Rendering conceptual only

from auto-dependent to walkable

North Bayshore Master Plan

Google has embarked on an ambitious plan to transform their Mountain View headquarters from an auto-dependent suburban office park into a walkable, bikeable, and mixed-use neighborhood in alignment with the City of Mountain View’s visionary Precise Plan for the area. 

Embedded in a restored and enhanced bay edge ecosystem and robust public realm network, the North Bayshore Master Plan envisions phasing out $750 million of existing suburban office park assets and building up to 3.14 million square feet of office (1.3 million net new square feet) while adding a complete neighborhood of up to 7,000 residential units (20% as affordable units), 55,000 square feet for community facilities, 31 acres of public parks and open space, and a world-class pedestrian, bicycle, and transit network. The new neighborhood will eventually host ~20 thousand residents, ~60 thousand workers, and 3 million annual visitors. 

The Second Nature team is serving as an Ecology adviser, working closely with Google, Lendlease, and multidisciplinary design teams to develop masterplan entitlement documents and design guidelines. The team is targeting LEED ND Gold or Platinum certification for the masterplan.

Second Nature Team
Micaela Bazo
Robin Grossinger
Erica Spotswood

Design Team
Hassell: Urban Design
Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF): Architecture
West 8: Landscape Design
Sherwood Design Engineers: Civil and Infrastructure
H.T. Harvey & Associates: Ecology
Second Nature: Ecology
Integral Group: Sustainability
David J Powers: Environmental
Kier & Wright: Mobility & Utilities

Project Sponsor: Google
Development Advisor: Lendlease

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Native Street Trees and Urban Wildlife