Education

A safer, steadier campus — with less surprise

K–12 districts and higher-ed campuses run on aging infrastructure, mixed eras of electrical equipment, and maintenance teams carrying a large physical footprint. Continuous thermal monitoring gives those teams visibility they don't have to go find.

Education

A safer, steadier campus — with less surprise

K–12 districts and higher-ed campuses run on aging infrastructure, mixed eras of electrical equipment, and maintenance teams carrying a large physical footprint. Continuous thermal monitoring gives those teams visibility they don't have to go find.

A campus is not one building. It's a portfolio: academic, administrative, athletic, residential, ancillary. Each with its own electrical history, its own inspection rhythm, and its own version of a bad day. When something goes wrong — a transformer, a main service, a switchgear lineup — the disruption lands on students, staff, families, and leadership in that order.

What CTM365 changes in this environment

  • Continuous thermal visibility across the electrical systems a maintenance team can’t physically be inside of all the time.
  • Earlier awareness of developing issues in older equipment where retrofits may be years away.
  • A stronger reliability story for boards, administrators, and insurance partners.
  • Less time inside energized equipment for staff and contractors during routine reads.

A university with an aging central plant

Continuous thermal visibility on main electrical distribution helps facilities leadership track drift before a hot spell turns a known-old system into an unplanned project.

A K–12 district with a multi-building footprint

Standardized continuous monitoring on the highest-impact electrical assets across the largest buildings — a coherent posture without a per-site platform.

A mixed-era
campus

Where newer buildings sit next to decades-old infrastructure, continuous monitoring provides a single visibility layer across both.

Benefits

Protect student and staff-facing spaces from preventable disruption

Stretch maintenance bandwidth by reducing unnecessary manual inspection activity on energized equipment

Give leadership a credible, continuous reliability story

Buy time inside a long-term capital plan with better visibility into what's drifting now

Frequently asked questions

No. Most education engagements start with the highest-impact electrical infrastructure — central plants, main service equipment, critical academic or residential buildings — and expand from there.

CTM365 is independent of your building automation system. It doesn’t require integration to deliver value, and we can talk about interoperability where it makes sense.

Most often, CTM365 slots into an existing reliability or deferred-maintenance conversation as a proactive visibility layer. We’re happy to help you frame it internally.

Tell us about your campus. We'll walk through where
continuous monitoring fits first.