Better inputs. More defensible conclusions.

Building gives appraisers a structured, source-linked record to work from — so less time goes to assembling information and more goes to the analysis that actually requires your judgment.
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What changes

The record is already organized when you arrive.

Instead of receiving a folder of files in varying states of currency and organization, you're working from a continuously maintained Asset Record — documents classified, data extracted, and sources linked. The assembly work is already done.

You can see what's been verified and what hasn't.

Every document in the record carries its trust state — observed, verified, or attested. You know which figures have been cross-validated across sources and which haven't been reviewed yet. That changes how you weight inputs and how you defend your conclusions.

Your models connect to the record directly.

Upload your valuation model and Building's AI maps verified record fields into your inputs automatically — rent, NOI, occupancy, lease expiration, capital reserves. When the underlying data changes, the model knows. Your workbook stays current without manual reconciliation.

Your sign-off becomes part of the permanent record.

When you attest to a valuation or confirm a record condition, that attestation logs permanently — tied to your identity, the specific records you reviewed, and the purpose for which you confirmed them. Your work is traceable. So is its basis.

Where Building fits your workflow

Financing

Work from verified, source-linked asset records instead of transaction-specific packages assembled under deadline. Compress the input-gathering phase and focus on the analysis.

Transactions

Support acquisition and disposition appraisals with a record that shows its own history — prior valuations, operating trends, and verification events included.

Compliance

Confirm regulatory and covenant conditions against a governed record rather than a one-time document submission.

Tokenization

Provide defensible valuations for digital instruments that require continuously maintained, independently auditable asset data.
Your conclusions are only as strong as what's behind them.
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