Building Automation Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Building Automation stocks.

Building Automation Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 3 KTOS Winners And Losers Of Q1: Kratos (NASDAQ:KTOS) Vs The Rest Of The Defense Contractors Stocks
Jul 3 FIX Construction and Maintenance Services Stocks Q1 Teardown: Comfort Systems (NYSE:FIX) Vs The Rest
Jul 2 KTOS Kratos Valkyrie Demonstrates Affordable Runway Flexibility with Recent Take-Off and Flight Operations
Jul 2 CARR Carrier completes sale of industrial-fire business for $1.425B
Jul 2 CARR Sentinel Capital Partners Carves Out Industrial Fire Business from Carrier
Jul 2 CARR Carrier Announces Close of $1.425B Sale of its Industrial Fire Business
Jul 1 LTRX Zacks Industry Outlook Highlights Cisco Systems, Extreme Networks and Lantronix
Jul 1 CARR Wall Street Just Turned Bullish on These 3 Hot Stocks. Should You Buy Them?
Jun 28 CARR Carrier's Business Transformation Adds Value
Jun 28 LTRX 3 Networking Stocks to Watch Despite Industry Headwinds
Jun 28 FIX Is Comfort Systems USA (FIX) Outperforming Other Construction Stocks This Year?
Jun 28 FIX Third Avenue Small-Cap Value Fund Sold Comfort Systems USA (FIX) As It Grew Above Small-Cap
Jun 28 FIX Construction and Engineering Stocks Q1 Results: Benchmarking Quanta (NYSE:PWR)
Jun 27 KTOS The Successful First Flight of Kratos’ Erinyes™ Hypersonic Test Bed Ushers in a New Era in U.S. High-Speed Experimental Research
Jun 27 LTRX Lantronix Launches New EDS5000 Series Device Server
Jun 27 FIX Construction and Maintenance Services Stocks Q1 In Review: Primoris (NYSE:PRIM) Vs Peers
Jun 27 FIX Comfort Systems USA (FIX) Jumped on Strong Demand
Building Automation

Building automation is the automatic centralized control of a building's heating, ventilation and air conditioning, lighting and other systems through a building management system or building automation system (BAS). The objectives of building automation are improved occupant comfort, efficient operation of building systems, reduction in energy consumption and operating costs, and improved life cycle of utilities.
Building automation is an example of a distributed control system – the computer networking of electronic devices designed to monitor and control the mechanical, security, fire and flood safety, lighting (especially emergency lighting), HVAC and humidity control and ventilation systems in a building.BAS core functionality keeps building climate within a specified range, provides light to rooms based on an occupancy schedule (in the absence of overt switches to the contrary), monitors performance and device failures in all systems, and provides malfunction alarms to building maintenance staff. A BAS should reduce building energy and maintenance costs compared to a non-controlled building. Most commercial, institutional, and industrial buildings built after 2000 include a BAS. Many older buildings have been retrofitted with a new BAS, typically financed through energy and insurance savings, and other savings associated with pre-emptive maintenance and fault detection.
A building controlled by a BAS is often referred to as an intelligent building, "smart building", or (if a residence) a "smart home". Commercial and industrial buildings have historically relied on robust proven protocols (like BACnet) while proprietary protocols (like X-10) were used in homes. Recent IEEE standards (notably IEEE 802.15.4, IEEE 1901 and IEEE 1905.1, IEEE 802.21, IEEE 802.11ac, IEEE 802.3at) and consortia efforts like nVoy (which verifies IEEE 1905.1 compliance) or QIVICON have provided a standards-based foundation for heterogeneous networking of many devices on many physical networks for diverse purposes, and quality of service and failover guarantees appropriate to support human health and safety. Accordingly, commercial, industrial, military and other institutional users now use systems that differ from home systems mostly in scale. See home automation for more on entry level systems, nVoy, 1905.1, and the major proprietary vendors who implement or resist this trend to standards integration.
Almost all multi-story green buildings are design to accommodate a BAS for the energy, air and water conservation characteristics. Electrical device demand response is a typical function of a BAS, as is the more sophisticated ventilation and humidity monitoring required of "tight" insulated buildings. Most green buildings also use as many low-power DC devices as possible. Even a passivhaus design intended to consume no net energy whatsoever will typically require a BAS to manage heat capture, shading and venting, and scheduling device use.

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