More pictures and details spring up about Apple's proposed new campus, scheduled for completion in 2015.

The city of Cupertino, California has released more details about Apple's proposed new campus, the donut-shaped glass office expected to sit on nearly 150 acres of land just east of the company's current headquarters at 1 Infinite Loop. And with this information comes pretty new artistic renderings that highlight exactly what "Apple Campus 2" could look like come its expected 2015 completion date.

In total, Apple's new four-story, curved-glass headquartersis expected to take up approximately 2.8 million square feet of space. It'll hold around 13,000 people in total and include room for an underground, 1,000-seat auditorium, around 300,000 square feet of above-ground and underground research facilities, and an underground parking structure. Apple will also use an on-site power plant to fuel the building in an attempt to limit the new campus's reliance on the electric grid.

The City of Cupertino is still in the middle of its review process for Apple's proposed designs, which includes an environmental impact assessment that analyzes issues of traffic, noise, and air quality surrounding the project. Following that, the proposal faces developmental review and public hearings before Apple can start cooking its architectural donut.

That said, it's extremely likely that plans for Apple's new campus are going to sail through their various review processes with universal acceptance.

"There is no chance that we're saying no," said Cupertino Mayor Gilbert Wong in a . "This mothership really has landed here in Cupertino."

Feel free to conduct your own visual review of Apple's plans by checking out PDFs of the artistic renders of "Apple Campus 2." Should you hate or love the design, and live in the Bay Area, you'll be able to make a public comment about Apple's plans at a future stage of Cupertino's review process. The four PDFs released today by the City of Cupertino include an Introduction, Site Plan/Landscaping, a Floor Plan, and the Renderings themselves, which are embedded below.

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