Yes, there is. Epsilon IX for example, whenever it was built, it doesn't have any design element from TOS. Neither do the bits and pieces we see of San Francisco.
Nonsense. There is nothing in Epsilon IX which is CONTRADICTORY to TOS. All we see is the exterior (which I can very easily imagine a TOS-era ship parked next to without any cognitive dissonance whatsoever!), a space-suited figure (which is perfectly fine... you'd expect equipment upgrades to be fairly frequent once "replication" technology exists, wouldn't you?) and a command center with upgraded consoles (which don't really look like the TOS or TMP enterprise, do they?)
"Different" doesn't mean "contradictory."
The Orbital Office, while new, doesn't reflect anything from TOS.
But there's nothing there to infer or imply that it didn't exist during TOS. At most, they may have changed the "internal decorating" a bit.
The Workbee, Airtram, Shuttlepod, Warp-Sled-Shuttle... well they must all have been developed in those seven years unseen

(and still no resemblence to anything seen in TOS).
And they also have almost nothing in common with the design of the TMP Enterprise, when viewed in a stand-alone fashion.
I have no problem whatsoever acceptiong the Workbee as having been around during TOS, or even having had the 1701 carry a few of those (I think it was Petri Blomquiest (sp?) who suggested that the rectangle under the hangar was actually a hatch for Enterprise's four workbees?)
The "airtram" is entirely consistent with the TOS "starbase-side" feel, as far as I'm concerned.
The "Starfleet Courier" shuttle (with warpsled) doesn't contradict TOS any more, or less, than it does the TMP Enterprise design. It's covered with exposed details, has a "heat shield," etc, etc. I love it, but it's a unique design.
As for the TRAVEL POD (not "shuttlepod")... it works just fine. The only think missing is the placement of some "standard docking port" on the TOS Enterprise... but that can be fixed by either assuming (1) that the TOS Enterprise had such ports but we couldn't see them (hidden behind panels, or just omitted?) during the series, or (2) that this docking port became standard post-TOS, and was retrofit onto all starfleet ships between the end of TOS and the beginning of TMP (which is perfectly reasonable).
There's no "conflict" there.
That term is nonsensical. It would only be a "visual reboot" if the ship we saw in TMP was supposed to be "the same as we'd seen before," and if the uniforms we saw in TMP were supposed to be "the same as we'd seen before." But they weren't, were they?
It's not a "reboot" to use period costuming in a show set in the 1940s, then to use other period costuming if the same show moves forward to the 1970s, is it? "Change" is not the same as "re-writing."
Star Trek is also just another visual (and perhaps even continuity) reboot. That the writers use that 'alternate timeline felgercarb' to pander to the fanbois like you, should make you feel... important? pandered to?
"Fanbois?" Is it really always important to insult the folks you disagree with?
Ultimately, it is just storytelling... so from that standpoint, you're right. But it's storytelling that a significant portion of the potential audience are PERSONALLY INVESTED IN, to one extent or another... and so, from that standpoint, it's not nearly so simple as you want to make out.
There is no such thing as a "visual reboot." It's a reboot, or it's not... visual is just one aspect of that, no more or less important than anything else (characterization, in-universe history, etc).
If it's a "reboot," on any level, this is telling the audience "forget what you already know."
TMP DID NOT DO THAT.
AT ALL.
TNG-era stuff did, on occasion... and that brought about the first real schisms in fandom (which hang on to this day).
This movie will simply take those fractures and schisms and break them wide open. You, and others, will love it... but as much because it makes folks like CRA uncomfortable as for any other reason, it seems.
People like him will, JUSTIFIABLY, feel as though something they've invested in has been "raped."
And how, exactly, will this internal conflict among the few people who will even remember this freakin' movie a half-hour after walking out "revitalize" the franchise?