Bueno Systems, a SkyFoundry partner in Australia, has just announced that the energy management and operational savings project conducted by BUENO at the iconic Crown Casino in Melbourne has been awarded Project of the Year at the Internationally recognized Energy Manager Today Awards in the United States. All of us at SkyFoundry want to extend our congratulations to the BUENO team.
The Energy Manager Today Awards recognize excellence in products and services that provide companies with significant energy management benefits, and in projects that improved energy management and increased bottom line results. BUENO provided a complete managed service solution for monitoring and analytics using SkySpark technology. Rule algorithms were set to detect faults including heating and chilled water valves failing or not closing, failed dampers, VAV box failures, valves hunting, central plant short cycling, pumps/fan hunting, temperature set points not being achieved, equipment left in manual override mode, and invalid occupancy readings from room control sensors.
John Petze Thu 10 Dec 2015
Bueno Systems, a SkyFoundry partner in Australia, has just announced that the energy management and operational savings project conducted by BUENO at the iconic Crown Casino in Melbourne has been awarded Project of the Year at the Internationally recognized Energy Manager Today Awards in the United States. All of us at SkyFoundry want to extend our congratulations to the BUENO team.
The Energy Manager Today Awards recognize excellence in products and services that provide companies with significant energy management benefits, and in projects that improved energy management and increased bottom line results. BUENO provided a complete managed service solution for monitoring and analytics using SkySpark technology. Rule algorithms were set to detect faults including heating and chilled water valves failing or not closing, failed dampers, VAV box failures, valves hunting, central plant short cycling, pumps/fan hunting, temperature set points not being achieved, equipment left in manual override mode, and invalid occupancy readings from room control sensors.
Read the full article here:
Read the Crown Melbourne Case Study here: