From Z to A: Asset Intelligence
ZAi Powered by ONUMA
From Z to A: Asset Intelligence
ZAi Powered by ONUMA
In the ZAiMAP platform, MAPS go far beyond geospatial views. They are the framework for connecting, understanding, and acting on all types of data, from assets to processes. Whether you’re looking at a city block, a classroom, a solar array, or a sensor buried underground, maps help us answer not just where things are, but how they relate and why it matters.
Geospatial & Campus Scale
We begin with spatial context: where assets, buildings, and infrastructure are located within a city, region, or utility network. These maps integrate with GIS systems, weather data, and broader environmental layers to provide situational awareness at scale.
Building & Floor Plan Scale
Zooming in, 2D and 3D building maps represent rooms, equipment zones, utility connections, and occupant spaces. These aren’t static drawings. They’re interactive, real-time maps used by AI and end-users to visualize how systems function and interconnect.
Asset & Field Equipment Scale
Not all assets live in buildings. ZAiMAP maps individual equipment in the field, from electrical towers and rooftop solar panels to manhole covers, utility meters, and environmental sensors. It can be mapped and linked into a digital twin for monitoring, maintenance, or decision-making if it has a location.
Business Process Maps
We also map how things work: procedures, approvals, and system rules. These are “logic maps” describing how tasks, alerts, and workflows should function across departments and systems. This structure powers automation, traceability, and AI-driven actions.
The Natural User Interface
The physical world, from city grids to single valves, is our most intuitive interface. By grounding digital twins in physical and logical maps, we turn software into something people and systems can navigate naturally.
Without a digital mapping foundation like ZAiMAP provides, facility and infrastructure operations would be as disoriented as trying to find your Uber with a paper map. We don’t just need maps; we need maps with context, relationships, and logic that power smarter decisions at every level.