For over a decade, Alphabet’s “Moonshot Factory,” X, has searched for a way to fix the world’s most expensive bureaucratic bottleneck: the real estate development process. After two previous attempts stalled, the lab has finally spun out a new contender, Anori, with $26 million in fresh funding and a strategy built on industry-wide collaboration.
The Trillion-Dollar Waiting Room
The biggest hurdle in construction isn’t the building itself—it’s the “pre-development” phase. This two-to-four-year window of permits, approvals, and regulatory checks is where projects often bleed money.
According to Astro Teller, head of X, the current system is painfully sequential. If an architect tweaks a design, structural engineers, insurers, and city officials must all retreat to their corners to recalculate. Anori aims to replace this fragmented cycle with a unified platform where developers, engineers, and city regulators collaborate in real-time, surfacing compliance issues in weeks rather than years.
Strategic Backing and Leadership
Led by CEO Adrian Walker, a veteran of Ford and X, Anori’s $26 million round was spearheaded by Prologis and Builders VC, with participation from Series X Capital.
Unlike previous attempts like Flux (formerly Vannevar), Anori has secured early buy-in from the industry’s biggest players. By making these stakeholders investors rather than just customers, X has solved the “chicken-and-egg” dilemma of urban planning adoption.
Key Targets for Growth
- Multifamily Housing: Specifically 3-to-6-story buildings, which Teller identifies as the most efficient way to scale urban living.
- Infrastructure: Expanding into hospitals and high-demand data centers.
- Global Partnerships: The city of Rio de Janeiro has already signed on to modernize its licensing via the platform.
A New Era for X Spinouts
Anori joins an elite roster of X graduates, including self-driving leader Waymo, drone delivery service Wing, and wireless optical firm Taara.
By integrating with other X initiatives—like the grid-mapping platform Tapestry—Anori represents a broader push to bring “transparency and intelligence” to the physical world. With X expected to graduate roughly two companies per year, Anori marks a significant shift toward solving the foundational inefficiencies of our built environment.






