As Artificial Intelligence reshapes the future of the built environment, Sathish Rajendren, Executive Managing Director – Property and Facilities Management, India & APAC, Newmark, explains how AI-powered Computer-Aided Facility Management (CAFM) platforms are transforming facilities into predictive, autonomous, and insight-driven ecosystems that improve efficiency, reduce costs, and enhance operational resilience.
Artificial Intelligence is fundamentally redefining Computer-Aided Facility Management, evolving it from a primarily administrative system into a smart, insight-driven platform. Historically, Computer-Aided Facilities Management (CAFM) solutions have centered on essential functions such as asset tracking, maintenance records, and service request management.
While these capabilities remain critical, AI introduces a transformative layer – enabling systems not just to record information, but to interpret it, anticipate outcomes, and proactively enhance facility performance.
This shift is already delivering a measurable impact. Organizations adopting AI-enabled facility management are reporting:
• 10-20% increases in equipment uptime
• Up to 18% maintenance cost savings
• 5x ROI from FM transformation initiatives. Unsurprisingly, momentum is accelerating
• 92% of organizations have already piloted or planned to pilot AI in Facilities Management or Corporate Real Estate (FM/CRE) in the near future
Here are 5 features where AI has been able to bring in a significant difference to the Facilities Management Industry:
1. From Data Accumulation to Predictive Intelligence
At the heart of this evolution is AI’s ability to detect complex patterns hidden within vast amounts of operational data. Modern facilities continuously generate information through equipment sensors, performance metrics, work orders, and service histories. AI can analyse both real-time and historical data at scale, uncovering trends and anomalies that are difficult or impossible for human teams to detect consistently.
For example, subtle vibration changes that precede pump failures or seasonal demand spikes affecting HVAC systems can be identified well in advance. This capability enables a decisive shift from reactive maintenance to predictive maintenance, driving tangible results such as a 50% reduction in unplanned downtime and a 20-40% extension in asset life. Equipment lasts longer, failures occur less often, and operational disruptions are significantly reduced.
2. Turning Insights into Actionable Recommendations
AI’s value extends well beyond pattern recognition. By contextualizing data, AI transforms raw information into decision-ready insight. Instead of navigating dashboards filled with historical metrics, facility teams receive prioritised recommendations e.g., when to perform maintenance, which assets pose emerging risks, and where recurring failures warrant root-cause analysis.
This intelligence dramatically reduces administrative effort. Organizations report 20-50% reductions in maintenance planning time, allowing managers to focus less on coordination and more on optimization. With clearer foresight, resources can be allocated more strategically, leading to lower inefficiencies and a 15-25% reduction in overall FM operational spend (OPEX).
“AI is no longer just supporting facilities management — it is enabling buildings to think, predict, respond, and continuously improve in real time”— Sathish Rajendren
3. From Advisory Systems to Autonomous Operations
In more advanced implementations, AI-driven CAFM platforms move beyond recommendations into automated execution. When anomalies are detected through building systems or IoT sensors, AI can create work orders automatically, assign them to the most suitable technicians, and prioritize tasks based on urgency, SLAs, or asset criticality.
This level of operational autonomy delivers significant performance gains, including 75% faster maintenance response times. Faster responses prevent minor issues from escalating into critical failures, improve occupant experience, and ensure continuity of essential services; especially in complex environments such as hospitals, airports, and large commercial campuses.
AI also has made inroads into the Cleaning Services – wherein mechanised cleaning is transitioning into robotic cleaning, sensor-based washroom services, increasing cleaning efficiencies through increased coverage, optimization of resources resulting in savings of around 10-12% on cleaning costs.
4. Continuous Learning That Improves Over Time
One of AI’s most powerful differentiators is its ability to learn continuously. Unlike rule-based systems that remain static, AI evolves as it absorbs new data. Every repair completed, failure avoided, occupancy pattern detected, or compliance requirement updated improves the system’s accuracy.
This learning capability means CAFM platforms become increasingly tailored to the specific operational patterns of a facility or portfolio. Over time, predictions become sharper, recommendations more precise, and automation more reliable driving sustained performance improvements rather than one-time gains.
5. Breaking Down Silos for Holistic Visibility
Facilities management has traditionally operated across disconnected systems i.e., maintenance, compliance, vendor management, energy monitoring, and asset lifecycle tracking often exist in isolation. AI acts as a unifying intelligence layer, correlating insights across these domains to provide a single operational truth.
By linking asset failures with vendor performance, maintenance strategies, and compliance records, AI enables leaders to see beyond symptoms and address root causes. This holistic visibility supports better contractual decisions, smarter capital planning, and measurable efficiency gains, including up to 30% energy savings through smarter optimization of building operations.
AI redefining CAFM
Ultimately, AI is redefining CAFM’s role within the enterprise. It is no longer just a system of record, but it is becoming a system of intelligence. By enabling predictive insights, autonomous action, and continuous optimization, AI-powered CAFM platforms help organizations future-proof their built environments.
As buildings grow more complex and performance expectations continue to rise, AI-driven CAFM is emerging as a strategic lever for resilience, efficiency, and long-term value creation. The results speak for themselves: higher uptime, lower costs, extended asset life, and a smarter, more agile facilities operation ready for the demands of the future.