Anyone that has wandered the plant rooms of today’s modern commercial buildings can see first hand that the built environment provides a lot more than its most basic function: shelter. Buildings provide fully functional micro-environments to perhaps thousands of people and this means that there are a lot of different requirements that need to be satisfied.
Whether the building in question is a manufacturing plant with specialist machinery or a large office block in the middle of a global city, modern buildings will use a building management system (BMS) - sometimes also referred to as a building automation system (BAM) - to keep the space functioning as intended.
Many new buildings provide an integrated BMS solution from completion. This means that the building’s functions, such as lifts and air conditioning, as well as its environmental metrics, for example energy consumption and emissions, can be monitored from day 1.
Older buildings however will need to have this technology retrofitted. This is no longer as challenging as it used to be with the development of long-lived and small form factor sensors that do not need to be connected to external power sources.
Below is a list of the most common elements of a building management system. Whilst the below outlines the elements of a building that may be handled by a BMS, the actual parameters will differ from one location to the next.