September 22, 2024

"During his 27 years at Apple, he had conceived the minimalist aesthetic of Apple products...."

"Over the past four years, [Jony Ive] has quietly accumulated nearly $90 million worth of real estate on a single city block. The purchases began early in the pandemic, at a time when many tech luminaries were fleeing San Francisco. Mr. Ive found the exodus noxious.... A self-professed control freak, Mr. Ive decided that he had fretted enough over the snugness of each iPhone box, the layout of every Apple Watch component and the curve of every iPad corner. He wanted something new.... [H]e and his future wife, Heather, fell in love with Jackson Square. Many buildings in the neighborhood had survived the city’s 1906 earthquake and fire because there was a whiskey storehouse in the area. City officials had worried the alcohol would catch on fire, so they protected the neighborhood, even as the rest of the city burned.... At Apple, he had worked at Infinite Loop, a sterile office park near the interstate, and Apple Park, a futuristic circle of glass and blonde wood. Both campuses were so isolated that they could have existed anywhere. He wanted his new office to be part of the community."

From "After Apple, Jony Ive Is Building an Empire of His Own/Five years after leaving Apple, the iPhone designer is forging a new life in San Francisco, one imaginative building at a time" (NYT)(free-access link).

29 comments:

loudogblog said...

And if it were Musk doing this, he'd be roasted for being a rich, fat cat who's causing gentrification.

Michael K said...

My daughter, Claire was interviewed for a job with Apple a few years ago by the head of design. I wonder if this is the guy? She went through a half-dozen interviews and this guy was last. She didn't get the job and was relieved after considering where to live.

john3166 said...

from the article: "He wanted his new office to be part of the community".

---
Readers may find a visual look at Apple Park worthwhile.

"Organizing people to work together effectively is surely one of the great challenges (and opportunities) over the next few decades. In person, remote, "hybrid", contractors, teams, "ai"/bots and so on. The choices are endless and no small hurdle."

https://amuznews.blogspot.com/2024/09/thinking-about-work-and-place.html

rehajm said...

Yes yes. Why does he het a pass?

rehajm said...

It seems a dumb as a stump kind of investment but time will tell. Clearly economics is not the highest priority. Bezos did this kind of stuff in Seattle several years ahead of him. What lovely shiny turds Bezos polished…

Old and slow said...

Interesting and talented guy. I have to admit that I was a bit surprised to learn that he is married to a woman.

chuck said...

Five years designing a type face sounds like a take off on Knuth, who famously wrote Tex and designed fonts in order to typeset his books (TAOCP).

Kate said...

Interesting timing for a coastal elite flex story.

Next the guy will look into buying Hetch Hetchy.

Gerda Sprinchorn said...

This is one of the benefits of income inequality, you get insanely wealthy people willing to spend extravagantly on architecture. Sometimes you get something interesting.

Eva Marie said...

Thanks for the link. I really liked the ad for Van Cleef and Arpels’ Alhambra collection. After I read the name of the collection I saw the Islamic influence on the design. It’s a beautiful collection. I wonder what Ive would think of the design.

Quaestor said...

"He wanted his new office to be part of the community."

And thus it incorporates an all-weather 24/7 opioid market with plenty of defecation alcoves and pass-out pavement.

Dave Begley said...

"The chairs were topped by papers and cardboard boxes with the earliest ideas for a product that uses A.I. to create a computing experience that is less socially disruptive than the iPhone.

The project is being developed in secret. Mr. Newson said that what the product would be and when it would be released were still being determined."

Secret no more; whatever it is.

Maybe this rich liberal guy will be interested in cleaning up downtown S.F. now.

Mikey NTH said...

It is visionary only if there are renters. Otherwise it is a white elephant.

Dixcus said...

If you take NOTHING away from this story about one of America's most insane moments ... the burning of an entire city after one of the most insane Earthquakes ever recorded ... you MUST take this away so that you understand what America's political class considers important in such an event:

"City officials (politicians) had worried the alcohol would catch on fire, so they protected the neighborhood, even as the rest of the city burned."

Whiskey.

That was more important ... by far ... than any other human possession or body.

For GOD'S VERY SAKE ... do not let the whiskey burn.

Remember that the next time some politician tells you they have a plan for your future. The plan is to let you burn to death while they protect their booze.

Michael K said...

Actually, I had a patient who was there that day. Quite a story. He and a couple of friends watched the whole city burn. Was stuck there almost a month before they could get out. Water was barged to the city.

Promises made Promises kept said...

Jony Ive was essential to the turnaround at Apple, but his obsession with style unchecked by the practical side started to become a problem. I think the two best days for Apple were the day Jony Ive joined the company, and the day he left.

He was ignoring Steve Jobs' dictum "design is not how it looks, but how it works" with his obsession with making devices thin -- too thin often to be used comfortably. It's not a surprise that my iPhone 13 is a copy of my iPhone 5, and doesn't need a case to be held comfortably like my iPhone 6 did. He passed his 'sell by' date at Apple.

To call apple stagnant is to ignore the push into health that Tim Cook has championed. Cook's push to make the watch more than just the fashion accessory that Ive envisioned has allowed it to be more than a passing trend. It ignores the huge success of the AirPods. And it completely ignores the implications of Apple silicon. Overnight, Apple threw Intel back on its heels with the M1 processor. And yes, while the services aren't as sexy as a new iPhone, they've allowed Apple to grow. That's the point of a corporation; to make money and grow.

Jony Ive did incredible work at Apple. He is one of the great designers of the 20th - 21st century. But it was time for him to move on.

Craig Mc said...

Is he stocking up for SF's conservative renaissance? He might be waiting a while. Detroit had fifty years head start, and they're still waiting.

rob5819 said...

This is not going to end well: https://www.wallpaper.com/design/jony-ive-marc-newson-lovefrom-partnership-with-ferrari.

Sprezzatura said...

Rehajm, shows up in the only other Althouse post with the Jony Ive tag. That was back in 2015.

In addition to the Jony Ive tag, that post also had several other tags including "aesthetics" and "wealth." Fun tags, IMHO. Plus it's nice to look through old threads to read stuff from old school commenters.

I recommend checking out tags here.

Sprezzatura said...

BTW, I would have liked the "aesthetics" tag on this post. Manly because it'd be funny to have something (e.g. a tag) that ties Jony Ive's POV re architecture to DJT jabbering about loving bronze and how Portland is garbage with old 2x4s and plywood instead of (presumably) bronze stuff. That DJT post did get the "aesthetics" tag, but not this post re Jony Ive. The other Jony Ive post did get the "aesthetics" tag, hence I looked through a bunch of "aesthetics" posts while chasing that tag.

Earnest Prole said...

San Francisco, the place where no one wants to live yet 1200 square-foot cottages sell for $2.4 million. Mysterious.

Jim Gust said...

Thanks much for the link, as I cannot otherwise read the NYTimes. I was interested to note that the article was silent on the amount of crime and homelessness in the area that Mr. Ive purchased. Because there isn't any in that part of San Francisco, or because it didn't fit the narrative?

tommyesq said...

Wasn't familiar with him, looked him up - what a shlub, considering his desire for slim designs.

Mike (MJB Wolf) said...

That was a strange article. I appreciate the link and I have always liked the I’ve design aesthetic but expected more photography based on the headline. At least some photos of the buildings he is buying up. The result of reading the whole thing was an empty feeling of “what is the point of this article?” There seemed to be absolutely no point to all that writing. Other than the jarring ly presented fact that now that I’ve and many of his colleagues have moved on from one of the most profitable publicly traded companies in US history he has “no concern for ROI.” Well duh, having hundreds of millions of dollars kind of allows one the luxury of such attitudes.

What was the pitch for this article at the NYT editorial table? “Look at the cool name-dropping we can do while mentioning AI several times!”

Mike (MJB Wolf) said...

Another format issue. It’s nearly impossible to type his name on my iPhone and not have it autocorrected to I’ve. How ironic.

CrankyProfessor said...

This is not a criticism but a query - is the Jackson Square Historic District without an actual SQUARE? I mapped the name and didn't see one. I did a little research and got boundaries of the district and looked - still no Square. SF has a number of full-city-block parks labelled "Square" (e.g. Sydney Watson Square). What is Ives buying? Buildings along a street?

PM said...

Just a couple blocks from my office. The original drinking and whoring neighborhood - Gold Rush original. It's always been pretty well-restored. He wants to up-tart it, fine. Hotaling's the neatest street.

Rusty said...

Hate to break this to Jony. You're polishing a turd.

gerry said...

"Up-tart" gave me a smile.