Google Joins the Hunt for the Loch Ness Monster With Underwater Street View

People have been looking for the Loch Ness Monster for centuries, but now Google has brought some high-tech dragon-hunting software to the search.

The company, with help from London agency adam&eveDDB, has brought underwater Street View to the famous Scottish loch, having introduced it last year to the Great Barrier Reef. You can now jump right into Loch Ness in Google Maps, and peer down into the murky depths.

You won’t see quite as much as you do at Great Barrier Reef. But it’s a charming conceit, and one that Google is running with—even going so far as putting a Loch Ness doodle on the Google U.K. homepage. Meanwhile, adam&eve made the video below to go with the project.

“A huge part of Google’s mission is to help make mysterious places more accessible to everyone, and there’s no more emotive, exciting example of that than revealing what’s beneath the waters of Loch Ness,” says Alex Hesz, director of digital at adam&eveDDB.

“This is a place of enduring mystery and profound beauty, and we were lucky enough to accompany Google’s underwater capture team on a truly extraordinary task. We think that the campaign really captures the scale of that undertaking, the beauty of the place, and the reasons why Loch Ness has retained such a sense of mystery and intrigue for so many, for so long. The fact that everyone can now explore it for themselves is hugely exciting.”

CREDITS
Client: Google
Project: Explore Loch Ness with Google Maps
Brief: Google gives access to explore hidden places
Creative agency: adam&eveDDB/Google Creative Lab
Chief Creative Officer: Ben Priest
Executive Creative Director: Ben Tollett, Richard Brim
Creative Director/s: Paul Knott, Tim Vance and Google Creative Lab
Planner: Will Grundy
Account Management: Alex Hesz and Sam Brown
TV Producer: Ben Sharpe and Jordan Cross
Production company: Sonny
Director: Nick Rutter
Editor: Gary Forrester
Edit House: Marshall Street Editors
Soundtrack name and composer:  “The Search” by Brendan Woithe
Post-production: The Mill
Audio post-production: Clang @ Marshall Street



A recurrent mystery / Serpent de Mer ?

nessie2007 nessie2009
THE ORIGINAL?
Mercedes CL-Class “is it real?” – 2006
Source : Eurobest Advertising Festival,
Agency : Young & Rubicam (Israel)
LESS ORIGINAL :
Volkswagen Scirocco “experience the unusual” – 2009
Source : Adsoftheworld,
Agency : DDB Gulf (United Arab Emirates)
Tous les deux ou trois ans cette idée revient sur le devant de la scène créative tel un serpent de mer. Serpent de mer : au figuré cette expression correspond à un sujet peu crédible ou ennuyeux apparaissant de façon récurrente (définition Wikipédia). On ne saurait mieux dire!