Google launched its self-driving car project in 2009 under the leadership of Sebastian Thrun, a Stanford University professor who is lauded as the founder of the autonomous car. While at Google, Thrun led several projects at Google's X research lab, including Google Glass and Street View. Thrun has since left Google and is now the founder of education startup Udacity.
Thrun first began his research on driverless vehicles at Stanford, leading a student and faculty team that designed the Stanley robot car. The car won a $2 million prize at the 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge for driving 132 miles in the desert on its own.
Google began its project with six Toyota Priuses and an Audi TT that drove through the streets of Mountain View, California. It hired a handful of people with perfect driving records to sit behind the wheel, a position it still hires for seven years later.
Google's cars use GPS, sensors, cameras, radar, and lasers to "see" the world around them. The sensors on the car can detect objects up to two football fields away, including people, vehicles, construction zones, birds, cyclists, and more.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdBy 2010, Google's cars had logged more than 140,000 miles on the road. The company wrote in a blog post at the time that it believed it had the power to cut the number of traffic deaths each year by half.
By 2010, Google had also added several high-profile engineers to its team: Carnegie Mellon University professor Chris Urmson, who led a team that won the 2007 Urban Challenge; Mike Montemerlo, whose Stanford team won the 2005 Grand Challenge; and Anthony Levandowski, who built the first autonomous motorcycle. Urmson later become CTO of the project.
As of 2011, Google had made the switch from Toyota to Lexus, installing its technology into a fleet of 23 RX450H SUVs.
Google announced it had turned the corner on its technology in April 2014, writing in a blog post that the test cars could handle thousands of urban situations that had stumped it in the prior few years. It was the company's first official update on the project since 2012.
In May 2014, Google built its own car and showed off a prototype of it at the Code Conference. There were no brakes, no steering wheel, and no gas pedal — only a button to turn it on. The company capped the vehicles' speed at 25 mph and planned to make 100 to 200 versions of the car.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAbout a year later, Google started road-testing the prototypes in Mountain View.
In July 2015, Google began testing its self-driving cars in Austin, Texas, sending the Lexus RX450h vehicles equipped with autonomous technology to the city.
In September 2015, Google hired former Hyundai and Ford executive John Krafcik as CEO of the project.
Several reports surfaced in December 2015 that Google was partnering with Ford to work on self-driving cars. But the deal never materialized, and Ford went on to work on self-driving cars on its own.
In February 2016, a Google car got into its first accident: One of the cars hit a bus in Mountain View going two miles per hour. While the vehicles had gotten into various scrapes over the years, this was the first time one of the autonomous cars caused an accident.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdGoogle added Kirkland, Washington, as another test site in February 2016 due to the region's wet weather.
In April 2016, Google began testing its cars in Arizona. Ahead of their arrival, Google sent four vehicles to Phoenix to map the area. Google said at the time that it chose Arizona because of the state's desert conditions, which would help Google understand "how our sensors and cars handle extreme temperatures and dust in the air."
Google and Fiat Chrysler teamed up to work on self-driving cars together in May, with Fiat providing 100 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivans to Google for testing purposes.
The self-driving car project took a step closer to commercializing in August, when Google hired former Airbnb executive Shaun Stewart. Stewart specializes in building and scaling up businesses.
After more than seven years, Urmson left the self-driving car project in August, writing on Medium: "Now, 1.8 million miles of autonomous driving later, I've decided the time is right to step down and find my next adventure."
Urmson's departure was one of many for Google around the same period of time, including one of the project's other cofounders, Jiajun Zhu, who left for an unnamed startup. Another group that included cofounder Anthony Levandowski went to found a self-driving truck startup at the beginning of the year.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIn September, one of Google's cars was involved in a collision that sent the car's human driver to the hospital. Another vehicle came into an intersection in California at 30 miles per hour, running a red light and hitting the Google car's right side, effectively T-boning the car. The car sustained substantial damage.
Google plans to make its self-driving car project — which is still housed under Google X — into a standalone company under the Alphabet umbrella by the end of the year.
At last count, Google's cars had driven more than two million miles in its four test cities. There are now 24 Lexus SUVs on the road and 34 prototype cars that drive up to 26,000 miles per week. But after seven years of work, there's still word on when the cars will become commercially available, while Google's competitors like Uber and Tesla have already debuted their cars to the public. One reason may be Alphabet CEO Larry Page's insistence on building a fully-autonomous vehicle rather than one that's partially autonomous.