The Spheres Blossom at Amazon’s Urban HQ in Seattle
The Spheres—the newest buildings on Amazon’s campus in downtown
Seattle—have no enclosed offices, conference spaces, or desks, and
employees can meet in treehouses suspended under 40+ foot trees or in
sitting areas and walking paths alongside cascading waterfalls
Plants, trees, sunlight, soil, and water take center stage – the sound
of running water and the scent of flowering plants create an instant
botanical immersion that takes visitors far away from the urban landscape
The project created more than 600 full-time jobs, and is part of
Amazon’s more than $4 billion investment in the design, development, and
construction of its Seattle HQ
The Spheres will be open to provide educational opportunities to the
Seattle community through tours, field trips and partnerships with local
schools and universities
SEATTLE–(BUSINESS WIRE)–(NASDAQ: AMZN) — Amazon today announced the opening of The Spheres, the
company’s newest Seattle HQ buildings that are home to more than 40,000
plants from around the world. There’s no place else in the world quite
like The Spheres – a spot where Amazon employees can work in an
environment that’s more like a tropical rainforest in the clouds than an
office. Plants, trees, sunlight, soil, and water take center stage – the
sound of running water and the scent of flowering plants create an
instant botanical immersion that takes visitors far away from the urban
landscape. The Spheres are a result of innovative thinking about the
character of the workplace and an extended conversation about what is
typically missing from urban offices – a direct link to nature. Studies
suggest that spaces that embrace biophilic design can inspire
creativity and even improve brain function.
“Our goal with The Spheres was to create a unique gathering place where
employees could collaborate and innovate together, and where the Seattle
community could gather to experience biodiversity in the center of the
city,” said John Schoettler, Amazon Vice President of Global Real Estate
and Facilities. “I am very proud and thankful to the entire team who
made The Spheres a reality – they did a terrific job from the design all
the way to the finishing touches. We are thrilled to officially open the
doors.”
The Spheres feature treehouse meeting rooms, river and waterfall
features, paludariums, a four-story living wall, and epiphytic trees.
They are home to more than 400 species spanning five continents and 50
countries, and many of the plants have journeyed from botanical gardens,
tree nurseries, and conservation programs from around the globe. Many of
the plants inside The Spheres are from cloud forest ecosystems, where
plants thrive on mountainsides at an altitude ranging from 3,000 to
10,000 feet. Plants in these ecosystems have adapted to cooler
temperatures, which makes their climate needs comfortable for people,
too.
Amazon is committed to sharing the beauty and biodiversity inside The
Spheres with the public, and will provide educational opportunities to
the Seattle community through tours, field trips and partnerships with
local schools and universities. The Spheres also include a visitor
center – called The Understory – that is open to the public year round.
The Understory provides a fully immersive, 360-degree experience where
visitors can get up close and personal with the science, engineering,
and plants behind The Spheres.
“The Spheres are sure to become an iconic part of downtown Seattle, and
I applaud Amazon for its latest innovation,” Gov. Jay Inslee said.
“These unique buildings are so much more than a beautiful creative space
for Amazon employees. They will help conserve a number of rare plant
species from around the world and provide countless educational
opportunities for local students – and that’s something Washington can
take pride in.”
“Seattle is the coolest city in the country, leading the way with
innovative urban projects like The Spheres. This unique landscape will
bring together students, visitors, and residents in the heart of our
City,” said Mayor Jenny Durkan.
“The most delightful design feature of Amazon’s Spheres goes far beyond
bringing natural beauty into Seattle’s urban core,” said Toby Bradshaw,
Professor and Chair, UW Department of Biology. “The use of plant
biodiversity — including the ‘weird’ and ‘ugly’ specimens — to tell the
story of interconnections among living things will be an inspiration to
all who visit and work at The Spheres.”
Learn about The Spheres, The Understory, and how to visit on www.seattlespheres.com.
For regular updates about the plant life inside The Spheres, follow @SeattleSpheres
on Instagram.
About The Spheres
Find out about opening day: https://blog.aboutamazon.com/amazon-campus/the-spheres-blossom-in-seattle
The Spheres were built to create a wide variety of ways to communicate,
work and dine on five different levels in the backdrop of dramatic plant
installations including living walls, paludariums and treehouse
gathering spaces. Below are a few facts about The Spheres, as well as
what visitors will find within and around them:
-
More than 600 full-time jobs created through the design, build and
construction of The Spheres -
More than 620 tons of steel, or enough steel to build the Space Needle
three times -
12 million pounds of concrete used in the construction, or enough
concrete to build a highway from Seattle to Sacramento, CA. -
The exterior façade features a naturally occurring shape in nature
called a “Catalan,” which is derived from the face of a pentagonal
hexecontahedron Catalan solid – the shape repeats throughout The
Spheres with 60 faces per Sphere and 180 total -
The Spheres’ façade contains 2,643 panes of glass that are ultra-clear
and energy-efficient, with a film interlayer to keep out infrared
wavelengths that produce unwanted heat -
Structural engineers tested The Spheres for all kinds of environmental
factors, including 91 different scenarios. At the base of The Spheres,
a 400,000-pound ring beam transfers heavy loads of gravity, wind and
seismic forces from the glass-and-steel façade to columns in the
parking garage below - The largest Sphere is more than 90 feet tall and 130 feet in diameter
-
All three Spheres share a single indoor environment, which makes air
flow critical between the buildings. Radiant floor heating and cooling
is an efficient way to balance indoor temperature, and also ensures
that less hot and dry air circulates through the HVAC system. -
More than 40,000 plants and over 400 species will call The Spheres
home at any given time -
The Spheres’ plant collection spans five continents, and includes
specimens from The University of Washington and Atlanta Botanical
Garden -
Many of the plants inside The Spheres are found in cloud forests, a
remarkably diverse type of high-elevation tropical forest that
receives much of its moisture from direct contact with clouds rather
than from rain -
Cloud forest ecosystems are typically located at high altitudes (3,000
to 10,000 feet), and they are found in tropical and subtropical
mountainous regions of the world, where cooler temperatures on
mountain slopes cause clouds to form -
Cloud forest plants depend on cool, humid conditions. To ensure that
both people and plants can thrive, The Spheres operate on a diurnal
cycle – the daytime temperature inside will average 72 degrees with
humidity around 60 percent, and the nighttime temperature will average
55 degrees with humidity around 85 percent -
The Spheres largest inhabitant – a Ficus rubiginosa dubbed “Rubi” –
was planted at a tree farm in California in 1969. Today, Rubi is
55-feet tall, 22-feet wide and weighs nearly 36,000 lbs.
UW Partnership Background
Over the past 30 years the University of Washington has cultivated a
world-class plant collection at the UW Botany Greenhouse (9,000
specimens, 3,000 species). This past summer, the building was torn-down
to pave the way for a new, state-of-the-art greenhouse facility. Amazon
is providing a home to all of these plants at a greenhouse in
Woodinville, WA while construction is taking place, providing the space
and care to keep the collection thriving for future UW students.
The UW plant collections are a vital component of UW Biology’s missions
— research, teaching, and public outreach. Indeed, the outreach mission
alone brings thousands of visitors annually to the greenhouse — K-12
students and their teachers, garden clubs, horticultural societies,
photographers and artists, and Seattleites looking for warmth and light
in midwinter! UW has also shared some plants for use in The Spheres, and
there will be many more such opportunities to share resources and
expertise as Amazon and UW Biology move into their respective homes.
Amazon Sustainability Background
In addition to the on-going conservation efforts inside The Spheres,
Amazon puts its scale and innovative culture to work for sustainability
in many other ways. By the numbers:
7 – Amazon’s Sustainability team includes 7 expert groups: Energy
and Environment, Packaging, Social Responsibility, Sustainability
Services, Science and Innovation, Transportation, and Technology.
50 – Last year, Amazon announced a goal to have over 50
fulfillment facilities with solar on rooftops by 2020. You can read the
announcement and watch a video about the project here.
55 – About 55% of employees at our Seattle headquarters get to
work by walking, riding bikes, or taking public transit. It’s one of the
big benefits of an urban campus.
330,000 – In 2017, we launched our largest
wind project to-date – Amazon Wind Farm Texas. Amazon’s projects
will generate enough clean energy to power more than 330,000 homes a
year.
3 million – That’s how many square feet we’ll be heating in
Seattle using recycled energy from a non-Amazon data center across the
street from our buildings. It’s an innovative project called ‘District
Energy’ and it’s 4x more efficient than traditional heating.
3.6 million – To date, Amazon has announced or commenced
construction of a total of 3.6 million megawatt hours (MWh) of renewable
energy.
360 Million – Amazon’s packaging initiatives (like
Frustration-Free Packaging and Ships in Own Container) eliminated more
than 215,000 tons of excess packaging as of 2017. That’s 360 million
boxes avoided.
Be sure to check out www.Amazon.com/sustainability
to stay informed about Amazon’s sustainability initiatives.
About Amazon
Amazon is guided by four principles: customer obsession rather than
competitor focus, passion for invention, commitment to operational
excellence, and long-term thinking. Customer reviews, 1-Click shopping,
personalized recommendations, Prime, Fulfillment by Amazon, AWS, Kindle
Direct Publishing, Kindle, Fire tablets, Fire TV, Amazon Echo, and Alexa
are some of the products and services pioneered by Amazon. For more
information, visit www.amazon.com/about
and follow @AmazonNews.
Contacts
Amazon.com, Inc.
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www.amazon.com/pr