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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday May 11 2017, @11:19PM   Printer-friendly
from the dot-com-bubble dept.

USA Today has an article about Amazon.com's new Seattle headquarters, which consist of "three gigantic glass spheres," and about other unusual buildings in the city.

Americans tend to think of brown shipping boxes when it comes to Amazon. But in Seattle, the company is increasingly known as a real-estate owner. That's especially true downtown, where Amazon employs more than 24,000 — some of whom will soon hold meetings and take lunch breaks inside three gigantic glass spheres that add a geodesic flare to the urban grid.

The tallest of the glass and metal Spheres rises 90 feet and is more than 130 feet in diameter, with two smaller spheres to each side. In a city that gets 152 days of rain a year, they will provide a warm, dry, plant-filled space for meetings, meals and mingling for up to 800 Amazon employees at a time.

"It's kind of fantastic," said Thaisa Way, an urban landscape historian at the University of Washington in Seattle.


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  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Friday May 12 2017, @04:49AM (1 child)

    by Immerman (3985) on Friday May 12 2017, @04:49AM (#508475)

    Vaguely, in the sense that almost all three-atom molecules look vaguely the same. But it lacks the two most iconic features of a water molecule: the large size difference between oxygen to hydrogen, and the 105* angle they form.

    Really, it looks a lot closer to carbon dioxide, with its two slightly smaller oxygen molecules in a straight line with the central carbon.

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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Friday May 12 2017, @03:47PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Friday May 12 2017, @03:47PM (#508667)

    And, there's a question: what produces more CO2, UPS trucks delivering cardboard boxes direct from warehouse to customer, or individuals in private cars driving to multiple brick and mortar retail locations browsing, purchasing, and driving home?

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