Alphabet’s X has a new spinout, and it’s going after one of the world’s most expensive bureaucratic nightmares
For more than a decade, Alphabet’s X moonshot factory has been quietly trying to fix one of the world’s most stubborn industries. It failed twice, but this time the industry itself is along for the ride.
X’s dedicated spinout vehicle, Series X Capital, also participated in the fundraise, which Astro Teller, the head of X, described as “not a particularly small deal.
So there’s a secondary ring that has to include those, too. ” Today, all of those parties work sequentially.
Then the whole package goes to the city, which takes another six months to a year just to compare the submitted documents against its own rules. If something doesn’t comply, the whole process starts over.
” Other projects like hospitals and “particularly data centers,” said Teller, are on the table, too. “We believe that if we can bring transparency, coordination, and intelligence to the real estate development process, we can accelerate housing and commercial real estate projects,” said Adrian Walker, Anori’s CEO (pictured above). Walker spent more than nine years at Ford Motor Company before relocating to the Bay Area a decade ago, where he worked as a founder and investor prior to joining X almost five years ago. X itself has been here before. About 13 years ago, it spun out a company called Vannevar Technologies — later renamed Flux — that attempted something similar.
A second attempt, focused on factory automation for building components, never made it to market either.
Anori was founded inside the moonshot factory in the fall of 2023.
X’s standard industry outreach process provided the first signal that this time was different.
Usually, Teller told me, the experts X consults say something like: “Interesting. Come find us when you’re ready. ” This time, they didn’t. “They said, ‘No, no — we want in now,’” Teller recounted. Representatives from across the industry — owner-operators like Prologis, large architecture firms, and major contractors — said they didn’t want to be sold a finished product; what they wanted was to help build it.
That dynamic is why X is elbowing Anori out the door earlier than planned.
By making the industry’s biggest players stakeholders in Anori’s success, X has given them a financial incentive to make it work. That same logic explains Anori’s first major partnership: Rio de Janeiro has signed on to modernize its urban licensing process using the platform. The city’s mayor, Eduardo Paes, had already made permitting reform a priority before X came calling. (No building has yet been approved through Anori’s platform. )
Anori is the newest member of what Teller dubs the extended X family.
Taara participated in the Rio partnership alongside Anori, as did Tapestry (it’s building an AI-powered platform to map and manage the electrical grid), and Materra (it uses AI and molecular identification technology to improve plastic recycling). Teller said the arrangement came from Rio’s mayor, not X. “He said, ‘I don’t just want to play with one or two of your moonshots. I want to bring a whole bunch in.
’” X will hold a board observer seat at Anori.
In all likelihood, Anori won’t be the last company X spins off this year.
“It’ll be lumpy,” he said
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