Apple Campus 3

The Apple Wolfe campus, also called Apple Campus 3 or AC3, and formerly called Central & Wolfe, is an office complex owned and occupied by Apple Inc., located in Sunnyvale, California. It is Apple's third large campus in Silicon Valley and was completed 2018. It was originally speculatively designed by the architecture and site engineering firm HOK and was constructed by HOK's Level 10 Construction. The Korth Sunseri Hagey (KSH) architecture firm and the Jay Paul Company and Landbank commercial real estate development companies were also involved in the project.

Location and transportation access
The complex is in Sunnyvale, California, next to the Central Expressway at Wolfe Road, about 4 mi north of Apple's current headquarters at Apple Park and former headquarters on Infinite Loop (both in Cupertino). The site is closer to Caltrain stations (the Sunnyvale and Lawrence stations) than the other two campuses, and is thus more conveniently located for workers to use Caltrain for transportation, although it is still farther than usual walking distance, so commuting by Caltrain typically also involves a company shuttle bus. Transit between the site and Apple Park takes about 10 minutes by car or an hour by city bus, and Apple provides shuttle buses for employees.

Design
The land area of the site is 18 acre. The multi-story office buildings have approximately 882000 sqft of occupiable floorspace, supplemented by a 1010000 sqft multi-level parking garage, bringing the campus' total building square footage to 1892000 sqft. The complex is dominated by three office buildings that are interconnected with two 60 ft connecting regions, each building having four stories of office space and two levels of underground parking. The site features 90000 sqft of rooftop gardens, and landscaped open space covers 53% of the total area. A fourth building hosts amenities. Each floor of each office building has about 62000 sqft of floorspace and a ceiling height of 13.5 ft. The three main buildings have platinum-level LEED 2009 Commercial Interiors as certified by the U.S. Green Building Council.

An aerial view of the buildings has been said to resemble "a broken fidget spinner". Originally, the buildling was designed to resemble the looped square command symbol used in macOS.