Can Google鈥檚 Sidewalk Labs help your city?
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With smart eyewear and self-driving cars crossed off their to-do list, Google is tackling a major new real-world project: cities.
The Silicon Valley giant on Wednesday announced the creation of , a start-up dedicated to improving transportation, cost of living, and energy use in US cities.
The New York-based initiative, helmed by former Bloomberg chief executive Daniel Doctoroff, is the latest in a series of public-private tech collaborations seeking to improve city life.
鈥淲e are at the beginning of a historic transformation in cities,鈥 said Mr. Doctoroff, who has served as deputy mayor of economic development and rebuilding in New York City, in a press statement. 鈥淯nprecedented technological change is going to enable cities to be more efficient, responsive, flexible, and resilient.鈥
As of 2014, more than half the world鈥檚 population , a number that is expected to rise by another 2.5 billion by 2050, according the UN. In the United States, of people live in urban areas.
As cities grew, however, so did their problems: Waste, pollution, congestion. In response, city planners, along with tech companies and individual designers, have begun to find solutions, including building apps to make urban life more efficient.
Take Los Angeles, which in 2013 became the first major metropolis in the world to in an effort to fight traffic. New York City uses to monitor air pollution, helping commuters, pedestrians, and cyclists avoid the smoggiest areas.
Similar initiatives have appeared across the globe, from an app in Paris offering real-time information about , to a聽 in Nairobi.
Big corporations are also investing in smart cities: IBM, for instance, collaborated with researchers at Sweden鈥檚 KTH Royal Institute of Technology in 2010 to develop for Stockholm. Last year, Cisco partnered with Hamburg, Germany, in a series of pilot projects around , infrastructure sensing, and other urban technology.
Sidewalk Labs will work in 鈥渢he huge space between civic hackers and traditional big technology companies,鈥 Doctoroff , building technologies to improve energy use and adjust commuting habits.
Google CEO Larry Page compares the new initiative to Calico, a Google-backed venture that seeks to extend the human lifespan, and Google X, the company鈥檚 experimental research branch. He recently , 鈥淲hile this is a relatively modest investment and very different from Google's core business, it鈥檚 an area where I hope we can really improve people鈥檚 lives.鈥
As the vague language suggests, Google has yet to specify how Sidewalk Labs will function or generate profit. But advocates of smart urban living systems are optimistic.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see an ambitious private sector initiative like this recognize that cities are important,鈥 Steven E. Koonin, director of New York University鈥檚 Center for Urban Science and Progress, told the Times. 鈥淎nd there are technology opportunities, but they are complicated.鈥