fi-equipped buses.) That the layout of the Ring is too

rigid, and that unlike Google s planned Mountain View headquarters (which that

company has described as having lightweight blocklike structures, which can be

moved around easily as we invest in new product areas ), Apple Park is not

prepared to adapt to potential changes in how, where, and why people work. That

there is no childcare center.

Certainly some of those critiques may prove to be warranted, and others raise

valid points. Overall, it s probably fair to say that a project of this

complexity and scale can only be truly evaluated post-occupancy and over time.

As someone who studies the design of high-tech workspaces, I am drawn to ask a

more fundamental question: Why is Apple heading in such a different direction

than most of its Valley peers? In other words, what is this project really

about?

The answer starts, as in all things Apple, with Steve Jobs.

How We Got Here

To set this in context, it s important to first understand the fundamental

challenge of building contemporary (and future) workspaces, especially for

technology companies: Software and buildings operate on entirely different

timescales. Software, like information technology in general, is optimized for

speed and upgrades constant, sometimes radical change. Buildings, on the

other hand, are change averse, optimized to stand for decades. But despite the

different timescale, the challenge for real estate executives is not unlike the

one facing CIOs: to make sure a new investment will not quickly become

obsolete.

Silicon Valley has dealt with this challenge for decades, but the unique

culture of the region gives its companies a competitive advantage. Throughout

the 20th century, the Valley s ascent can be traced to close geographical

proximity and deep collaboration between tech companies, academia, and

government agencies a formula that produced some of the most significant

technology ventures in modern American history.

Influenced by this collaborative context, Valley founders prized proximity to

one another; face-to-face interactions; informal deal making; and changeable,

impermanent team and org structures. These values are reflected in their

buildings, which adopted design strategies to make workspace configurations

adaptable, or somewhat less permanent. The aim was to get the physical

workspace to perform at the speed of software or at least get a little closer

to it.

This led to open floor plans, rich amenities and services, informal attire, a

collegial atmosphere, and very distinct work cultures. The more successful

interior spaces foster collisions and spontaneous interactions among

employees through a variety of space typologies. Those collisions, as research

(mine and others ) shows, increase learning, collaboration, and ultimately

innovation.

In the last decade, however, the timescale gap between workspaces, buildings,

and technology has widened even more rapidly, as mobile phones, social media,

and other new technology have allowed companies to quickly reach massive scale.

New young tech companies Airbnb, Twitter, Instagram, Snap, and WeWork, among

others operate differently than Silicon Valley giants. They acquire huge

customer bases and receive staggering market valuations while employing a

relatively small number of people. Their business models are fluid. Their speed

and disruptive scale inevitably force them to choose workspaces that emphasize

extreme flexibility, impermanence, and the ability to be reconfigured to

accommodate rapid growth.

For this new tech workforce, work is less a place built through furniture,

and more a digital collaboration space built by networks. Having grown up

communicating and working through mobile devices and social networks, younger

workers and founders see themselves and their work as mobile by default. Not

surprisingly, this shapes their expectations of a workspace.

The model emerging to support them is a network of corporate offices

distributed among the commercial shops and public spaces of a neighborhood

community. Workers move freely through these different spatial contexts,

bumping into colleagues, collaborators, potential partners, and other

urbanites. Work happens anywhere and anytime within this urban fabric. It

mirrors the nature of online interactions, where personal, social, and

professional lives interconnect naturally at all hours.

These responses to the rapid change of technology seem reasonable when one

thinks about how most companies measure their real estate investments. Mostly,

the focus is on efficiency: cost and profitability per square foot, vacancy

rates, maintenance overhead.

When it comes to Apple Park, however, the metrics used to measure the reported

$5 billion investment appear more complex and nuanced. They belong to an

entirely different domain, and perhaps a different category of buildings

altogether.

Enduring Value Beyond Efficiency

This brings us back to Steve Jobs, who didn t think about corporate real estate

only in terms of efficiency, amortization, and physical adaptability. His final

interviews leave us with a clear sense that this project was intended to carry

great symbolic value: My passion has been to build an enduring company where

people were motivated to make great products. Everything else was secondary.

And, I want to leave a signature campus that expresses the values of the

company for generations.

He probably knew the Churchillian adage that we shape our buildings, and then

they shape us. In fact, his raw instinct for manipulating space to influence

behavior was well known since the days of designing the Pixar campus in 1998.

A decade later, the design concept for Apple Park expanded his approach and

legendary attention to (some say obsession with) functional detail to a higher

level of sophistication. Today the almost finished project conveys Jobs s

aspirations through significant breakthroughs in the building systems of our

time:

Innovation in exterior building systems. The ring is a curved glass fa ade. Not

a single flat sheet of exterior glass was used, and the company made a

manufacturing modification so that the hue of the glass would not be green. The

main caf is fronted by the single largest sheet of curved glass in the world.

This design maximizes the connection between the worker and nature just outside

the windows.

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Photo courtesy of Apple

Innovation in structural systems. To achieve the curvature of a perfect circle

while minimizing landfill use, the project developed its own concrete plant.

Ninety-five percent of all the concrete from the old HP campus buildings,

parking lots, sidewalks was ground and recycled on-site to build the concrete

frame of the new building.

Innovation in mechanical and electrical systems. The building counts one of the

largest solar panel arrays in the world, with the aim of powering the entire

campus with electricity generated on-site. The mechanical air conditioning

system is designed to make this the largest naturally ventilated building in

the world. A former director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency leads

the project s environmental aspects.

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Innovation in workplace systems. Not an open plan. The overall strategy for the

workspace is based on modular pods dedicated to either teamwork, focused

work, or socialization. The rhythm of the pods permits serendipitous and fluid

meeting spaces along the circumference of the Ring, connecting interior

high-tech environments for productivity to panoramic views of the exterior

landscape, orchards, and sunlight.

It s not just these large-scale design moves that convey the building s

aspirations. Doorknobs, glass doors, desks, even faucets are formed to fit and

contribute to the overall experience of the space. No detail rushed, no

off-the-shelf solution used. Every touchpoint seems to present an opportunity

for timeless design. Arguably, like in an iPhone. Or, in the world of

buildings, a cathedral.

Apple Park may actually have more in common with that category of architectural

project than with other corporate workspace ventures. Cathedrals carry symbolic

value, aspirational visions that go far beyond their function. In fact, the

very great ones in Europe required significant innovations in the architectural

technology of their time in order to achieve their vision think Brunelleschi

s Dome in Florence, the flying buttresses in Chartres, the vaulted roof in the

Duomo of Milan. As with those types of buildings, technology breakthroughs were

necessary for Apple Park s vision to exist; extraordinary details and

craftsmanship were necessary for it to inspire.

Closer to home, a more practical analogue is this. In the world of technology

workspaces, we haven t seen this sense of timelessness and the deliberate

intent to build far into the future in over half a century, when the same

long-view ethos produced the Sandia National Laboratories, NASA Johnson Space

Center, Fermilab, or the Manhattan Project. These 20th-century projects were

symbols that inspired many generations of workers to see their work as part of

something bigger, to employ their talents in advancing new frontiers of science

and technology innovation for all.

Beyond its function as a workspace, Apple Park may ultimately aspire to a

21st-century version of this ethos. This project is about a legacy, timeless

design, and the belief that the design of a headquarters can shape a company s

trajectory and inspire generations of future workers and leaders for years to

come.

Contrarian and Obsolete?

To many critics, Jobs s vision doesn t make a lot of sense. From the Wired

article:

It s an obsolete model that doesn t address the work conditions of the future,

says Louise Mozingo, an urban design professor at UC Berkeley.

It s a spectacular piece of formal design, but it s contrarian to what s going

on in corporate headquarters across the tech industry, says Scott Wyatt, an

architect at NBBJ, a prominent international firm that has designed buildings

for Google, Amazon, and Tencent.

There s no doubt that Apple Park stands in stark contrast to the flexibility

and speed of successful contemporary workspaces for Silicon Valley and the tech

startup set. But it seems inaccurate to state that Jobs s vision wasn t taking

the future into account.

At a time when the future of work itself demands closer contact with machines,

Apple Park deliberately sets human workers in closer contact with nature. Jobs

s vision wasn t concerned with whether future employees will rely on AI

interfaces, telepresence robots for collaboration, or augmented reality for

prototyping. He envisioned an enduring building that would be relevant 100

years from now, like a cathedral or national lab.

Most technology companies want to build workspaces that can adapt over time.

Understandably, they want to hedge against unpredictability and rapid change.

Apple instead is building a campus that aims to inspire and stand the test of

time. It is not a hedge. Little that Steve Jobs did was.

Jennifer Magnolfi is founder of Programmable Habitats, a research firm that

specializes in the design of high-tech work environments. She is a graduate of

Harvard University s Graduate School of Design.