Infrastructure has never had
a permanent home.

Mechanical and energy systems move through owners, contractors, governments, and platforms over their lifetime. Everywhere they go, they leave fragments — service records here, installation data there, performance history nowhere. No single place has ever held it all together.

Until now.

Infrastructure Identity Intelligence Registry™

The Registry is a neutral, permanent intelligence layer for mechanical and energy infrastructure. It doesn't replace how organizations operate. It connects them — through a shared identity layer that makes infrastructure history visible, portable, and durable across decades.

Not a database. A continuity layer for the entire infrastructure lifecycle.

Most infrastructure data lives inside organizational silos — a contractor's CRM, an owner's spreadsheet, a utility's billing system. When those organizations change, the data stays behind. What moves forward is the system itself, stripped of its history.

"The Registry sits above all of it. Neutral. Persistent. Owned by no single participant — available to all of them."

Every system that enters the Registry receives a persistent identity through HMIN™ or HEIN™. Every lifecycle event that follows — installation, service, upgrade, replacement — attaches to that identity. The history accumulates. The intelligence compounds. And it survives every transition the system goes through.

System enters RegistryIdentity assignedEvents accumulate→Intelligence compoundsContinuity persists

Neutral by design: The Registry belongs to no owner, contractor, or platform. Infrastructure identity persists regardless of who holds the system.

Persistent by default: HMIN™ and HEIN™ are assigned once and never reset — surviving every ownership transition, contractor change, and technology migration.

Compounding over time: The longer a system is registered, the richer its record becomes. Intelligence strengthens as lifecycle events accumulate across decades.

Portable across platforms: Infrastructure identity lives in the Registry — not in any operator's system. It moves with the infrastructure, not with the software.

The problem wasn't technical. It was structural.

The tools to track infrastructure have existed for decades. The reason history still disappears isn't a technology failure — it's a structural one. No neutral party ever held the identity layer. Every record lived inside an organization that eventually changed, closed, or moved on.

01 Owners held records — until they weren't owners anymore.

Infrastructure history lived in ownership structures that reset with every transaction. Buyers inherited systems, not knowledge.

02 Contractors held knowledge — until they were replaced.

The most detailed infrastructure knowledge in existence lives with service providers. When a contract ends, that knowledge walks out the door.

03 Platforms held data — until they were switched.

Building management systems, asset tracking tools, and CMMS platforms hold operational data — but only for as long as they're in use. A platform migration means a history reset.

04 Nobody held continuity.

There was no neutral layer that all participants shared. No persistent reference point that survived every transition. The Registry is that layer — built for infrastructure that operates across decades, not software contracts.

Every part of the infrastructure lifecycle has a role.

Infrastructure history is created by many hands — owners, contractors, governments, insurers, manufacturers — and lost because none of them ever shared a common identity layer. The Registry changes that. Here's where each participant fits, and what they gain.

Infrastructure owners & operators: Municipalities · Housing · Portfolios.

You manage the assets. You deserve to know their history.

Housing providers, municipalities, utilities, and portfolio operators are responsible for infrastructure that spans decades and multiple service providers. Without persistent identity, every transition erodes what's known. With it, lifecycle continuity survives — across system generations, ownership changes, and contractor rotations. Capital planning becomes grounded. Risk becomes visible. Infrastructure stops being a liability and starts being an asset you actually understand.

Service & delivery providers: Contractors · Engineers · Builders.

Your work deserves to be remembered.

Contractors, engineering firms, and builders create the most detailed infrastructure knowledge that exists — and almost all of it disappears when a project closes. Every installation, service event, and upgrade your team contributes attaches to the system's persistent identity — building a verified record that follows the infrastructure forward. Your work becomes part of a history that outlasts the job.

Financial & risk institutions: Insurers · Lenders · Investors.

Right now, you're pricing risk you can't see.

Insurance providers, mortgage lenders, and infrastructure investors make significant decisions about assets whose mechanical and energy history is almost entirely opaque. A building changes hands and its infrastructure record resets. The Registry gives financial institutions something they've never had: verified, longitudinal lifecycle data at the system level — so risk assessment reflects reality, not assumption.

Governments & public programs: Agencies · Housing authorities · Climate programs.

You're investing in infrastructure you can't track.

Governments deploying electrification programs, retrofit incentives, and public housing upgrades at scale have a structural visibility problem: once a program ends, the performance of what was built becomes invisible. The Registry gives public programs a persistent reference layer — so electrification adoption can be tracked, retrofit performance can be measured, and long-term infrastructure outcomes can be reported with confidence.

Manufacturers & technology providers: OEMs · Platform providers · Vendors.

Your products have a lifecycle. Now you can see it.

Manufacturers and technology providers deploy systems that operate for decades — but once a product leaves the factory, its real-world performance becomes invisible. The Registry creates a longitudinal view of how systems perform across their full lifecycle, across real installations, across varied operating conditions. Intelligence that improves products, informs warranties, and strengthens long-term customer relationships.

The Registry grows stronger
with every system that enters it.

Every organization that participates strengthens the intelligence layer for everyone. Every system that goes unregistered is history that disappears permanently. The organizations building long-horizon infrastructure intelligence today are the ones who will have it when it matters most — and the ones who won't be starting from scratch when everything changes.