flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Apple spars with Cupertino, Calif., mayor over strained city infrastructure

Codes and Standards

Apple spars with Cupertino, Calif., mayor over strained city infrastructure

Apple’s new ‘spaceship’ campus project prompts questions about whether the company should pay more to offset traffic woes.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | May 10, 2016

Apple's new campus. Rendering courtesy City of Cupertino

The construction of Apple’s new $5 billion campus in Cupertino, Calif., has raised tensions over whether the company and other large employers should pay more in taxes to local communities to help offset their impact on local infrastructure.

Many people in Cupertino have begun to organize and focus on Silicon Valley’s aging transportation networks. Frustrated by traffic and noise, some residents want to stop further development. Traffic woes have been occasionally worsened by temporary road closures related to Apple’s new headquarters construction.

Apple paid $9.2 million in taxes to Cupertino from 2012 to 2013, according to a report in the Guardian. In the 2012 fiscal year, Apple tallied $156.5 billion in sales. The city gives Apple an annual tax break on business-to-business sales that started in 1997, when Apple was on the verge of collapse, the Guardian reported.

Cupertino Mayor Barry Chang, who has butted heads with Apple over the issue, says the high-tech giant should pay more taxes to the city, but doesn’t want to see limits on new development for fear that they could harm the regional economy.

Related Stories

| Jan 30, 2012

New firm-fixed-price rules on federal contracts impact construction industry

Contractors will need to be on the lookout for policies such as the Contractor Accountability for Quality clause.

| Jan 30, 2012

Roofer’s fatal plunge demonstrates need for fall-prevention regulations

“The biggest problem is getting our workers to use the equipment,” says Michael J. Florio, executive director of the organization.

| Jan 26, 2012

Tampa moves to streamlined online permitting system

The system will replace an inefficient patchwork of old software and is designed to provide businesses, homeowners, and contractors with online access to permitting and licensing information.

| Jan 26, 2012

EPA to collect more data, seek comments before finalizing mud rule

The EPA says it will seek more data and is accepting comments until March 5.

| Jan 26, 2012

Industry challenges Connecticut's suit over defective construction work

The dispute arose over multimillion-dollar leaks at the University of Connecticut's law library.

| Jan 26, 2012

Earthquake 'fuse' could save buildings during temblors

The idea is to use an earthquake "fuse" that can prevent the tiny fractures and warps that make structures unsafe after a quake and very expensive to repair.

| Jan 26, 2012

HPD open materials standard for green building materials gains momentum

GreenWizard, provider of a cloud-based product management and project collaboration software, is the latest industry participant to sign on

| Jan 26, 2012

Siemens launches smoke detection knowledge center

New knowledge center web site demonstrates efficacy of smoke detection. 

| Jan 18, 2012

Chile's seismic code upgrades credited with saving lives in 2010 quake

Since 1960, when Chile suffered a 9.5 magnitude quake, the largest ever recorded; the country has steadily improved building codes to protect lives and property.

| Jan 18, 2012

Report analyzes residential hurricane codes in 18 states

The Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) released a new report analyzing residential building codes in 18 hurricane-prone coastal states along the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Coast.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Multifamily Housing

Grassroots groups becoming a force in housing advocacy

A growing movement of grassroots organizing to support new housing construction is having an impact in city halls across the country. Fed up with high housing costs and the commonly hostile reception to new housing proposals, advocacy groups have sprung up in many communities to attend public meetings to speak in support of developments.



halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021