Understand
Bring data from utilities, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, storage, weather, alarms, and technical context into one readable operating picture.

It connects telemetry across utilities, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, energy storage, weather, alarms, and BMS context so raw signals turn into incidents, priorities, and next actions for daily operations and measurable optimization.
Use what the building already knows. Reduce noise. Diagnose earlier. Hand off issues with more context.
BAAP is the layer that turns scattered building data into something people can understand and act on.
BAAP stands for Building As A Person. It connects telemetry from metering, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, energy storage, weather, alarms, and technical context so the building stops speaking in isolated points and starts speaking in operational meaning.
It does not replace the systems already on site. It helps people understand what changed, why it matters, and what the next reasonable move should be.
Modern buildings already produce utilities, heat pump and ventilation states, photovoltaics, storage, weather, alarms, anomalies, BMS signals, logs, and documentation. The problem is not missing information. The problem is that signals arrive fragmented, noisy, and hard to turn into action.
People still jump between tools, review alerts manually, and rely on individual experience to decide what matters first. That slows diagnosis, weakens prioritization, and adds cost to daily operations.
BAAP sits above the systems you already use and helps people understand signals, set priorities, and move faster with more confidence.
Bring data from utilities, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, storage, weather, alarms, and technical context into one readable operating picture.
Turn noisy signals into incidents, risks, and next steps with clearer operational and business relevance.
Support teams with AI-assisted summaries, issue interpretation, and stronger handoff into service work.
The value is operational first: calmer supervision, faster diagnosis, earlier loss detection, and better service handoff.
Fewer
Use data quality, context, and grouping to reduce the noise around what deserves attention.
Faster
Support people with clearer incident context instead of forcing manual cross-checking between tools.
Earlier
Spot abnormal water, electricity, and gas behavior before it becomes an expensive incident.
Better
Turn fragmented telemetry into a technical story that operators and service partners can both use.
Three product layers explain the platform at a glance.
BAAP is the operating core that helps the building explain what is happening, why it matters, and what action should come next.
Understand water, electricity, gas, anomalies, losses, and waste patterns in one operational view.
Bring telemetry, BMS/HVAC signals, alarms, documentation, and technical structure into one readable context.
These are the operating situations where BAAP is easiest to recognize in practice across utilities, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, storage, weather, and alarm context.
See water, electricity, gas, photovoltaics generation, storage charge and discharge, and heat-pump demand in one operating view.
Identify leaks, persistent baseload, abnormal storage cycles, and cross-system drift before they escalate.
Add context to alarms and help people understand what may matter most.
Connect BMS controls, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, storage, and weather context with operational interpretation.
Support facility and technical work across energy and building systems with faster, more structured understanding.
Reduce hidden inefficiencies from weak schedules, delayed reactions, and fragmented visibility across systems.
Better visibility into risk, usage, and operational performance across a building or portfolio.
Faster interpretation of signals, anomalies, and technical issues in daily supervision.
More context for prioritization, maintenance planning, and service coordination.
Clearer problem descriptions and better handoff from operations into technical action.
BAAP is designed above the systems you already use. We work with available data sources and the existing technical reality instead of forcing a replacement project before value appears.
Instead of abstract promises, we start by looking at what your own telemetry already shows and where earlier interpretation could create value.
Telemetry from utilities, heat pumps, ventilation, photovoltaics, energy storage, weather, alarms, BMS context, documentation, and selected technical inputs.
Look for anomalies, blind spots, and areas where better interpretation improves action.
Summarize findings, priorities, and rollout options in a form people can actually use.
BAAP Telemetry works where building data, automation, and day-to-day operations meet. The point is not another interface. The point is to make telemetry understandable enough to support real decisions.
BAAP stands for Building As A Person. It is the operating layer that turns building telemetry, alarms, anomalies, utilities, and technical context into readable decisions and next actions.
BAAP Telemetry is the team and product brand behind BAAP. We design the data, AI, and operational layer that helps buildings explain what is happening and what should happen next.
BAAP is for owners, operators, facility teams, technical managers, and service partners responsible for how a building performs, consumes, alarms, and gets serviced.
No. BAAP is designed as a layer above existing systems. We work pragmatically with the telemetry, metering, BMS/HVAC, logs, and documentation that already exist.
No. BAAP starts with buildings, but the same logic of signals, deviations, actions, and KPIs also applies to factories, agriculture, processing, and other repeatable operational environments.
The usual first step is a focused pilot on your own data. We review what is already available, identify patterns and blind spots, and summarize the priorities and next rollout options.
Work with BAAP Telemetry to create one calmer operating layer across utilities, alarms, anomalies, incidents, and BMS/HVAC context.