Smart Cities

Google Goes Underground with its Toronto Smart City Project

Stay ahead of the pack

with the latest independent smart building research and thought leadership.

Have an account? Login

Subscribe Now for just $200 per year per user (just $17 USD per month) for Access to Quality Independent Smart Building Research & Analysis!

What Exactly Do you Get?

  • Access to Website Articles and Notes. Unlimited Access to the Library of over 1,700 Articles Spanning 10 Years.
  • 10% discount on ALL Memoori Research reports for Subscribers! So if you only buy ONE report you will get your subscription fee back!
  • Industry-leading Analysis Every Week, Direct to your Inbox.
  • AND Cancel at any time
Subscribe Now

Google’s sister company, Sidewalk Labs, has released updated plans on their smart city district in Toronto, Canada. This, Sidewalk Labs’ first major project, has been fraught with mystery, leaks, and rapant speculation, but we are starting to learn more about the project. Documents released last week show a range of innovative new features and strategies, that Google will no doubt hope, quells the unrest amongst Toronto citizens about the project.

The new plans were leaked, published in the Toronto Star on Valentines Day, forcing Sidewalk Labs into releasing official documents that it says “are not even approved by Alphabet yet,” the firm’s parent company.

The most controvertial element of the leaked plans is that rather than the 12 acre development that had been discussed until now, the new documents refer to 350 acres. This suggests that Sidewalk Labs is looking at developing almost all of Toronto’s unused eastern waterfront area, in what they call the “extended innovation area.”

This has not gone down well with a growing group of Toronto residents and international observers. Many of whom have been fighting the project from the very start, claiming tech-companies, including Google, are keen to get into cities for “uban profiteering” rather than for the benefit of citizens. Issues surrounding privacy, cybersecurity, and inorganic urban reform, among others, have divided the public. All this before actual plans have been confirmed, and long before ground is broken.

“It isn’t fully baked and people just naturally are afraid of new things,” said Dan Doctoroff, CEO of Sidewalk Labs, responded to mounting criticism of the project in the wake of the leaked documents. “The best thing we can do is sit down with them and explain and we will be thoughtful and patient and listen to people’s concerns and hopefully reach a place where we have a mutually acceptable way of moving forward that doesn’t have to be what we suggested.”

Open discussion between residents and Sidewalk Labs is the one thing both sides of the debate agree on. “We’ll figure out as we go what the next steps are, but everything is on the table. To start, all we need to do is to bring residents together,” stated Bianca Wylie, a campaign organizer, open government advocate, prominent critic of the Sidewalk Labs project. Wylie’s comments acompanied the leaked story, which also catalyzed the boom of a #BlockSidewalk movement on social media.

Honestly, “urban profiteering” is not the wildest accusation; no one is expecting private revelopment with intention to make profit. Nor are profitability and citizen-friendly cities necessarily exclusive of one another. As you would expect, social cohesion and environmental responsibility are built into the fabric of the project. The use of wood symbolises this development, with a range of timber buildings ranging up to 30 stories high to be built, providing structural and environmental benefits, and also a boost to Canada’s logging and timber industries.

Much of the plan is similar to the plans released last summer, as covered in an August article. However, there are some noticable differences, espcially in the more realistic artist renderings that replace the cartoon style images in year’s last verson.

Buildings appear more curved than before, suggesting some extra biophilic considertions, and the images highlight the numerous, carefully designed, social areas. As with many artist renderings, the district appears utopian, with no sign of the ugly things that make cities work, but the updated plan gives away the burried secret to these idillic scenes.

Google takes a variety of services underground with robots to free up the street level for humans. Robotic vehicles will zoom around subterranean tunnels to make deliveries and remove trash from around the district. This will reduce congestion on the street, as well as removing “ugly” or disruptive elements like garbage trucks and delivery vehicles. A network of underground tunnels will handle the transport of all “last mile services,” and some expect that food deliveries will also be serviced by these tunnels.

Moving services underground is not an entirely new concept. In fact, the famous urban planner Georges-Eugène Haussmann even proposed the idea for Paris well over 100 years ago. Today, Disneyworld and Roosevelt Island both feature underground refuse collection, completely out of sight of the visitors above. However, fully automating underground services using robots and driverless vehicles takes the concept to a new, more efficient and smarter level.

By placing great focus on social cohesion and environmental responsibility, Sidewalk Labs has no doubt avoided an even more significant backlash. However, the simple fact that Google, the world’s biggest corporation, one infamous for its collection of personal user data, is seeking to design and manage a city district is enough to cause concern and enthusiastic opposition.

If people don’t like Google’s AI reading their Gmail then how will they feel when Google runs their building? It seems likely that the Quayside project will go ahead but not before a charm offensive and some bold promises from Google’s little sister.

Most Popular Articles

Plejd
Energy

Plejd Smart Lighting Business and 2023 Financials

In this Research Note, we explore the smart lighting controls business of Plejd AB, a Swedish public company supplying the Nordic market. We explore their 2023 financial results, product portfolio, channel approach and international growth strategy, based on their year-end results, 8th February 2024, and their latest Annual Report. Founded in 2009 and headquartered in […]

Mapspeople Results 2023
Smart Buildings

MapsPeople Indoor Mapping Business & 2023 Financials Examined

In this Research Note, we examine MapsPeople, a Danish public company providing indoor mapping and navigation software. This analysis, covering their latest financial results, channel and vertical market focus, PointInside acquisition, and 2024 outlook, updating our previous Research Note in May 2023. Founded in 1997, MapsPeople is a subscription-based SaaS company based in Nørresundby, Denmark […]

Smart Construction Procurement
Smart Buildings

Smarter Buildings Demand Smart Construction Procurement

“There is a rot at the core of how construction is procured and it begins with clients and main contractors. We are already at the bottom, as can be seen in cruel black and white by the failures of large main contractors throughout 2023. Something has to change!” proclaimed Mike Wharton, chief executive of Complete […]

Subscribe to the Newsletter & get all our Articles & Research Delivered Straight to your Inbox.

Please enter a valid email

Please enter your name

Please enter company name

By signing up you agree to our privacy policy