Google’s proposal for a futuristic new campus in Mountain View, Calif. looks more like Disneyland than it does a traditional, cubicle-laden office.

Renderings for Google’s new headquarters show a campus that doesn’t have any desks. But since the campus will be open to the public, the concept art includes children and even a person playing guitar.

Google submitted a plan Friday to redevelop four sites to the Mountain View City Council with a promise to be more environmentally friendly and support the local community. Plans for the new headquarters were produced by the firms of Thomas Heatherwick and Bjarke Ingels

“This project is about much more than just office space; it’s about doing more with the local community as well,” David Radcliffe, said Google’s vice president of real estate, wrote in a blog post. “So we’re adding lots of bike paths and retail opportunities, like restaurants, for local businesses.”

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But not everyone is thrilled about the new proposal, which has divided the City Council and sparked outrage among some residents.

Mountain View council member Leonard Siegel told The Wall Street Journal he is concerned that Google’s plan will add office space but not homes, exacerbating an already-big traffic problem.

The Bay Area’s rapidly growing workforce of both very high and very low-income residents has contributed to major housing shortages. The median rent price in San Francisco climbed 15% year-over-year. The median rent price in San Francisco is $3,055 a month, while the national average is $1,350 a month, according to Zillow

Google’s GOOG, +0.08% plans will also absorb nearly all the land in the North Bayshore technology district, leaving little room for any other office development, according to the San Jose Mercury News.

Take a look at Google’s renderings of its proposed new headquarters.