The Hamilton Spectator

Investing in next-gen infrastruc­ture

Google owner teams with teachers’ pension plan on new venture

- IAN BICKIS

TORONTO — Google parent company Alphabet Inc. and affiliate Sidewalk Labs are partnering with the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan to launch a new company that invests in North American infrastruc­ture.

The spin-out of Sidewalk Labs called Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture Partners, plans to hold, operate and invest in advanced infrastruc­ture for the digital age.

“Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture will give cities an opportunit­y to deploy next-generation infrastruc­ture,” said Sidewalk Labs CEO Dan Doctoroff in a statement.

The company will focus on five areas including advanced mobility, energy, water and waste, digital infrastruc­ture, and social infrastruc­ture.

The infrastruc­ture could include technology-enabled systems for stormwater management, neighbourh­ood-scale heating and cooling, advanced traffic controls and other initiative­s like the ones that Sidewalk Labs hopes to deploy at the Quayside side on Toronto’s waterfront.

“Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture will play an important role in Sidewalk Labs’ ecosystem of products, financing, and developmen­t too make cities more inclusive and sustainabl­e,” said Doctoroff.

The new venture will help transform infrastruc­ture through the use of technology, Olivia Steedman, senior managing director of the Teachers’ Innovation Platform said in a statement.

“We will bring our infrastruc­ture and investment expertise to the table, while leveraging our partners’ world-leading capabiliti­es in technology, to enable sustainabl­e, intelligen­t and efficient physical infrastruc­ture.”

The company’s co-CEO’s are Brian Barlow, who will be based in its Silicon Valley office, and Jonathan Winer, who lives in New York.

Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture’s launch comes as Waterfront Toronto continues to evaluate Sidewalk Labs’ proposal for Quayside and the eastern waterfront, which included a $1.3billion spending commitment from the company.

The proposal, which would see Sidewalk develop both Quayside and a separate eight hectare site, has come under criticism for oversteppi­ng the criteria set out by Waterfront Toronto.

Sidewalk has also faced wider criticism over concerns of data collection and monitoring as part of its plan for the waterfront developmen­t. The company has recommende­d that an independen­t, government-sanctioned trust be establishe­d to set guidelines and oversee data collection, while also committing not to sell personal informatio­n.

 ?? RENE JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Newly founded Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture Partners will focus on five areas including advanced mobility, energy, water and waste, digital infrastruc­ture, and social infrastruc­ture.
RENE JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Newly founded Sidewalk Infrastruc­ture Partners will focus on five areas including advanced mobility, energy, water and waste, digital infrastruc­ture, and social infrastruc­ture.

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