Commercial, Retail Buildings to Drive Growth of Remote Monitoring

Posted on June 19, 2013

LONDON — Commercial and retail building operators are expected to drive the growth of remote monitoring services in intelligent buildings, accounting for more than 80 percent of the $400 million market in 2016, according to a new study by IMS Research, a part of IHS Inc.

Remote monitoring in intelligent buildings is a service offered by third-party companies that audit and report on the operational performance of a building. The services have two key selling points, says IMS Research. First, auditors can make recommendations to save energy costs by determining, for example, a more efficient schedule for the building automation system. Second, the building owner can reduce internal staffing costs for the facility by using a third-party service provider.

“Remote monitoring services are gaining increased traction as building owners find significant savings to be made, in terms of both decreasing energy bills and reducing staffing costs,” said Sam Grinter, market analyst for building technologies at IHS. “The drive to reduce overhead has been reinforced over the last five years by tough economic conditions.

“Commercial and retail end users have been the fastest to take advantage of remote monitoring services in intelligent buildings,” Grinter noted, “because the slashing of operational expenses has been a higher priority for them than for government or institutional end users.”

Remote monitoring service providers have found success with commercial and retail end users by demonstrating the effectiveness of the systems in trial deployments. Then, once the return on investment is demonstrated, services are rolled out throughout the wider building portfolio. The services in intelligent buildings are looked upon as a competitive advantage, which explains why adoption has spread relatively quickly.

As the market develops further, other end-user industries such as education, government, data centers, and hospitality will increasingly take advantage of the services, says the report. The systems are expected to not only improve building efficiency but also reduce internal staffing costs for monitoring and maintaining buildings.