Skip to main content

Facebook gets green light to build Gehry-designed campus extension

mark zuckerberg meeting frank gehry
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Facebook has been given the go ahead to start building its swish new Menlo Park campus extension. The city’s mayor, Peter Ohtaki, gave the social networking giant the good news Tuesday night.

“Congratulations,” Ohtaki said, adding, “Where’s the ‘Like’ button.”

According to the Mercury News, the decision had no trouble going through, with the council voting four-to-zero in favor of the project.

The design of the new 433,555-square-foot Facebook campus, which was first shown off last summer, is the work of internationally acclaimed architect Frank Gehry.

The eco-friendly complex, which is expected to be able to accommodate some 3,400 workers, will cover 22 acres and incorporate an enormous room (making Facebook home to the largest open-plan office on the planet) as well as a rooftop garden. A tunnel will connect the new building to the existing campus.

frank gehry Facebook buildingWhen Facebook pulled the wraps off its ambitious plans last year, company boss and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg wrote on his site, “The idea is to make the perfect engineering space: one giant room that fits thousands of people, all close enough to collaborate together. It will be the largest open floor plan in the world, but it will also have plenty of private, quiet spaces as well.”

While much of Gehry’s work can be described as anything from ‘striking’ to ‘WTF is that supposed to be?’, Zuckerberg and other Facebook executives requested a low-key look for the new Menlo Park campus, forcing Gehry to tone down some of the early designs he had in mind.

“They felt some of those things were too flashy and not in keeping with the kind of the culture of Facebook, so they asked us to make it more anonymous,” Gehry’s creative partner, Craig Webb, told the Mercury News.

When it’s complete, much of the building will be concealed by the landscaping and rooftop garden. “Our intent is that it almost becomes like a hillside, with the landscape really taking the forefront,” Webb said.

Now that the city council has given Facebook the OK to build its new campus extension, construction workers should be arriving to break ground in the coming months.

[via Cnet]

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Activists behind Facebook ad boycott rip Zuckerberg after meeting
mark zuckerberg thinking

Activist organizations behind a widespread ad boycott of Facebook told Digital Trends they don’t believe CEO Mark Zuckerberg is committing to confronting hateful content after meeting with him and other Facebook executives on Tuesday -- with one calling it a "PR exercise."

Zuckerberg, COO Sheryl Sandberg, and CPO Christopher Cox met with organizers from the NAACP, Color Of Change, Anti-Defamation League, Stop Hate for Profit, and Free Press to discuss Facebook’s failure to curtail the spread of hate and disinformation across its platform. In a statement from Stop Hate for Profit, the organization said that Zuckerberg “offered the same old defense.”

Read more
Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google will testify before Congress in July
Google & Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai

The top chief executives from Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google will all appear before Congress in late July for an antitrust hearing, according to Recode's Kara Swisher.

Most of the tech giants have appeared before Congress in the past, some multiple times, on an array of issues ranging from data mining to political bias, but this hearing would be the first on antitrust concerns. According to Swisher, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Google's Sundar Pichai, and Apple head Tim Cook will all participate in the hearing.

Read more
Facebook will label controversial content, ban hate speech in ads after boycott
mark zuckerberg thinking

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the social network will be changing several content moderation policies after a number of major advertisers pledged to boycott the company. In a major reversal, Zuckerberg said the company would ban hate speech in paid advertisements on the platform and start cracking down on harmful posts by public figures.

Zuckerberg revealed the changes in a video and post on Facebook, where the CEO said that the social network is "prohibiting a wider category of hateful content in ads."

Read more