Common areas.
Real
Most building administrators don't know how much electricity the common areas actually consume — or how much could be saved with changes that cost less than three months of the current bill.
Measurement before decisions
We turn invisible consumption into readable reports — so administrators can act with data, not guesses.
Real consumption measurement
We measure actual electricity consumption per circuit in common areas: elevators, pumps, lighting, hallways, parking. No estimates — instruments connected directly to your building's electrical system.
Obsolete equipment identification
Pumps, luminaires, and panels that are years past their efficient lifespan — identified with technical criteria and replacement cost.
Amortization plan
For each recommended replacement, we calculate investment cost, projected monthly savings, and payback period in plain language for the assembly.
Assembly-ready report
A structured document designed for presentation at the owners' assembly — concrete figures, not intentions.
Designed for residential buildings
Our process is adapted to the specific context of Argentine residential buildings: electrical infrastructure, common expense structure, and the administrative reality of working with co-owners and property managers. The audit covers every common area circuit — from the main panel to the last hallway light.
Four steps to concrete numbers
A structured process that takes your building from "we don't know" to "here's exactly what's happening."
We review the building's electrical layout and identify all common area circuits to be measured.
We connect instruments to each circuit and record real consumption data over a representative period.
We identify equipment that consumes more than expected and calculate potential savings for each replacement.
We deliver a structured document with findings, recommendations, and payback calculations — ready for the assembly.
Stop paying for energy you can't account for.
An energy audit for common areas is the first step toward managing building expenses with real information.
From panel to report
The audit process, captured at each stage.
Numbers the assembly can act on
Good intentions don't pass assemblies. A concrete amortization calculation does. Our report gives the administrator the information to present a change not as an expense, but as an investment with a defined payback period.
Each recommendation in our report includes: equipment cost, installation estimate, projected monthly savings, and months to payback — all based on the building's actual measured consumption.
- Actual consumption per circuit — not industry averages
- Equipment identification with technical specification
- Replacement cost with current market pricing
- Payback period calculated for your specific building