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Technology alliances collaborate to improve smart building integration

June 25, 2020  By  SP&T Staff


Technology alliances BACnet International, KNX Association, OCF, Thread Group and the Zigbee Alliance announced an agreement to work together to better align commercial buildings with users’ connectivity needs and to improve the integration of smart building products.

The organizations are collaborating on a initiative called “IP Building and Lighting Standards” (IP-BLiS) and promoting a secure multi-standard IP-based infrastructure as a backbone in building automation to replace what they say is the inefficient, still-widespread use of siloed solutions.

According to a joint statement from the organizations, there is currently “no automation technology available that covers all of the use-cases required to fully automate a commercial building. From elevators and energy management, to lighting, water supply and air conditioning, to access control and surveillance systems: there are countless application scenarios for technologies in smart buildings. However, some individual building systems still use a wide variety of proprietary solutions that often require separate hardware-based gateways and infrastructures. This fragmentation results in higher costs for planning, installation, maintenance and administration of smart building projects. In addition, synergistic opportunities over the long-term remain unused.”

To remedy this situations, the members of IP-BLiS says they intend to combine light control and building management systems with IT networks by using a secure all IP-based configuration while harmonising the operation of their technical standards accordingly.

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“The BACnet community is collaborative by nature and we welcome the opportunity to promote fully integrated building systems through IP-BLiS,” said Andy McMillan, president of BACnet International, in a statement. “IP-BLiS is a powerful platform for communicating the value of IP in addressing the complexity and dynamic requirements of building information and control systems.”

“We are proud to be a part of IP-BLiS. This initiative is a real game changer for building automation that will further accelerate the growth of the market thanks to its added values in terms of integration, scalability and security,” said Franz Kammerl, president at KNX Association International.

“Collaboration and cooperation are key to allowing the IoT to reach its full potential,” said David McCall, president, Open Connectivity Foundation. “IP-BLiS is the perfect platform for OCF and other key industry players to join forces and address the issues that face light and building automation today by removing connectivity roadblocks to create truly smart buildings.”

“Thread Group is excited to be a part of such a prestigious initiative. Our low-power wireless mesh networking protocol is based on IP because it allows for so many disparate applications to work together seamlessly,” said Grant Erickson, president of Thread Group. “We believe that IP-BLiS will provide a crucial standard that smart buildings need to improve interoperability and reduce costs, improving the efficiency, functionality, automation and safety of buildings such as offices, healthcare facilities, hotels and schools.”

“The advent of the Internet of Things has progressively required more and more collaboration between manufacturers, ecosystems and global standards organizations to unlock the evolving potential offered by connected devices,” said Tobin Richardson, president and CEO, Zigbee Alliance. “Through IP-BLiS, we’re looking forward to helping facilitate more efficiencies for users across commercial settings through secure, all-IP-based standards for better lighting control and building management.”


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