UK government partners with Google DeepMind to build AI-powered housing planning tool
A new AI prototype called Extract can digitize planning documents in 40 seconds instead of two hours, with a national rollout planned for spring 2026.
The UK government just handed Google DeepMind a very specific homework assignment: make housing approvals faster using AI. The result is a prototype tool called Extract, launched on June 9, 2025, by Prime Minister Keir Starmer at London Tech Week.
Extract uses DeepMind’s Gemini multimodal model to digitize historical planning documents, including maps, handwritten notes, and the kind of paperwork that currently takes council workers up to two hours per document to process manually. The AI tool does it in roughly 40 seconds.
What Extract actually does
Pilot programs ran across four local councils, and the results were notable. Processing times dropped from approximately two hours to about 40 seconds per document.
The national rollout to all English local authorities is planned for spring 2026.
The bigger picture: AI meets public sector bureaucracy
Extract sits inside a broader strategic relationship between the UK government and Google DeepMind. The two parties formalized a Memorandum of Understanding in December 2025, covering AI applications in public services, scientific research, and national security.
Starmer’s government has set a target of delivering 1.5 million new homes, a figure that requires every part of the planning system to move faster than it currently does.
What this means for investors
Extract has no blockchain component, no token, and no decentralized anything. It’s a straightforward government technology contract between Alphabet’s AI research lab and the British state.