Skip to content

Photo Gallery: Inside Amazon’s Spheres

Take a closer look inside The Spheres and the 40,000 individual plants and more than 300 plant species from more than 50 countries and almost every continent that now call it home.

By Dan Shafer and Alex Crook January 30, 2018

Amazon-Spheres-1243

Amazon’s one-of-a-kind spherical addition to its downtown Seattle headquarters officially opened this week

The Spheres are part of the e-commerce giant’s $4 billion headquarters that’s now where 40,000 employee work, and perhaps not coincidentally, 40,000 plants fill the space.

Ron Gagliardo, senior manager of horticultural services at Amazon and the person who oversaw the project’s plants from seedling to full bloom, said there is nothing comparable to The Spheres in any conservatory anywhere in the United States. 

John Schoettler, vice president of global real estate and facilities at Amazon (and one of 2017’s Most Influential Seattleites), hasn’t been shy comparing The Spheres to Seattle’s iconic structures, putting it in the same sentence as the Space Needle, Smith Tower, and Pike Place Market, and talking about it as a modern iteration of London’s Kew Garden’s — something he’s had in mind since the project’s very inception.

“I recall bringing Jeff to the Denny Triangle,” Schoettler said at the grand opening event. “It was Halloween, 2011. We walked around and began to think big — and boy, did we ever. Back then, the Denny Triangle was a collection of old hotels, surface parking lots, and in desperate need of a new mission. We wanted to create something really special, something iconic for our campus and for the city of Seattle. We wondered, what would London’s royal botanical Kew Gardens look like, if they were built today?”

For now, at least, The Spheres will not really be open to the public. The Understory, a separate-but-connected part of the structure, is now taking reservations, and will be open seven days a week. 

John Sa, Amazon spokesman, said the company is “looking to create that opportunity in the future,” but noted that The Spheres has a capacity of about 800 people, and that time is currently being booked by the 40,000 Amazon employees.

Seattle magazine photographer was there for the grand opening event, and captured the ins and outs of Seattle’s latest greatest iconic structure.

See more at seattlemag.com.

Follow Us

82 Million Tons of E-Waste by 2030. Now What?

82 Million Tons of E-Waste by 2030. Now What?

Smart ways to handle old electronics after a holiday upgrade.

Every holiday season, our houses fill with upgraded gadgets and the promise that we’ll deal with the old stuff later. Meanwhile, the drawer of mystery cords multiplies, and some items just get tossed out. Most of us mean well, but those castoff electronics often end up somewhere they really shouldn’t. And with about 59% of…

Going to the Mountains This Winter? Read This.

Going to the Mountains This Winter? Read This.

A new online tool breaks down avalanche basics for anyone planning snowy fun off the beaten path.

I’m a rule follower when it comes to the outdoors. This summer, my family did some backcountry hiking in Whistler and made sure to do everything by the book—texting friends our plan and location, and wearing a bear bell even though it felt a little dorky. It’s reassuring to know you’ve covered the basics before…

Historic Flooding Prompts WA Governor to Declare Emergency

Historic Flooding Prompts WA Governor to Declare Emergency

Rivers are surging around the state amid days of heavy rainfall.

As floodwaters swelled around Washington, threatening low-lying communities along rivers, Gov. Bob Ferguson signed a statewide emergency declaration on Wednesday. Ferguson says he’ll also seek an expedited emergency declaration from the federal government in response to the flooding, which is the result of an atmospheric river that has dumped multiple inches of rain in parts…

Barnes & Noble Is Coming Back to Downtown Seattle

Barnes & Noble Is Coming Back to Downtown Seattle

The bookseller will open a new flagship at 520 Pike, marking the largest retail lease in downtown Seattle since 2020.

Barnes & Noble is returning to downtown Seattle for the first time since early 2020. The national bookseller has signed a 10-year lease for a new flagship at 520 Pike Street, a 29-story tower, taking over 17,538 square feet on the corner of Pike and 6th Avenue. The store is expected to open in the…