Apple purchases San Diego campus in Rancho Bernardo

The tech company plans to hire 5,000 employees by 2026

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The Apple logo in red, outside the Apple UTC store at the Westfield UTC mall.

Photo via Michael Beausoleil + SDtoday

San Diego is preparing for a major hardware update. Apple Inc. purchased a $445 million campus in Rancho Bernardo — setting up the company to become a major employer locally + establishing a greater presence outside of its Cupertino, California, headquarters.

In July, the tech giant purchased the Rancho Vista Corporate Center — a seven-building research + development space. This 67.5-acre campus was home to HP Inc. until November 2016, then it underwent $80 million in renovations that were completed in May 2020.

 iHave seen Apple before

This isn’t Apple’s first move into America’s Finest City. In addition to five stores in San Diego County , the company leased 165,000 sqft of offices in University City starting in 2018. And it continued growing — before purchasing its new campus, it leased a different office space in Rancho Bernardo in July 2022.

Now, Apple owns its new campus and has established a more permanent presence, unlike its prior rentals that could go away like the headphone jack.

There’s a new addition to our city.

Image by Michael Beausoleil + Canva

 iWant a job

Apple is committed to upgrading by 20,000 jobs in the US over the next five years — and it looks like 25% will be in the San Diego area. The brand is looking forward to long-term expansion in the region, with plans to hire 5,000 employees here by 2026.

When Apple first arrived in San Diego, it primarily focused on hiring engineers + jobs in cellular technology . Now, there are 600+ open jobs in fields ranging from machine learning to camera technologies and hardware architecture, indicating San Diego will play a bigger role in future Keynotes.

 iSee the future

While Apple has multiple spaces in the county, its timeline hasn’t been released to the public. Josh Ohl - director of market analytics for CoStar — tells the “San Diego Union-Tribune” he believes the new campus will allow the company to consolidate into one space.

The new office space is carbon neutral + powered by 100% renewable energy. This supports San Diego’s Climate Action Plan — with an objective of having a net-zero carbon presence by 2035 — and Apple’s goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2030.

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Michael is based in San Diego, CA and joined 6AM City after working in higher education and a decade of creating digital content. When he’s not writing, he enjoys drinking coffee, watching competition reality shows, and discovering music.
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