Toyota Subsidiary Woven Acquires Lyft Autonomous Division

Jason R. Sakurai
by Jason R. Sakurai

Toyota’s Woven Planet Holdings has acquired Level 5, Lyft’s self-driving unit. Woven Planet’s deal brings scientists, software engineers, and researchers together as one.

Last year, we detailed the launch of Woven, but since that time they’ve been relatively quiet until now. Woven has put together engineers, research scientists, and mobility services experts. They’ve amassed sensing, computing, and software assets, to go along with automated driving system capabilities.

The company is growing beyond its headquarters in Tokyo to include teams in Palo Alto, California, and London, UK. Besides Level 5, Lyft agreed to the use of their data to fast track the autonomous technology Woven Planet is developing. Lyft’s vast system and fleet data will make Woven commercially viable that much faster, according to the company.

Lyft received $550 million in cash, with $200 million paid upfront, and the balance paid over five years.

“This acquisition advances our mission to develop the safest mobility in the world at scale. The Woven Planet team, alongside the team of researchers at TRI, have already established a center of excellence for software development and technology in the Toyota Group,” said James Kuffner, Woven Planet’s CEO.

“Bringing Level 5’s world-class engineers and experts into the fold—as well as additional technology resources—will allow us to have even greater speed and impact. This deal will be key in weaving together the people, resources, and infrastructure that will help us to transform the world.”

Lyft’s CEO, Logan Green stated, “Lyft has spent nine years building a network capable of scaling autonomous vehicles. This brings together the vision, talent, resources and commitment.”

Woven Planet’s mission is to combine Silicon Valley culture with Japanese craftsmanship to develop mobility solutions. The acquisition accelerates Woven’s ability to advance technology. We wonder whose responsibility it will be to plug in the autonomous EV, the brain onboard, or yours?

[Images: Toyota]

Jason R. Sakurai
Jason R. Sakurai

With a father who owned a dealership, I literally grew up in the business. After college, I worked for GM, Nissan and Mazda, writing articles for automotive enthusiast magazines as a side gig. I discovered you could make a living selling ad space at Four Wheeler magazine, before I moved on to selling TV for the National Hot Rod Association. After that, I started Roadhouse, a marketing, advertising and PR firm dedicated to the automotive, outdoor/apparel, and entertainment industries. Through the years, I continued writing, shooting, and editing. It keep things interesting.

More by Jason R. Sakurai

Comments
Join the conversation
3 of 7 comments
  • APaGttH APaGttH on May 07, 2021

    Even the best self-driving technology can't handle ordinary driving scenarios like moderate to severe weather. Take away the lines on a snow-covered 3 lane interstate and thank you for playing, sorry, but the human needs to drive. That seems simple to us when in reality this is extremely difficult to resolve with code. Lyft and Uber are both gamblings on self-driving technology negating drivers to make their business model viable. The fact that Lyft sold their division indicates to me where they felt self-investment was going. The fact Toyota bought the technology tells me that they have something more than vaporware. If the investment can make the full-speed stop-start cruise control less useless in Toyota products, that in itself is a win.* * Toyota system keeps to large of a gap so cars pull in front. The system goes, "oh no car pulled in front of me," and slows down more, resulting in more cars pulling in front, and more slow downs. Beyond a light traffic scenario, it is useless.

  • Ravenuer Ravenuer on May 07, 2021

    Re: that last pic....is that supposed to be "SNOW", or "MONS"?

    • APaGttH APaGttH on May 07, 2021

      I would guess snow - snow is a huge challenge for self driving cars. Once the lane markers disappear on a multilane road or interstate you need to move to best guest. A ton of variables the brain processes without think that lines of code have to consider. It is harder to teach a car to drive itself in a snowstorm than land a reusable rocket booster vertically on a target landing pad. Pretty mind-blowing to think that driving a car is literally harder than rocket science - yet our gray matter is, "I got this."

  • El scotto UH, more parking and a building that was designed for CAT 5 cable at the new place?
  • Ajla Maybe drag radials? 🤔
  • FreedMike Apparently this car, which doesn't comply to U.S. regs, is in Nogales, Mexico. What could possibly go wrong with this transaction?
  • El scotto Under NAFTA II or the USMCA basically the US and Canada do all the designing, planning, and high tech work and high skilled work. Mexico does all the medium-skilled work.Your favorite vehicle that has an Assembled in Mexico label may actually cross the border several times. High tech stuff is installed in the US, medium tech stuff gets done in Mexico, then the vehicle goes back across the border for more high tech stuff the back to Mexico for some nuts n bolts stuff.All of the vehicle manufacturers pass parts and vehicles between factories and countries. It's thought out, it's planned, it's coordinated and they all do it.Northern Mexico consists of a few big towns controlled by a few families. Those families already have deals with Texan and American companies that can truck their products back and forth over the border. The Chinese are the last to show up at the party. They're getting the worst land, the worst factories, and the worst employees. All the good stuff and people have been taken care of in the above paragraph.Lastly, the Chinese will have to make their parts in Mexico or the US or Canada. If not, they have to pay tariffs. High tariffs. It's all for one and one for all under the USMCA.Now evil El Scotto is thinking of the fusion of Chinese and Mexican cuisine and some darn good beer.
  • FreedMike I care SO deeply!
Next