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Toyota Woven City

Toyota's prototype smart city for testing AI, autonomy, and connected mobility at human scale.

4.3 (6)
Daniel NikulshynRecenzováno Daniel Nikulshyn·Aktualizováno květen 2026

Přehled

Toyota Woven City is a purpose-built living laboratory at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan, designed by Toyota's Woven by Toyota subsidiary. It serves as a real-world testing ground where residents, researchers, and partner companies can develop and validate AI systems, autonomous vehicles, robotics, smart infrastructure, and sustainable energy technologies in everyday use. The city is organized around dedicated lanes for autonomous vehicles, pedestrians, and personal mobility, with sensor networks and a central digital operating system tying services together. Toyota positions it as a platform for collaboration with external inventors and startups, accelerating the path from prototype to deployment in connected urban environments. Rather than a consumer product, Woven City is best understood as an R&D environment and partnership program for organizations working on mobility, AI, and smart city solutions.

Klíčové funkce

  • Dedicated autonomous vehicle roadways
  • Connected sensor and data infrastructure
  • Hydrogen and sustainable energy systems
  • Robotics and in-home AI testing
  • Digital twin of the physical city
  • Partner program for startups and researchers

Případy užití

Test autonomous vehicles in live urban traffic

Automakers and mobility startups can validate self-driving systems on dedicated AV lanes alongside pedestrians and personal mobility devices in a real, inhabited environment.

Pilot in-home robotics and AI assistants

Researchers can deploy robotics and AI products into resident homes to gather everyday usage data and refine human-machine interaction at scale.

Validate hydrogen and sustainable energy systems

Energy companies can trial hydrogen infrastructure and renewable power integration across an operational city grid powering homes, transport, and services.

Simulate urban scenarios with a digital twin

Partners can use the city's digital twin and sensor network to model infrastructure changes, traffic flows, or AI deployments before physical rollout.

Pro a proti

Pro

  • Real-world urban testbed with actual residents
  • Backed by Toyota's manufacturing and mobility expertise
  • Integrates autonomy, robotics, and energy systems
  • Open to external startup and research partners

Proti

  • Not a product available to general users
  • Limited geographic scope near Mount Fuji
  • Long development timeline before broad impact
  • Partnership access is selective

Recenze

4.3

Průměr z 6 hodnocení.

5
2
4
4
3
0
2
0
1
0

Přihlas se, abys mohl napsat recenzi.

J

Jamal Carter

Compared a few options

Evaluated this against two competitors. Where it wins: digital twin of the physical city and open to external startup and research partners. On balance the feature set — especially partner program for startups and researchers — justifies the 5 stars for our use case.

W

Wei Chen

Does the job

Pretty happy overall. Hydrogen and sustainable energy systems just works and backed by Toyota's manufacturing and mobility expertise. Limited geographic scope near Mount Fuji can be annoying, but no dealbreakers — I'd recommend it to a friend without hesitating.

F

Frank Müller

Compared a few options

Evaluated this against two competitors. Where it wins: partner program for startups and researchers and real-world urban testbed with actual residents. Where it lags: partnership access is selective. On balance the feature set — especially connected sensor and data infrastructure — justifies the 4 stars for our use case.

R

Robert Ainsworth

Does the job

Pretty happy overall. Hydrogen and sustainable energy systems just works and open to external startup and research partners. Not a product available to general users can be annoying, but no dealbreakers — I'd recommend it to a friend without hesitating.

C

Carlos Mendoza

Solid for our team

We rolled this out across the team last quarter and real-world urban testbed with actual residents. Digital twin of the physical city fits neatly into how we already work, and partner program for startups and researchers removed a step we used to do by hand. Not a product available to general users, which is the main caveat, but it has held up under daily use.

R

Rina Desai

Years in this space

I've evaluated a lot of these over the years. What stands out here is digital twin of the physical city — handled better than most — and real-world urban testbed with actual residents. Long development timeline before broad impact is my one real gripe. Worth the time if this is your use case.

Otázky

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