Use case
Appraisal

Bring clarity and trust to every valuation.

Building organizes financial, operational, and supporting property records into a structured, verifiable asset record. Appraisers, lenders, and asset managers can work from consistent, traceable inputs, reducing ambiguity, rework, and disputes during valuation.
Building Appraisal

How Building supports better appraisals

Structured, verifiable asset records that give appraisers consistent inputs and full traceability without changing appraisal methodology.

Verified lifecycle records

Organize leases, financials, certifications, and maintenance documentation into a single, traceable asset record that appraisers can rely on as source material.

3D referenced asset context

Link documents to digital twins and visual models to provide spatial and contextual clarity around building condition, components, and scope.

Appraisal ready data delivery

Provide clean, well structured records that reduce follow up, clarification, and reconciliation during appraisal review and underwriting.
Dashboard mockup

See value in context

Move beyond static reports. Building links asset records, supporting documents, and digital context so valuations can be reviewed, traced, and understood with confidence.

Frequently asked questions

How does Building strengthen valuation defensibility?
Building links valuation inputs directly to verified source documents. Figures are traceable, timestamped, and consistent, creating a clear audit trail that supports review by investors, auditors, and regulators.
How can structured asset data influence appraised value?
Clear, well-organized records reduce uncertainty. When assumptions are supported by verified documentation, appraisers and lenders can better assess risk and make more confident judgments.
What role does the digital model play in the appraisal process?
The digital model provides contextual visibility into the asset’s condition and history. It supports review and validation of information but does not replace professional inspections or appraisal judgment.

Still have questions?