In April 2016, The Information reported that Sidewalk intended to create a new city in the United States to test design ideas prior to real world implementation.[8] Sidewalk did not confirm that report, but has said it had engaged in thought experiments about what it could be like to develop a community "from the internet up."[9]
In October 2017, Sidewalk Labs announced plans to develop
Quayside, a 12-acre (4.9 ha) neighborhood in
Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, in response to a competition organized by
Waterfront Toronto. Branded as Sidewalk Toronto, the project aims to become "a testbed for emerging technologies, materials and processes" to address issues such as sustainability, accessibility, inclusiveness and prosperity in urban communities.[10][11] The initiative is also envisioned to be scaled up across Toronto's
Port Lands, an 800-acre (320 ha) area that is one of the largest areas of underdeveloped urban land in North America.[12] The project progressed slowly with ongoing consultation from the public.[13]
In 2018, the company opened a new Toronto office and began holding weekend open houses in which visitors from the public contributed their ideas to the development of the Sidewalk Toronto project.[13] In 2019, Sidewalk Labs said it had consulted thousands of Torontonians for its development plans. However, representatives of Waterfront Toronto's Digital Strategy Advisory Panel (DSAP) said that Sidewalk Labs's projects contained too much "tech for tech's sake."[14][15]
In May 2020, the project was abandoned due to the economic uncertainty posed by the
COVID-19 pandemic.[16][17]
Development Advisory Services
Sidewalk Labs offers advisory services for real estate developers to use technology to meet environmental, affordability, and equity goals. Sidewalk Labs has advised on the following four projects:[18][19]
Mana Wynwood — a 23.5–acre project in
Miami that will serve as a trade center between
Latin America and
China and an arts and entertainment center
Downtown
Summerlin — a 300–acre mixed-use development with minimalized parking in
Las Vegas
The Power Station — a 29–acre mixed-use residential community on the waterfront in
San Francisco at the site of a former electrical plant
Vancouver Innovation Center — conversion of a 180–acre industrial manufacturing site into a mixed-use residential and commercial community in the
Portland/Vancouver area
Traffic flow in the United States
In early 2016, Sidewalk Labs began working with ten cities which participated in the
U.S. Department of Transportation's "Smart Cities Challenge" to help cities better understand daily street activity through the use of real-time data. The Challenge attracted dozens of medium-sized cities across the US to compete for $40 million in federal funding[20] along with an additional $10 million from the
Paul G. Allen Family Foundation[21] to assess road data gathered from smartphones to analyze congestion and other traffic conditions, and develop a transportation coordination platform to improve the efficiency of road, parking, and transit use.[3][22] The winner,
Columbus, Ohio, was announced in June 2016.[23][24]
Products
Mesa, launched in September 2020, is a tool to help commercial buildings use energy more efficiently.[25]
Delve, launched in October 2020, is a tool to help developers, architects and urban designers discover optimal design choices for neighborhood projects.[26]
Pebble, launched in May 2021, is a tool to help manage parking in cities.[27]
Investments and portfolio companies
Sidewalk Labs invests in and incubates companies which develop tools that can support Sidewalk Labs initiatives and scale to cities around the world.[28]
In June 2015, Sidewalk Labs led a group of investors in the acquisition of
Control Group and
Titan forming a new company called Intersection.[29] Intersection works in cities and public spaces to offer internet connectivity, information, and content.[30]
Cityblock
Cityblock Health was spun-out of Sidewalk Labs in 2017. Its goal is to improve health care for low-income people with difficult medical needs. It employs over 500 people and has
patients in three US states and Washington, DC.[31][32]
Coord
In 2018, Sidewalk Labs introduced a spin-off Coord, a company focused on providing
RESTful APIs for accessing information like routing, bike share details, toll information, and curbside details.[33][34] In October 2018, Coord raised an additional $5 million to continue building products.[35]
Replica
Replica is an AI-powered data platform which helps cities make operational or infrastructural changes in response to changes in population behaviors.[36] It began as a project at Sidewalk Labs in 2017 and was spun out as an independent company in 2019.[37]
Sidewalk Infrastructure Partners (SIP)
Sidewalk Infrastructure Partners (SIP) was spun-off from Sidewalk Labs in 2019 to develop technologies that modernize infrastructure such as recycling, waste disposal and transportation in communities throughout the United States.[38][39]
Ori
Sidewalk Labs invested in Boston-based robotic home interior design company Ori in 2019.[40]
Nico
The Neighborhood Investment Company (Nico) allows local residents to make small, long-term real estate investments in their own neighborhoods. Sidewalk Labs invested in Nico at the end of 2019.[41]
VoltServer
In late 2019, Sidewalk Labs invested in VoltServer, which strives to "make electricity safe" and overlays data on electricity distribution.[42]
The Yellow Book
Sidewalk Labs provides a
coffee table book to employees known as The Yellow Book, which contains aspirational designs of a futurist city run on its technology.[43] In the book, the company proposes expanding its scope to include the power to levy
taxes, control
public services such as schools, roads, and public transportation, collect data on the current and past locations of all members of the community, and to help redesign the local criminal justice system. The book also describes a social credit system to reward "good behavior", a system which has been compared by some to
the one used in China. Sidewalk's proposed system also included rewards for sharing personal data.[44]
The book also includes the potential real estate profitability of such investments, containing theoretical proposals for communities in
Detroit,
Denver, and
Alameda, California. The company has described this book as a "wide-ranging brainstorming process", and stated that most of its ideas were never considered for the Toronto project.[44]