Almaden Resident

Farm robotics technology firm subleases Santa Clara building

- By George Avalos gavalos@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

SANTA CLARA >> An artificial intelligen­ce and robotics company whose technologi­es could revolution­ize farming and food production has subleased a big Santa Clara office building.

Blue River Technology, which is a unit of manufactur­ing and agricultur­al equipment titan Deere & Co., has subleased an office building at 3303 Scott Blvd., according to a top executive of the building's owner, Toeniskoet­ter Developmen­t.

“This is really exciting,” said Brad Krouskup, chief executive officer with Toeniskoet­ter. “It's great to get a company with cutting-edge technology in the building.”

The building that Blue River has leased totals 83,600 square feet and was developed in 2015 by the Toeniskoet­ter firm.

Technicall­y, Blue River signed a sublease deal with Seres, a China-based maker of electric vehicles that at one point had hoped to use the 3303 Scott Blvd. office building as a launching pad for a major Silicon Valley presence.

Instead, Seres wound up attempting to sublease the space and recently concluded a deal with Blue River Technology. San Jose-based Toeniskoet­ter Developmen­t, as the property owner, endorsed the sublease deal between Blue River and Seres, Krouskup said.

In 2017, Deere & Co. bought Blue River in a $305 million acquisitio­n. The deal has enabled Deere & Co. to deploy Blue River's robotics and artificial intelligen­ce into a widening

array of equipment and machinery that Deere supplies.

Blue River's technologi­es enable farmers to use Deere's ultra-modern equipment to zero in on specific weeds to spray and kill off.

This high-tech approach has been crafted to replace convention­al techniques of mass spraying of weeds in fields.

In March 2022, Deere & Co. introduced a product called “See & Spray” that has grafted Blue River's artificial intelligen­ce and robotics onto Deere agricultur­al spraying equipment.

“See & Spray Ultimate can reduce non-residual herbicide use by more than two-thirds by only spraying weeds in corn, soybeans, and cotton,” Deere stated in a prepared release in March.

Computeriz­ed cameras and processors powered by Blue River's technologi­es are mounted on Deere & Co.'s herbicide vehicle to zero in on what needs to be sprayed and killed.

“The combined power of computer vision and machine learning” can be used to distinguis­h weeds from crop plants, according to

Deere & Co.

Blue River has amassed a huge number of images to bolster its artificial intelligen­ce and robotics technologi­es.

“Through 500-plus years of collecting millions of images of plants and weeds across hundreds of thousands of acres, See & Spray is capable of detecting a variety of crops and weeds to provide weed control,” Blue River states in a post on its website.

In 2011, Stanford graduate students Jorge Heraud and Lee Redden founded Blue River Technology. The company at present is located in a Sunnyvale office and research park.

Toeniskoet­ter executive Krouskup believes that Deere & Co.'s ownership of Blue River benefits both the tech company and the Santa Clara building that's just been subleased.

“You have a long-time manufactur­ing company that is backing a Silicon Valley company that has cutting-edge tools,” Krouskup said. “John Deere's involvemen­t also creates financial stability for the building.”

 ?? TOENISKOET­TER DEVELOPMEN­T ?? This office building, located at 3303Scott Blvd. in Santa Clara, has been subleased by Blue River Technology.
TOENISKOET­TER DEVELOPMEN­T This office building, located at 3303Scott Blvd. in Santa Clara, has been subleased by Blue River Technology.

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