We can't wait to see what it looks like when the landscaping is done.
The entire building was conceived more like an Apple product than a building, according to Apple executives.
Here you can see some trees ready to be planted.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThere will be a circular fountain in the middle, but it's not done yet.
Inside the ring will be parkland too.
There are also other offices on the campus, like these more conventional R&D buildings.
The idea is that, when completed, it should look like a lush forest or park with lots of trees native to Northern California.
Although the building looks move-in ready, there's still lots of landscaping to be done and trees to be planted.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAll of the windows on the building are made out of curved glass.
Somebody asked Apple Chief Design officer Jony Ive why Apple needed these massive, 440,000 pound glass doors. His reply? "Well, It depends how you define need, doesn’t it?"
Apple Park has four-story high glass doors opening to a massive atrium.
A series of underground tunnels handles traffic from cars without marring the surface.
The entire roof is covered in solar panels.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdYou can see workers inside putting the finishing touches on the immaculate interior.
This is merely the entrance. Most of the seating is underground.
Here is the Steve Jobs Theatre from a distance.
Construction workers on the project agree.
More snaps from inside Apple Park here.
Apple Park's main building is nicknamed the "spaceship," and it certainly looks like one from a distance.