Infinite Loop (street)

This article is about the street on which Apple Inc.'s campus is located. For the campus itself, see Apple Campus. For the programming term this street is named after, see Infinite Loop.
Infinite Loop
<span class="nickname" ">Infinite Loop

The headquarters of Apple on Infinite Loop with the then-current Myriad corporate font (introduced in 2002) and a light blue variant of the Apple logo on the headquarters sign.
Location Cupertino, California
Coordinates 37°19′55″N 122°01′52″W / 37.33182°N 122.03118°W / 37.33182; -122.03118
The same sign with the old Garamond corporate font used from 1984 to 2004 and a red variant of the Apple logo which was used from 1998 to 2004.

Infinite Loop is a street encircling the six main buildings of Apple's headquarters (the Apple Campus) in Cupertino, California. Each building has a number which corresponds to its single-digit address on the Loop, and so Apple's official mailing address is "1 Infinite Loop". The numbers increment in the clockwise direction. Employees often refer to the buildings as IL1 through IL6. The loop connects to Mariani Avenue, which was the former street address of Apple HQ; early printed material contains the address "20525 Mariani Avenue," which is the address of a building that still stands directly across on the other side of De Anza Boulevard.

Infinite Loop is at the southeast corner of De Anza Boulevard and Interstate 280. The main office, 1 Infinite Loop, directly faces De Anza Boulevard. There are other buildings on Apple's campus which are in the proximity of, but not on Infinite Loop. Apple has purchased nearby parcels of land (one mile east) on which to build a second campus.[1][2]

The name was inspired by the programming concept of the infinite loop.

Infinite Loop is actually a private U-shaped crescent that joins up with the public street Mariani Avenue to form a loop.

History

Street sign of Infinite Loop.
Map of the Apple Campus.

Construction of the Infinite Loop campus was completed in 1993 by Sobrato Development Cos.[3] Before 1997, activity on the campus was restricted to Research and Development activities, and each building was referred to as R&D 1 through R&D 6. Shortly after the return of Steve Jobs to Apple when Apple consolidated the number of buildings it occupied, many non-R&D related functions moved to the campus, so the Research and Development name was dropped, and the buildings were renamed IL 1 through IL 6. The local BJ's Restaurant & Brewery, just off campus, is often jokingly referred to as "IL 7", as was the Peppermill bar and restaurant which previously stood on the same site.

Before Infinite Loop was built, the location was occupied by Four-Phase Systems (which was later acquired by Motorola).

Appearances

The Infinite Loop appears on the icon of the Maps iOS application before iOS 7;[4] later versions center the icon on the new Apple Campus. It is also the default startup location of the Apple "Find my Friends" application.

The Infinite Loop also appears on the icon of the third-party map app OpenMaps.[5]

References

  1. Steve Jobs addresses Cupertino City Council (YouTube)
  2. "Cupertino : City News : Steve Jobs Presents to Cupertino City Council". cupertino.org. Retrieved 6 October 2015.
  3. The Sobrato Organization
  4. "iPhone maps icon is BJ's Restaurant and Brewhouse". Retrieved 2 November 2012.
  5. IZE, Ltd. (10 March 2010). "OpenMaps". App Store. Retrieved 6 October 2015.

Route map: Bing / Google

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