Sustainability becomes useful when it is connected to how a building actually works. Energy use depends on schedules, equipment, comfort expectations, maintenance routines and the way people use the space.
When this service is useful
- Energy costs are rising but the causes are unclear.
- Several sites need a shared way to review priorities.
- Maintenance actions and user habits are not aligned.
- The organization needs practical actions before a larger technical project.
What we review first
We look at the operational factors that influence consumption: HVAC use, lighting, opening hours, repeated incidents, shared areas and coordination between service teams.
The purpose is to turn broad sustainability goals into decisions that can be assigned, followed and adjusted.
How it connects with facility management
Energy improvements work better when they are part of normal facility routines. Maintenance, cleaning and workplace support teams can help detect waste, report anomalies and keep agreed measures visible.
Typical outputs
- Initial map of consumption drivers and priorities.
- Practical recommendations for low-disruption improvements.
- Coordination notes for technical and operational teams.
- Follow-up on incidents that affect consumption.
- Periodic review of actions and next steps.
Responsible scope
We do not promise automatic savings. First we validate the site context, then we prioritize realistic measures and review whether the operation responds as expected.
Where it is most useful
This approach is especially relevant for corporate offices, industrial sites, logistics facilities and retail locations, where energy use depends on both equipment and daily operating routines.