Google has been preserving snapshots of the world for years, including versions of places you thought were long gone. Your childhood street might still exist exactly as you remember it on Google’s servers. The corner store that shut down years ago is still open. Your neighbor’s old tree is still standing. Even the ugly green door your parents finally repainted in 2019 could still be there. Most people don’t realize Google Maps has archived this history for more than a decade, or that anyone can access it.

It’s called Street View’s Time Machine (also known as Historical Street View imagery). I spent far too long revisiting places that no longer exist in the same form as they did today. Consider this your warning before you open it: you may not get much else done afterward.


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Street View has been keeping receipts

Your city has a director’s cut

Street View of Schiller Park, Illinois

Google has been dispatching its Street View camera cars around the world since 2007, and every time those cars make a return trip, the old imagery is archived rather than replaced with new imagery. This means that Google is sitting on a staggering visual record of the physical world, organized by location and date. The Street View Time Machine surfaces that archive, letting you slide through different years of Street View imagery for any given location.

Major cities and heavily photographed corridors tend to have the richest archives, sometimes stretching back to 2007 or 2008. Rural and less-traveled areas may only carry one or two timestamps. But in places where Google’s cars have been diligent, you can watch a city block transform for more than a decade. You may see buildings rise, storefronts change hands, construction cranes appear and vanish, and a neighborhood reinvents itself while you watch from your desk.

This is how to find your way back

It is easier than you think

If you are unsure how to use Google Street View, on desktop, retrieving these historical snapshots is simple:

  1. Open Google Maps and drag the orange pegman icon in the bottom-right corner onto any street with a blue Street View line.
  2. Once you are inside the Street View interface, focus on the dark, translucent overlay box in the top-left corner of the screen.
  3. Rather than the older classic clock icon, you will now find a text link labeled “See more dates” displayed directly beneath the current location address and the most recent photo timestamp.
  4. Clicking this link triggers a horizontal carousel of preview thumbnails to appear at the very bottom of your screen, populated with the specific months and years for which Google has imagery at that exact coordinate.
  5. Simply scroll through these image cards and click on a past year to shift the entire 360-degree environment into the past.

If you want to visit the past using Google Street View on mobile devices running iOS or Android, the process has been entirely redesigned for touch interfaces, discarding the old desktop-mirroring layout:

  1. Search for a location or drop a pin on the map to display the location’s details, then tap the Street View thumbnail on the map or in the bottom info card to enter the immersive 360-degree view.
  2. Once inside Street View, look at the dark info card at the bottom of the screen displaying the location’s name and tap the See more dates > link situated right next to the current imagery’s timestamp. This action pulls up a dedicated bottom sheet displaying a scrollable carousel of historical photo tiles.
  3. Swipe through the carousel and tap any dated thumbnail to seamlessly jump back to that era.

Some locations will not surface these time-travel options at all. That simply means Google has only driven its camera cars through the area once, or the older historical archives have not been properly indexed and stitched for historical browsing. It is also worth noting that because Google updates major thoroughfares far more frequently than side streets, turning a corner can sometimes break the illusion, snapping you back to a different year or hiding the timeline entirely. For populated urban areas, though, the feature appears reliably. A useful starting point if you want to see the time machine at its absolute best is to search for a famous, rapidly evolving street rather than a tranquil residential cul-de-sac.

Alternatively, you can skip the city streets entirely and search for some of the weirdest things ever found on Google Maps that are still there, watching how these strange landmarks weather the passage of time.

The fun is in the tiny changes

The internet is full of features that launch with fanfare and disappear from conversation within a week. Street View’s time machine is the opposite: built without ceremony, aged beautifully, and still waiting patiently for most people to find it. Now that you know where the “See more dates” option lives, the past is one quick tap of a thumbnail preview away.

I ended up wandering through old versions of places I thought I remembered clearly. That is the trick. The feature not only takes you back in time, but it also reminds you that the present is already becoming an archive.

The Google Map app's logo

OS

Android, iOS

Developer

Google




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