Skip to main content

Google Maps adds a nifty new feature to Immersive View

Google Maps has boosted its Immersive View feature with a new element that lets you explore a planned route in a whole new way.

Announced on Wednesday at its annual I/O event that also introduced a bunch of cool new devices, Immersive View for routes lets you see every segment of your trip before you set off, whether you’re driving, walking, or cycling.

Recommended Videos

The feature builds on the core Immersive View tool, which Google announced at last year’s I/O event. Immersive View was built by using computer vision and AI technology to fuse together billions of Street View and aerial images for a digital model of the world that you can explore in great detail.

Immersive View for routes expands on this by allowing you to visualize a planned route and also preview useful information about your upcoming journey.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai described the feature as an “entirely new way” of viewing a journey while demonstrating the feature during his keynote on Wednesday:

Google Keynote (Google I/O ‘23)

As the video shows, the Immersive View for routes offers a smooth, multidimensional experience that lets you check out bike lanes, sidewalks, intersections, and parking before you set off.

Google Maps’ Miriam Daniel explains in a blog post that it also includes a time slider to let you find out more about the air quality through the day, and how the route will likely look according to the weather forecast, so you can be properly prepared for your journey.

Daniel adds that the Immersive View for routes also uses gathered traffic data to simulate how many cars might be on the road at any given time, “because a route during a quiet afternoon can look very different during rush hour.”

The feature looks like another great addition to Google Maps, which has been on a monumental journey of its own since the first version of the tool landed 18 years ago.

Immersive View for routes will be rolled out “in the coming months” for Amsterdam, Berlin, Dublin, Florence, Las Vegas, London, Los Angeles, New York, Miami, Paris, Seattle, San Francisco, San Jose, Tokyo, and Venice, with more cities expected later.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Google’s Find My Device app is copying a helpful iPhone feature
Someone using Find My with an iPhone 15.

Google's Find My Device network is still a work in progress, with features being added slowly. According to 9to5Google, an important feature that could arrive soon has proven crucial to its chief competitor, Apple, with the Find My app on the iPhone.

In the latest version of the Find My Device app for Android, v3.1.148, Google has set what’s being called a “foundation” for a compass feature -- just like Apple's Precision Finding tool.

Read more
Forget about the Google Pixel 9; new Pixel 10 details just leaked
Someone holding the Hazel Google Pixel 9 Pro.

Forget about the fancy new Pixel 9 Pro XL you just received or are waiting to get in the mail. Today's Pixel news concerns the upcoming Pixel 10 series, which will be released next year.

Android Headlines has just confirmed the code names for the new models. In doing so, it also seems to have confirmed which models will be announced by Google sometime in 2025.

Read more
Gemini Live, Google’s futuristic AI feature, is now free to use
A demonstration of Gemini Live on a Google Pixel 9.

Gemini Live, one of Google Gemini's more exciting features, will soon be available to Android users for free. The Google Gemini team announced the important news on X. The tool was previously only available through a Gemini Advanced subscription.

Gemini Live provides access to a Gemini AI chatbot, allowing you to have natural, free-flowing conversations with the AI using your voice instead of typing. Think of Gemini Live as your new digital best friend on your mobile device. It is capable of answering questions, assisting with homework, helping you plan trips abroad, and much more.

Read more