Vizonare
Live 3D ticketing platform for facility management powered by spatial AI
Website: https://www.vizonare.com/
Cover Block
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| Attribute | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Vizonare |
| Tagline | Live 3D ticketing platform for facility management powered by spatial AI [Vizonare] |
| Headquarters | New York, United States [Crunchbase] |
| Founded | 2022 [Crunchbase] |
| Stage | Seed [PitchBook] |
| Business Model | SaaS [Vizonare] |
| Industry | Proptech [Crunchbase] |
| Technology | AI / Machine Learning, Spatial Computing [Vizonare, Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief] |
| Geography | North America |
| Founding Team | Solo Founder [The Org] |
| Funding Label | Undisclosed |
| Total Disclosed | ~$150,000 (estimated) [Crunchbase] |
Links
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- Website: https://www.vizonare.com/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/vizonare
- App Store (iOS): https://apps.apple.com/us/app/vizonare-field/id6752294356
Executive Summary
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Vizonare is an early-stage startup applying spatial computing to the stubbornly analog workflows of facility management, a bet that hinges on whether building operators will adopt a visual, AI-powered 3D workspace over traditional spreadsheets and ticketing systems [Vizonare website]. Founded in 2022 by Przemek Blasiak, the company has built a live 3D ticketing platform that integrates maintenance requests, asset management, and virtual tours, accessible via web, mobile, and Apple Vision Pro [Vizonare pricing page]. The core differentiation is its use of LiDAR-enabled devices to create digital twins of physical spaces, aiming to reduce site visits and improve collaboration among managers, vendors, and tenants [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief].
As a solo founder, Blasiak's technical background is not detailed in public sources, and the team composition remains limited, with one other affiliated employee identified [The Org, Unknown] [PitchBook]. The company describes itself as VC-backed, listing Spatial Capital in its portfolio, but no funding rounds, amounts, or valuations are publicly disclosed [Spatial Capital]. Its business model is SaaS, targeting Fortune 500 enterprises, though specific customer names and revenue metrics are absent from public records.
For investors, the next 12-18 months will be critical for validating several unproven claims. Key watchpoints include the disclosure of a substantive seed round to fund growth, the publication of named enterprise customer case studies, and measurable traction signals beyond the current 660 monthly web visitors [Crunchbase]. The opportunity is clear,digitizing a massive, fragmented industry,but the execution risk is high given the early team build and lack of public financial or commercial proof points.
Data Accuracy: YELLOW -- Product claims and team size are sourced from company materials and one database; funding and customer details lack independent verification.
Taxonomy Snapshot
| Axis | Classification |
|---|---|
| Stage | Seed |
| Business Model | SaaS |
| Industry / Vertical | Proptech |
| Technology Type | AI / Machine Learning |
| Geography | North America |
| Founding Team | Solo Founder |
Company Overview
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Vizonare was founded in 2022 and is headquartered in New York, United States [Crunchbase]. The company operates as a legal entity named Vizonare Inc., according to state business registries and third-party directories [The Org, RocketReach]. Its founding story centers on applying spatial computing and AI to digitize the traditionally manual, spreadsheet-driven workflows of facility management, aiming to create a shared visual workspace for managers, vendors, and tenants [Vizonare website].
Key operational milestones are not extensively documented in public sources. The company launched its core platform, accessible via web and mobile apps, and later extended support to the Apple Vision Pro, indicating a focus on mixed-reality interfaces [Vizonare pricing page]. Public traction signals are limited; as of June 2025, the company's web presence attracted approximately 660 monthly visitors [Crunchbase technology page]. The team has grown to an estimated nine employees [PitchBook].
A significant data gap concerns funding. While the company describes itself as "VC-backed" on its homepage [Vizonare website], and lists Spatial Capital as an investor on the fund's portfolio page [Spatial Capital], no specific funding rounds, dates, or amounts have been publicly disclosed. Total disclosed funding stands near $150,000, a figure that appears to aggregate very early-stage capital rather than a formal seed round [Crunchbase].
Data Accuracy: YELLOW -- Company details confirmed by multiple directories; funding and milestone claims lack independent public corroboration.
Product and Technology
MIXED
Vizonare's product is a visual workspace for facility management, a category historically dominated by spreadsheets and text-based ticketing systems. The company's public positioning centers on a single phrase: "a live 3D ticketing platform for facility managers, vendors, and tenants to coordinate and automate work - powered by spatial AI" [Vizonare]. This framing suggests a core workflow of logging and resolving maintenance issues, but with the spatial location of each ticket rendered in a three-dimensional model of the building.
The platform appears to be multi-surface, accessible via web browser, a dedicated iOS mobile app, and an Apple Vision Pro application [Vizonare pricing page]. The mobile component is critical to the spatial AI claim, as it reportedly uses LiDAR sensors on compatible Apple devices to capture 3D scans of physical spaces [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief]. These scans form the digital twin where work orders are visualized. Key product surfaces described on the company's website include centralized dashboards for multi-location property management, preventive maintenance checklists, QR code generation for easy on-site access, and an AI assistant that provides insights with location context [Vizonare].
Data Accuracy: YELLOW -- Product claims are sourced directly from the company's website and app store listings; the LiDAR and spatial AI capabilities are inferred from a single third-party brief.
Market Research
PUBLIC The push to digitize physical operations, accelerated by hybrid work and cost pressures, is creating a tangible market for software that can visualize and manage built environments. Vizonare positions itself within the facility management (FM) software segment, a category historically dominated by computerized maintenance management systems (CMMS) and integrated workplace management systems (IWMS).
Third-party market sizing specific to spatial AI for facility management is not available in the cited sources. However, the broader intelligent FM software market provides a relevant analog. According to Grand View Research, the global facility management market size was valued at $42.8 billion in 2022 and is projected to expand at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.5% from 2023 to 2030 [Grand View Research, 2023]. More targeted research from MarketsandMarkets estimates the global IWMS market will grow from $4.2 billion in 2023 to $6.5 billion by 2028, at a CAGR of 9.1% [MarketsandMarkets, 2023]. These figures suggest a substantial and growing addressable market for technology aimed at improving operational efficiency in buildings.
Several demand drivers underpin this growth. The shift to hybrid work models has increased the complexity of managing under-occupied or dynamically used spaces, necessitating better tools for remote oversight. Concurrently, rising energy costs and sustainability mandates are forcing enterprises to optimize building systems, a task that benefits from detailed, visual asset data. Furthermore, an aging workforce in skilled trades like maintenance is creating a need for technology that can capture institutional knowledge and guide less-experienced technicians, often remotely.
Key adjacent markets that could serve as substitutes or expansion vectors include the broader proptech sector, encompassing building information modeling (BIM) software and construction management platforms. Regulatory forces, particularly around energy efficiency disclosures (e.g., Local Law 97 in New York City) and indoor air quality standards, are becoming material operational concerns that drive investment in building data platforms. The commercial real estate sector's focus on tenant experience and retention also creates a pull for tools that can streamline service requests and communication, as highlighted in Vizonare's marketing [Vizonare website].
Intelligent FM Software (Analogous) 2022 | 42.8 | $B
IWMS Market (Analogous) 2023 | 4.2 | $B
IWMS Market (Analogous) 2028 | 6.5 | $B
The chart illustrates the scale of the analogous markets Vizonare is entering. The growth trajectory indicates sustained enterprise investment in operational technology, though the specific wedge for spatial AI and 3D visualization remains a smaller, unquantified subset of these totals.
Data Accuracy: YELLOW -- Market sizing is drawn from analogous, third-party industry reports for the broader FM and IWMS categories. No direct sizing for Vizonare's specific spatial AI niche is publicly available.
Competitive Landscape
MIXED, Vizonare enters a mature facility management software market with a proposition centered on spatial computing, a wedge that is technologically distinct but commercially unproven against established workflows.
Vizonare's primary competition is not a single company but a spectrum of alternatives defined by user workflow. The competitive map can be segmented into three layers.
- Incumbent Workflow Platforms. This segment includes large-scale Computerized Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS) and Integrated Workplace Management Systems (IWMS) like ServiceNow, IBM Maximo, and MRI Software. These are the entrenched systems of record, handling ticketing, asset management, and procurement at an enterprise scale. Their advantage is integration depth and procurement relationships within large organizations, but their user interfaces are often complex and not spatially oriented.
- Modern Challenger SaaS. A newer generation of cloud-based facility and operations platforms, such as Fiix (now part of Rockwell Automation), UpKeep, and Limble CMMS, have gained traction by offering mobile-first, user-friendly interfaces. They compete directly on simplifying maintenance workflows and have built significant distribution through freemium models and SMB focus. Their weakness relative to Vizonare is the lack of native 3D spatial context.
- Adjacent Spatial & Design Tools. This is the most technologically adjacent but commercially distant segment. It includes prosumer 3D scanning apps like Polycam, Matterport for virtual tours, and architectural collaboration tools like Autodesk BIM 360. These tools create digital twins or visualizations but are not built as operational ticketing platforms. They represent both a potential integration partner and a substitution threat if a user decides to cobble together a solution.
Vizonare's stated defensible edge is its integration of LiDAR-based 3D capture with a live operational platform. The company claims this creates a proprietary spatial dataset that enables AI insights with location context, a combination not offered by the workflow-focused challengers or the visualization-focused spatial tools [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief]. This edge is currently perishable, however, as it relies on technology (LiDAR sensors, ARKit/ARCore) that is broadly accessible. Durability would require building a network effect around shared 3D building models or accumulating a unique dataset of facility operational patterns that improves predictive insights faster than competitors can replicate the visual layer.
The company is most exposed on two fronts. First, its distribution is untested against the entrenched sales channels of incumbent IWMS vendors, who have multi-year enterprise contracts and deep relationships with corporate real estate departments. Second, it faces feature competition from the modern SaaS challengers, who could add basic 3D visualization or AR features as a module, leveraging their existing customer base and proven sales motion. Vizonare's early focus on Apple Vision Pro and iOS suggests a premium, design-led approach that may limit initial market reach compared to cross-platform web competitors.
The most plausible 18-month competitive scenario hinges on adoption by early lighthouse customers. If Vizonare can demonstrate quantifiable ROI,such as reduced site visits or lower capital project overruns,through a public case study with a named Fortune 500 client, it would validate its spatial wedge and attract direct competition from the challenger SaaS segment. In that scenario, a winner would be a company like UpKeep, which could rapidly acquire or build a spatial feature set to defend its SMB and mid-market base. A loser would be the standalone virtual tour providers, like Matterport in the facility operations context, as their offering could be subsumed into a more comprehensive operational platform. Conversely, if Vizonare fails to secure such validation, its technology risks remaining a niche visualization tool, unable to displace core ticketing workflows.
Data Accuracy: YELLOW, Competitive analysis is inferred from market segments; no named competitors are confirmed in sourced data. The technological edge is described in company materials [Vizonare website] and a third-party brief [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief].
Opportunity
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If Vizonare can successfully translate its vision of a spatially-aware, AI-powered command center for physical assets into a standard enterprise workflow, the opportunity is to become the operating system for the built environment, a multi-billion dollar category currently managed through fragmented, legacy tools.
The headline opportunity for Vizonare is to define and own the category of spatial facility management, becoming the default platform for any enterprise that needs to visualize, manage, and collaborate on physical infrastructure remotely. The evidence that makes this outcome reachable, rather than purely aspirational, lies in the convergence of several macro trends: the proliferation of LiDAR sensors in mobile devices creating a low-cost 3D capture layer [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief], the enterprise push for remote and hybrid operations post-pandemic, and the increasing complexity of building systems requiring predictive maintenance. Vizonare's stated wedge, a "live 3D ticketing platform" [Vizonare website], directly addresses the reactive, spreadsheet-driven nature of current facility management. By anchoring the workflow in a visual, shared 3D model, the company aims to move beyond simple ticketing to become the central system of record for a building's digital twin, a foundational shift that could command significant enterprise contract values.
Growth is not guaranteed to follow a single path. The following table outlines two concrete scenarios through which Vizonare could achieve scale.
| Scenario | What happens | Catalyst | Why it's plausible |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enterprise Standardization | A major Fortune 500 client adopts Vizonare as its global standard for facility management across hundreds of locations. | A successful, high-visibility pilot with a named enterprise client, leading to a corporate-wide rollout. | The company explicitly targets Fortune 500 enterprises and claims to already be "trusted by" such clients [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief], indicating initial market entry and a focus on the land-and-expand motion typical of enterprise SaaS. |
| Vendor Network Effect | Vizonare becomes the mandated collaboration portal for a large roster of third-party maintenance and construction vendors serving enterprise clients. | Strategic partnerships with national facility service providers or construction firms, embedding Vizonare into their service delivery. | The product is designed as a multi-sided platform connecting facility managers, vendors, and tenants [Vizonare website]. Capturing the vendor side creates switching costs and network density, making the platform more valuable for all users. |
Compounding success for Vizonare would likely manifest as a data and workflow flywheel. Each new building scanned adds to a proprietary library of 3D spatial data. As the AI assistant processes more maintenance requests, work orders, and asset histories within their precise spatial context, its predictive insights for preventative maintenance and resource optimization should improve [Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief]. This creates a product moat: a new entrant would lack both the historical dataset and the trained models. Furthermore, successful deployments within large, multi-location enterprises create internal distribution lock-in. Once standardized on Vizonare's platform and integrated with existing enterprise systems, the cost and operational disruption of switching to a competitor becomes prohibitive.
The size of the win, should an Enterprise Standardization scenario play out, can be framed by looking at comparable public companies in adjacent software categories. ServiceNow, which dominates IT service management and has expanded into facilities management workflows, trades at a market capitalization exceeding $100 billion. While Vizonare is not a direct competitor at that scale, it points to the value of mission-critical workflow platforms. A more direct, though still aspirational, comparable might be a company like Procore, a construction management platform valued at over $10 billion, which also digitizes physical project workflows. If Vizonare captured a meaningful segment of the enterprise facility management software market, a successful outcome could see it valued as a category-defining platform in the low single-digit billions (scenario, not a forecast).
Data Accuracy: YELLOW -- The opportunity analysis is based on the company's stated product vision and target market, which are publicly documented. The plausibility of growth scenarios is inferred from these claims and macro-trend analysis, as specific customer case studies or partnership announcements are not publicly available.
Sources
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[Vizonare] Vizonare - Manage facilities visually in one place | https://www.vizonare.com/
[Crunchbase] Vizonare - Crunchbase Company Profile & Funding | https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/vizonare
[PitchBook] Vizonare 2026 Company Profile: Valuation, Funding & Investors | https://pitchbook.com/profiles/company/593027-38
[The Org] Vizonare Inc. | The Org | https://theorg.com/org/vizonare
[Perplexity Sonar Pro Brief] Vizonare Research Brief |
[Vizonare pricing page] Pricing | https://www.vizonare.com/pricing
[Spatial Capital] Vizonare - Portfolio | https://www.spatial.capital/portfolio/vizonare
[Crunchbase technology page] Vizonare - Tech Stack, Apps, Patents & Trademarks | https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/vizonare/technology
[RocketReach] Vizonare Inc. Management Team | Org Chart | https://rocketreach.co/vizonare-inc-management_b79a9b29c572f383
[Grand View Research, 2023] Facility Management Market Size Report, 2023-2030 |
[MarketsandMarkets, 2023] Integrated Workplace Management System (IWMS) Market - Global Forecast to 2028 |
Articles about Vizonare
- 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.