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Google Earth now lets you see how streets have changed over time

With its 20th anniversary update, Google Earth brings historical Street View timelines to the platform for a more detailed view of urban evolution.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 24, 2025, 12:11 PM EDT
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The image shown is a colorful satellite view of Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park.
Image: Google
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There’s a peculiar thrill in peering at a familiar street corner and realizing it looked completely different just a few years ago. Whether it’s the disappearance of a local shop, the rise of a gleaming new skyscraper, or the slow regrowth of a forest patch, witnessing these transformations can feel like digital time travel. Google is leaning into that fascination: in celebration of Google Earth’s 20th anniversary, the platform now brings historical Street View imagery into its fold, letting anyone “rewind” street scenes directly within Earth’s globe-spanning interface. Simultaneously, Google is rolling out AI-driven environmental insights for professional users, spotlighting tree canopy coverage and land surface temperatures. Together, these updates aim to deepen our understanding of how places evolve over time and how they might be shaped for the future.

Since its launch in 2005, Google Earth has invited users to soar above cities, oceans, and remote landscapes, revealing secrets from the comfort of a desktop or mobile screen. Over the years, Google added functionality like historical satellite and aerial imagery—which until last year was confined to the Earth Pro desktop app—but now, historical Street View is joining the party. Previously, if you wanted to scroll through past Street View captures, you’d switch back to Google Maps, where a timeline slider appears when you’re in Street View mode. Now, that same capability is available in Google Earth: click into Street View, and you’ll be able to browse imagery from different years to see how a particular block or landmark has changed over time.

This integration is more than a novelty: it unifies the “big-picture” view of satellite/aerial imagery with the intimate, street-level snapshots. Imagine tracing the evolution of a waterfront development by toggling between overhead satellite imagery from, say, 2010 to 2025, then diving into Street View timelines to inspect construction phases, changes in storefronts, or shifts in pedestrian activity. By embedding historical Street View in Earth, Google is encouraging a holistic exploration of place-based change: from the macro to the micro.

Last year, a social media trend saw users virtually time-traveling via Google Maps to revisit childhood homes, track the emergence of new buildings, or simply marvel at “then vs. now” juxtapositions. That viral curiosity revealed a hunger for personal and collective memory through geospatial visualization—and Google is responding by making that experience more seamless in Earth. For casual explorers, it’s pure delight: you might revisit the street where you attended college, observe the growth of a neighborhood, or compare seasonal changes at a national park entrance. For educators and storytellers, the feature can serve as a visual aid: history classes can use it to illustrate urban growth or decay; environmental studies might show coastal erosion or reforestation; cultural pieces can chart how public art and local businesses have evolved.

Beyond personal curiosity, there’s a deeper layer: historical Street View in Google Earth underscores the broader narrative of how we shape and are shaped by our environments. By visually documenting changes—good and bad—users can form a more grounded appreciation of urban development, infrastructure lifecycles, or environmental shifts. It’s one thing to read about a neighborhood gentrifying; it’s another to watch, frame by frame, as new cafes pop up and familiar façades give way to modern designs.

Accessing historical Street View in Google Earth is straightforward. When you launch Google Earth on web or desktop and navigate to a location with Street View coverage, click the Pegman icon or drop the Street View “person” onto the map as usual. Once you’re in Street View, look for the timeline control (often represented by a clock icon or slider). If past captures exist, you’ll see markers or a scrubber indicating available years. Slide through them to jump between different capture dates. Just as in Google Maps, earlier years may offer lower resolution or fewer coverage points, but they can reveal surprising glimpses of the past—vacant lots turned into plazas, or former industrial sites transformed into parks. Availability will vary by location, reflecting Google’s capture schedule and privacy guidelines.

It’s worth noting that historical satellite/aerial imagery in Earth was rolled out last year beyond the Pro desktop app, making time-lapse of overhead views accessible to all users. Now, coupling that with street-level history strengthens Earth’s position as a one-stop “time machine” for geospatial exploration. As always, imagery resolutions and date ranges differ by region; some urban centers enjoy frequent captures, whereas remote areas may only appear sporadically over the years.

Alongside this historical Street View launch, Google is unveiling AI-driven environmental insights for professional users in the U.S., rolling out in the coming weeks. According to Google, these tools include tree canopy coverage analysis—highlighting areas that are more heavily shaded and spotting spots that could benefit from added greenery for cooling—and land surface temperature data, which reveals urban heat patterns to inform planning decisions.

Take Austin, Texas, as an illustrative example: professionals can overlay tree canopy data to identify neighborhoods lacking shade, guiding tree-planting initiatives or “cool corridor” designs to mitigate urban heat islands. Similarly, land surface temperature insights can pinpoint hotspots where pavement or roofing materials exacerbate heat, helping city officials or developers strategize interventions—like reflective materials, green roofs, or additional vegetation—to enhance thermal comfort and public health. These AI-derived layers lean on satellite data, machine learning models, and perhaps Street View imagery processing, offering a data-driven lens on environmental challenges.

Such features build on Google Earth’s growing role as a professional geospatial tool: earlier this year, Google integrated Earth into the Maps Platform family, making it accessible via APIs to visualize and analyze geospatial data at scale. Urban planners, environmental scientists, landscape architects, and NGOs can tap these insights within Earth’s interface or via platform integrations, streamlining workflows around sustainability, resilience, and resource management.

These updates reflect a broader trend: democratizing access to historical and environmental data. Traditionally, time-series geospatial analysis involved specialized GIS software, curated datasets, and technical expertise. By embedding intuitive time sliders and AI-driven layers into a widely used tool like Google Earth, Google lowers barriers for diverse users to engage with spatial-temporal narratives.

For environmental nonprofits, visualizing canopy changes over a decade could support grant proposals or community outreach, demonstrating where deforestation or reforestation efforts succeeded. Academics studying urban heat islands gain a quick reference to locate field study sites. Citizen scientists and local activists might document how municipal policies affect green coverage or surface temperatures. Even architects and real-estate developers can integrate these insights into design considerations, aligning projects with sustainability goals.

Moreover, the fusion of historical Street View and environmental analytics opens storytelling possibilities. Journalists can craft multimedia articles juxtaposing past and present street scenes with data-driven insights about how temperature patterns have shifted, illustrating the human and ecological dimensions of urban change. Educators can develop interactive lessons where students research their own cities: exploring changing street scenes, analyzing heat data, and proposing green solutions.

While exciting, these features come with caveats. Coverage for historical Street View varies: densely populated areas usually enjoy richer archives, whereas rural or developing regions may have fewer capture dates. The quality of older Street View imagery can be inconsistent—lower resolution, incomplete panoramas, or changes in camera technology affect visual continuity. Users should interpret changes carefully: a missing building in an earlier capture might reflect a gap in capture rather than actual absence.

Regarding AI-driven insights, tree canopy and surface temperature models rely on data sources and algorithms that have inherent uncertainties. Cloud cover, seasonal variations, or sensor limitations can influence accuracy. Google’s documentation likely outlines methodology and limitations; professionals should corroborate insights with ground-truth data for mission-critical decisions. Additionally, privacy and ethical considerations around Street View imagery remain relevant: while these features enhance historical exploration, they also remind us of the delicate balance between documenting public spaces and respecting individual privacy.

Google Earth’s 20th anniversary isn’t just about nostalgia; it signals a push toward more immersive, data-rich experiences that blend exploration with actionable insights. Historical Street View imagery invites users to reflect on the past, while AI-driven environmental data points toward future interventions. As Google continues integrating Earth with Maps Platform and AI technologies (e.g., Gemini-powered features hinted in some reports), non-professional users may eventually see more advanced analytics baked into consumer experiences—perhaps personalized environmental snapshots of one’s neighborhood or predictive visualizations of how a street might look under different climate scenarios.

In the meantime, anyone can dive into Google Earth’s new temporal layers: whether you’re a casual explorer curious about how your hometown has evolved, a storyteller crafting a visual essay, or a professional mapping out sustainability strategies, the ability to “rewind” street scenes and overlay environmental insights enriches our collective capacity to understand and shape the world around us.

Two decades into its journey, Google Earth continues to expand from a digital globe novelty into a versatile platform for exploration, education, and professional analysis. By weaving historical Street View imagery into Earth’s narrative and rolling out AI-driven environmental insights, Google empowers users to glimpse past transformations and envision future possibilities. Whether you’re rekindling memories of a childhood street, documenting urban evolution, or planning greener, cooler cities, the new features offer compelling lenses on how our world changes—one street at a time. Embrace the time-travel thrill, but also leverage the data-driven insights: together, they help us appreciate where we’ve been and guide where we might go next.


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