Over 115 million smart buildings to deploy by 2026
A new study from Juniper Research has found that the number of buildings globally deploying smart building technologies will reach 115 million in 2026, from 45 million in 2022.
This growth of over 150% reflects increasing demand for energy efficiency from businesses and residents alike, as energy costs spike.
Juniper Research, which specialises in identifying and appraising high growth market sectors, released the prediction in their new research report.
Smart Buildings: Key Opportunities, Competitor Leaderboard & Market Forecasts 2022-2026, provides a detailed analysis of the evolution of the smart buildings market.
A smart building is defined by Juniper Research as a building that uses connectivity to enable economical use of resources. It does so while creating a safe and comfortable environment for occupants.
The research found that by enabling buildings to monitor and automate common functions, significant efficiency gains can be made.
The report recommends that vendors focus on building analytics platforms for the most value to be driven from deployments.
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Non-residential smart buildings are projected to account for 90% of smart building spend globally in 2026; at a similar level to 2022. This is due to the larger economies of scale in commercial premises driving this spend, as well as the commercial focus of most smart building technologies.
Research co-author Dawnetta Grant explained in a statement, “Smart building platform vendors will understandably focus on non-residential use cases, as these provide a stronger return on investment, but they should not neglect the importance of residential deployments, as environmental concerns intensify.”
Global shipments of sensors used in smart buildings will exceed 1 billion annually in 2026 from 360 million in 2022; a growth of 204%.
Sensors, when combined with intelligent management platforms, allow smart buildings to adapt to conditions. Elements such as lighting, heating and ventilation are thus matched to live requirements.
The report recommends that smart building vendors partner with AI vendors to maximise the benefits of automation, including reduced energy costs and improved working environments.
The paper is available online.