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Apple Park Visitor Center is a two-story 20,135 sq ft (1,870.6 m 2) structure with four main areas: an Apple Store [65] featuring Apple-branded merchandise (T-shirts, hats, tote bags, postcards) not sold at regular Apple stores, [66] a 2,386 sq ft (221.7 m 2) café, an exhibition space which currently showcases a 3D model of Apple Park with ...
The Apple Campus is located on the southeast corner of Interstate 280 and De Anza Boulevard, and occupies 32 acres (130,000 m 2) [5] in six buildings spread over four floors. Each building is numbered with one digit on the private U-shaped street Infinite Loop, so named because of the programming concept of an infinite loop .
Applegate was originally settled in 1849 by Lisbon Applegate, who came to California with his son, George, from Missouri. Part of a family that first emigrated to America in the 17th century, the Applegates bought acreage above Clipper Gap, California, and established a fruit ranch there. The main house of the Applegate Ranch was where Oliver's ...
Apple’s standard return policy states that you have 14 days to return an Apple product from the day you bought it. But that only applies to purchases made from the Apple online store or at an ...
The J Line offers frequent, all-stops service along the El Monte Busway and the Harbor Transitway, two grade-separated transit facilities built into the Southern California freeway system. The line was created on December 13, 2009, as part of the conversion of the facilities from high-occupancy vehicle lanes into high-occupancy toll lanes ...
The avenue lies between Atlantic Boulevard and Rosemead/Lakewood Boulevard.It begins as Garfield Avenue as a minor street north of Grevelia Street in South Pasadena. It runs through cities like South Pasadena, Alhambra, Monterey Park, Montebello, Commerce, Bell Gardens, South Gate, on way to Paramount before it changes to Cherry Avenue on entrance to Long Beach, Lakewood, and Signal Hill ...
Tice Creek is a minor creek in Contra Costa County, California in the San Francisco Bay Area. [1] It is approximately 4.1 miles (6.6 km) long. It is a tributary of Las Trampas Creek, which itself is a major tributary to Walnut Creek which in turn drains into Suisun Bay.
The Apple Valley name was officially recognized when a post office was established in 1949. [9] One well-known apple orchard was owned by Max Ihmsen, publisher of the Los Angeles Examiner newspaper. In 1915, he developed 320 acres (1.3 km 2) of apples and pears. The fame of Apple Valley spread as Ihmsen's fruit won many agricultural awards. [10]