17 Nov Making Sense of Workplace Sensors
Why are you paying for empty office space? How much real estate savings are you missing?
Rental of a Premium Sydney office can be around AUD$ 1150-1500/sqm[i], yet nearly half of office space is unused at any point in time during the working day.[ii]
[i] Nsw.gov.au https://www.industry.nsw.gov.au/invest-in-nsw/about-nsw/economic-growth/developed-infrastructure/Comparison-of-global-office-costs
[ii] CBRE https://www.cbre.com/research-and-reports/apac-space-utilisation-the-next-frontier
Smart companies capitalise on technology to strategically plan for new spaces, lease renewals and to better support consolidation and growth scenarios. Technology can be a powerful tool that can provide robust data and analytics on actual work and meeting space utilisation as well as monitor traffic levels to identify space reduction opportunities to reduce space or repurpose existing spaces to optimise productivity. Such is sensors technology thru occupancy sensing.
Sensors technology is playing a leading part as an increasingly vital analytic tool with the reputed Edge building in Amsterdam, the world’s smartest and greenest building, hosting no less than 28,000 sensors throughout its entirety.
Occupancy sensing offers an accurate insight into how your space is being used and will help make informed decisions about your future workplace environment.
Sensors can help us understand how desks, conference rooms, break-out and office spaces are used on a day-by-day and hour-by-hour basis providing valuable insight into property planning and establishing how your real estate is actually being used. Clear and compelling data can provide a flexible and comprehensive solution to reduce your real estate costs and develop cost-saving initiatives for short or long-term needs.
Sensors provide metrics on workers varying work patterns, both increases and decreases in real estate utilisation, thus delivering valuable workplace intelligence that meets current and future business requirements.
Download our White Paper on Sensors