Zillow offers bird's eye view of home real estate

Thu Apr 13, 2006 1:19 AM ET

By Eric Auchard
Reuters

http://today.reuters.com/misc/PrinterFriendlyPopup.aspx?type=technologyNews&storyID=2006-04-13T051649Z_01_N12403591_RTRUKOC_0_US-EMBARGO-TECH-ZILLOW.xml


SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Zillow.com plans on Thursday to introduce a new 
feature to its real estate research Web site offering bird's eye, 
low-altitude photographs of residential neighborhoods, via a deal with 
software maker Microsoft Corp..

The Seattle-based company, which is looking to transform the way people 
research home buying and selling, launched Zillow earlier this year.

In the same way that Expedia took the mystery out of ticket pricing, Zillow 
allows consumers to find out key data on neighborhoods and calculate the 
value of their homes. It features no property listings.

Using Microsoft's Virtual Earth platform, Zillow will now be the first real 
estate site to give consumers an immersive, 45-degree-angle view of 
residential neighborhoods down to specific homes, allowing them to zoom in 
from four directions.

Zillow (http://www.zillow.com) is a free service funded through local 
advertising, and is designed to be independent from real estate agents. 
Since it launched in February, it has become among the fourth most popular 
U.S. real estate Web sites, according to Internet traffic measurement firm 
Hitwise.

The new images are shown alongside satellite maps, parcel information, home 
valuation and individual home data.

Images, taken by Pictometry, a supplier of aerial photography, are captured 
via digital cameras pointed at a 45-degree angle from low-flying airplanes. 
They will supplement Zillow's existing satellite and street map views.

Zillow, whose executive team includes several former Microsoft employees, 
is licensing the aerial images from Microsoft, which is based in nearby 
Redmond, Washington.

Terms of the relationship were not disclosed.

Initially, the new views can be found on home searches in cities such as 
San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles, Boston and Las Vegas. Additional 
coverage will be added later this year.

Rich Barton, who founded travel site Expedia and sold it to 
IAC/InterActiveCorp in 2003, set up Zillow with $32 million in venture 
capital from Benchmark Capital and Technology Crossover Ventures.

Zillow's service, which is still in trial mode, now has data on more than 
65 million homes, the company said.

It competes with IAC, which owns such leading real estate sites as 
RealEstate.com (http://www.realestate.com), LendingTree 
(http://www.lendingtree.com) and Domania (http://www.domania.com).


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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