City of the Future

Debi

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Toyota plans to build 'city of the future' with housing, robots and autonomous vehicles in Japan

Toyota plans to build ‘city of the future’ with housing, robots and autonomous vehicles in Japan

Key Points
  • Toyota plans to build a “prototype city of the future” on a 175-acre site at the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan.
  • The “Woven City” will include thousands of residents and will test autonomous vehicles, robotics, personal mobility, smart homes and artificial intelligence.
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Toyota on Jan. 6, 2019 revealed plans to build a prototype “city of the future” on a 175-acre site at the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan. The project, known as the Woven City, is expected to break ground in 2021.

Toyota plans to build a “prototype city of the future” on a 175-acre site at the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan to test and develop new emerging technologies such as autonomous vehicles.

Akio Toyoda, president of the automaker, described the “Woven City” as a “living laboratory” that will include thousands of residents and will test autonomous vehicles, robotics, personal mobility, smart homes and artificial intelligence in a real-world environment.

“Imagine a fully controlled site that will allow researchers, engineers and scientists to freely test technologies,” he said Monday night when announcing the plans in conjunction with the CES technology conference in Las Vegas this week. “This will be a truly unique opportunity to create an entire community or city from the ground up.”

The company did not announce a cost or timeframe for completion of the project, which plans to break ground in 2021. A Toyota spokesman did not immediately respond for comment.

The master plan for the city includes three sectors for research of such technologies: fast vehicles; mix of lower speed, personal mobility and pedestrians; and a park-like promenade for pedestrians.

Toyota expects about 2,000 people – from employees to retailers and visiting scientists – to initially live in the Woven City, according to Toyoda.

“I suppose you could say this is my personal field of dreams,” he said. “You know, if you build it, they will come.”

The city is planned to be fully sustainable, according to the company. That includes buildings made mostly of wood to minimize the carbon footprint; fully autonomous, zero-emission vehicles; and solar power in addition to power generated by hydrogen fuel cells.

Residences, according to the company, will be equipped with the “latest in human support technologies, such as in-home robotics to assist with daily living.”

“I truly believe this is a project that can benefit everyone. Not just Toyota,” Toyoda said.

The city was designed in conjunction with renowned Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, whose firm is responsible for designing the upcoming 2 World Trade Center in New York, Google’s new headquarters and other modern or futuristic developments such as a Mars simulation city for Dubai.
 
What do you think?? Would you live there....
 
I would not want to live in Japan, however a vacation there would be fun. They could help fund it by renting rooms. It could become an adventure destination.
 
It is an interesting thought but I fear that in practice it will be a disaster. Any new technology or system has "bugs" that will need to be worked out. With a city where they are testing so many new concepts and technological designs at the same time will almost certainly have a snowball effect of problems. A computer glitch in a cell phone or a new appliance is an annoyance but having your home doing bizarre things to you might be more than annoying. They are already finding problems with the self-driving cars that were unexpected.

LOL, I'm an old fart and don't like having my machines bossing me around even now.
 
It has the ring of a dystopian surveillance community where everything you do is constantly monitored and subtly controlled. It just doesn't strike me as a place where fiercely private non-conformists or people who just like to do their own thing when and where they please would thrive.
 
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It has the ring of a dystopian surveillance community where everything you do is constantly monitored and subtly controlled. It just doesn't strike me as a place where fiercely private non-conformists or people who just like to do their own thing when and where they please would thrive.
Which, I believe, is the whole point of that city's creation to begin with. Sort of a "let's test out how we can sell surveillance as a good thing."
 
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