Vizonare Puts a 3D Workspace in the Pocket of the Facility Manager

The early-stage proptech startup is betting spatial AI can replace spreadsheets for Fortune 500 building operations, but the path from vision to revenue is unproven.

About Vizonare

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Przemek Blasiak’s pitch is simple: facility management is stuck in spreadsheets. His company, Vizonare, wants to replace them with a live 3D model you can walk through on your phone. Founded in 2022, the New York-based startup sells a SaaS platform that uses spatial AI to create digital twins of buildings, linking maintenance tickets, asset data, and vendor communication to specific locations on a map [Vizonare]. The target is the Fortune 500 enterprise, a clientele the company claims to already serve, though no names are disclosed [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief]. For an industry that still runs on paper checklists and email chains, the promise is a visual, proactive system that cuts downtime and site visits. The question is whether the market is ready to buy.

The Spatial Wedge

Vizonare’s differentiation hinges on its use of spatial computing, not just another digital dashboard. The core product is a "live 3D ticketing platform" where a maintenance request isn’t just a line in a database but a pin in a photorealistic model of a boiler room or office floor [Vizonare]. Tenants can report issues by scanning a QR code, vendors receive work orders with full spatial context, and managers can tour sites remotely via a virtual walkthrough. The technical stack reportedly uses LiDAR from mobile devices to build these models and supports collaboration through augmented reality on Apple’s Vision Pro [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief]. This approach aims to solve a fundamental coordination problem in physical operations. The bet is that seeing the problem in context is worth more than reading about it in a spreadsheet.

Early Signals and Stealth Mode

The company’s public traction signals are minimal, characteristic of an early-stage venture still proving its model. PitchBook lists a team of nine employees [PitchBook]. Web traffic is light, with Crunchbase showing about 660 monthly visitors as of mid-2025 [Crunchbase]. There is no detailed funding history in the public record. The company describes itself as "VC-backed" on its homepage, and investor Spatial Capital lists Vizonare in its portfolio, but no round size, valuation, or additional investors are confirmed [Spatial Capital][Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief]. The lack of news coverage or customer case studies suggests a deliberate stealth posture or a very early commercial ramp. For a product targeting large enterprises, this opacity is not unusual in the first innings, but it leaves the scale of early adoption an open question.

The Path to Paying Customers

The commercial case rests on convincing cost-conscious facility directors that a visual platform justifies its subscription fee. Vizonare’s potential advantages in sales conversations are clear:

  • Operational clarity. Translating cryptic ticket descriptions into a visual, location-precise model could drastically reduce miscommunication and repeat site visits.
  • Asset intelligence. Linking equipment manuals, warranty data, and maintenance history to a 3D asset map turns a passive list into an actionable system.
  • Remote oversight. The ability to conduct virtual tours and measure spaces geometrically promises to reduce travel time and cost for managers overseeing dispersed portfolios [Vizonare].

The most credible counterfactual is inertia. Legacy Computerized Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS) are entrenched, and their workflows are understood. Migrating to a spatially-aware platform requires new hardware (LiDAR-enabled iPhones or iPads), new processes, and a belief that the visual layer delivers enough ROI to offset the switching cost. Without public pricing or named Fortune 500 logos, the renewal motion at a six-figure annual contract value remains theoretical.

For Blasiak and his team, the next 12 months will be about converting that claimed Fortune 500 interest into disclosed, referenceable deals. The backing from Spatial Capital, a firm focused on the spatial computing thesis, provides domain-specific credibility but not yet a war chest [Spatial Capital]. The real test is whether a facilities VP will bet their operational reliability on a 3D model. Can Vizonare move from a compelling vision to a must-have tool for the people who keep the lights on?

Sources

  1. [Vizonare] Vizonare - Manage facilities visually in one place | https://www.vizonare.com/
  2. [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief] Vizonare Research Brief
  3. [PitchBook] Vizonare 2026 Company Profile: Valuation, Funding & Investors | https://pitchbook.com/profiles/company/593027-38
  4. [Crunchbase] Vizonare - Tech Stack, Apps, Patents & Trademarks | https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/vizonare/technology
  5. [Spatial Capital] Vizonare - Portfolio | https://www.spatial.capital/portfolio/vizonare

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