Skip to main content

Google Earth adds 22 traditional homes and cultures for you to explore

Google Earth
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends
When you think of your first time exploring Google Earth, you probably remember entering your own street address and spending time zooming in and out of your neighborhood. A lot has changed since the app debuted, and on Wednesday, Google added new homes to explore as part of the relaunch — giving you access to even more cultures across the globe.

Back in April, Google Earth’s update introduced visual and textual content through partnerships with BBC Earth, the Jane Goodall Institute, and NASA. Using the Voyager Tab, you can see local guides, stories, and photos from a variety of different countries from these specific partners.

The tab also provides content from the Google Street View team that allows you to explore the area while learning about the people who live there. The series — titled This is Home — invites you into the traditional homes around the globe. Through curated photo galleries accompanied by stories and facts, you’re able to get a sense of how one defines their own home by immersing yourself in the cultures and settings.

When Google first added the series, there were five homes user could interactively tour — Greenlandic Illoq, an Inuit Igloo, Bedouin tent, Reed House, and Sherpa home. Since then, the company traveled to dozens of more locations across six contents and added 22 more homes and cultures to explore.

We all know traveling is expensive and sometimes even stressful, but with the new Google Earth update you can travel from the comfort of your phone. Among the new locations you can choose between a village in Madagascar or visit a Paiwan shaman at her home in Taiwan, all with just a few taps on your screen. Through Street View, you can also roam around the different communities and neighborhoods to gain more insight of the different types of environments across the globe.

But the features aren’t always the most upbeat and relaxing. With images and written stories, you’ll be able to gain a new perspective of different hardships other cultures face ranging from economic, population, and environmental pressures. One example includes the Inuit people of Sanikiluaq, who are struggling to build igloos to teach schoolchildren in due to weather conditions not being cold enough to create the correct type of snow.

So, for anyone looking for a different view other than their own home — or for those who already explored the first five locations Google Earth released — the new homes are now live. The app is available for download on iOS and Android.

Editors' Recommendations

Brenda Stolyar
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Brenda became obsessed with technology after receiving her first Dell computer from her grandpa in the second grade. While…
10 reasons you should buy an iPhone in 2024
Purple iPhone 14 (left) and a green iPhone 15 in hand.

The iPhone 15 lineup — which includes the standard iPhone 15 and the iPhone 15 Pro — is the iPhone at its best. It's the latest series of iPhones available today and the default choice if you're buying a new iPhone in 2024.

But it’s not the only choice of iPhones you can purchase. In fact, Apple still sells the iPhone 14, iPhone 13, and the iPhone SE on its website. You could also find other iPhone models available – refurbished or new — from other retailers or carrier stores.

Read more
We now know when Apple is adding RCS to the iPhone
The iPhone 14 Plus held in a man's hand.

Last November, Apple made a surprise announcement when it confirmed that RCS was coming to the iPhone in 2024. It's something iPhone and Android phone users alike have been waiting years for, but there was just one small problem: Apple never said when in 2024 RCS was coming. Thanks to Google, of all companies, we now have a better idea of when RCS is heading to the iPhone.

As spotted by 9to5Google, the Android website was recently updated with a new page dedicated to Google Messages. If you click on the "See more features" button for the section talking about RCS, there's a section titled "Better messaging for all" with the following text: "Apple has announced it will be adopting RCS in the fall of 2024. Once that happens, it will mean a better messaging experience for everyone."

Read more
iOS 18 could make my iPhone look like Android, and I hate it
The Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max and the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra's rear panels.

If rumors are to be believed, iOS 18 will allow you to customize the home screen on your iPhone more substantially than ever before. This feature will be familiar to Android phone owners, but I don’t want my iPhone to look like an Android phone.

It’s a weird double-edged sword, as by giving you more freedom to make the home screen look unique, iOS may also lose what makes it unique compared to the less constrained world of Android.
iOS 18 and your iPhone home screen

Read more